DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
"Delivered to Over 6000 Registered Recipients Each Day"

      
(File size: 1.66 MB)
Why is Cooking Prohibited on Shabbat?

The Torah only prohibited Melachot (forbidden labor) on Shabbat done in a direct, active fashion. For example, the act of Borer (sorting) or Kotev (writing) is itself a violation of Shabbat. However, Melachot achieved by indirect causes are known as "Gerama" and are not prohibited by the Torah. For example, The Torah prohibition of Mechabeh (extinguishing a fire) applies only to an act where a person directly poured water on a fire. However, it is permitted to extinguish with Gerama, whereby a person set up bottles of water in the path of the blaze, which would burst when the fire reaches them and extinguish it.

The Rishon Lesion, Hacham Yishak Yosef, asked why then is Bishul (cooking) prohibited on Shabbat. All a person did was put a pot of food on the fire; it is the fire which cooks the food by itself over time. A similar question could be raised regarding the Melacha of Zorea (planting). The act of putting the seed in the ground is only a cause for the eventual germination of the seed. Why then is it considered a Melacha?

Hacham Yishak answered that Gerama is only exempt when there is a direct way to accomplish the Melacha and yet a person did it indirectly. However, in cases like cooking and planting, the only way to accomplish the Melacha is through Gerama. Therefore, that becomes the halachic definition of the Melacha which the Torah prohibited.
This is analogous to the famous insight of the Hatam Sofer (R. Moshe Sofer, 1762-1839, Hungary) that any case in which Gerama becomes the standard way to perform the Melacha becomes prohibited. For example, the special electric Shabbat wheel chair developed in Israel operates on a Gerama mechanism. According to the Hatam Sofer, since it was designed to operate in that way, it no longer has the lenient status of Gerama.

SUMMARY
The leniency of performing a Melacha with Gerama applies only to activities which also have a direct means of achieving the result.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Use of Blech or Hotplate on Shabbat-Summary
Is It Permissible to Place a Cover on a Pot on a Blech on Shabbat?
Employing a Non-Jewish Maid on Shabbat
May a Jew Engage a Non-Jew to Invest on his Behalf on Shabbat?
May a Non-Jewish Technician Perform Repairs in a Jew’s Home on Shabbat?
Drying Dishes on Shabbat
Drying One’s Hands on a Towel on Shabbat
Cleaning Shoes on Shabbat
Using a Timer to Activate a Hotplate on Shabbat
The Difference Between Hatmana and Placing Food on a “Blech”
Hatmana: Covering Pots on the Blech
Hatmana: Foil –Placing Wrapped Foods on the Blech
Hatmana: Covering Pots on a Blech with Towels
Hatmana: Warming a Baby Bottle
Hatmana-Wrapped Foods in a Pot
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found