DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 1.28 MB)
Cooking with Sunlight or a Microwave on Shabbat

The Gemara in Masechet Shabbat (p. 39) states that "Bishul B’Hama"-cooking using the direct rays of the sun is permitted on Shabbat. For example, one may heat a glass of water by placing it outside in the sun. The Menuhat Ahaba (Rabbi Moshe Halevi, Israel, 1961-2001) even allows using a magnifying glass to concentrate the sunlight on the water, even if it brings the water to the boiling point. However, it is prohibited to use the magnifying glass to make a fire and then cook with that fire.

Rashi explains that there is neither a Torah nor Rabbinic violation involved in cooking in the sun, since that is not the normal way of cooking. Rav Moshe Feinstein (Russia – New York, 1895-1986) in his Iggerot Moshe (3:52) understands Rashi that any type of cooking which is not the normal method was never prohibited by the Rabbis, but if a method other than fire becomes the norm, it may be even be prohibited from the Torah. According to this approach, cooking in a microwave may be prohibited form the Torah. Even though it is not cooking with fire, since it has become accepted practice, the exemption no longer exists.

It should be noted that the Egleh Tal ( R. Avraham Borenstein, Poland, 1838-1910, Melechet HaOfeh 44) understands Rashi in a different way. Hacham Ovadia (Hazon Ovadia Vol. 4 p. 402) argues that cooking with a microwave is fundamentally different then cooking with fire, and therefore, although it is the norm, it is not prohibited by Torah law, only by Rabbinic law.

No authority holds that it is permitted to cook with a microwave on Shabbat. They merely disagree as to the level of the prohibition. The Mishna Berura Tiferet (318:52) cites Rav Shlomo Zalman Auerbach (Jerusalem, 1910-1995) that if the prohibition is only M’drabanan, then microwaves would be the preferred method for cooking in the event that a sick person needs cooked food.

SUMMARY

It is permitted to heat food and water directly in the sunlight or with a magnifying glass.

In the even that a sick person requires cooked food on Shabbat, it is preferable to use a microwave rather than a conventional oven.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
The Priceless Value of Serving as Sandak
The Connection Between Berit Mila and Speech
The Importance of the Berit Mila Meal and the Meal on the Friday Night Before the Berit
Which Kind of Kohen Should One Select for a Pidyon Ha’ben?
Pidyon Ha’ben – When is a Pidyon Required For a Firstborn Son?
Pidyon Ha’ben – May the Money be Given to a Kohenet?
The Pidyon Ha’ben Meal
If the Day of the Pidyon Ha’ben Falls on Shabbat, a Holiday, or a Fast Day
When Should a Pidyon Ha’ben be Performed for a Child Who Cannot Yet be Circumcised?
Using an Object of Value for Pidyon Ha’ben
Pidyon Ha’ben – If the Kohen Foregoes on the Money
May the Kohen Return the Money Received for a Pidyon Ha’ben?
Keeping One’s Word After Designating a Kohen for Pidyon Ha’ben
Pidyon Ha’ben – Appointing an Agent; Performing the Pidyon Far Away From the Baby
Naming a Baby at a Berit; the Permissibility of Naming an Ill Newborn Before the Berit
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found