DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 1.89 MB)
Applying Oil to One’s Skin on Shabbat

The Sages enacted a prohibition against medical procedures on Shabbat, due to the concern that people might grind herbs to produce medicine, which would constitute an act of Shabbat desecration. People in ancient times would commonly grind various herbs in order to produce medicine, which is why, incidentally, the common pharmaceutical symbol to this very day is a mortar and pestle. The Sages therefore forbade taking medication on Shabbat, except under certain conditions, to avoid the risk of people desecrating Shabbat by producing medicine.

In light of this prohibition, it is forbidden to apply oil to chapped skin – such as on the hands or lips – on Shabbat. Applying creams and lotions is forbidden even irrespective of this prohibition, due to the separate prohibition of Memare’ah (smoothing out a thick substance). But even liquids, such as oils, may not be applied to skin if this is done for medicinal purposes. This is the ruling of Hacham Bension Abba Shaul (Israel, 1924-1998), in his work Or Le’sion (vol. 2, 35:7), and of Rabbi Moshe Halevi (Israel, 1961-2000), in his Menuhat Ahaba.

Hacham Ovadia Yosef makes an exception in the case of infants, noting that oil is often applied to babies’ skin for the sake of cleanliness when they are changed. But for everybody else, since people do not normally apply oil for purposes other than healing chapped skin, this would be forbidden on Shabbat.

Summary: It is forbidden to apply oil to chapped skin – such as chapped hands or lips – on Shabbat. It is permissible, however, to apply oil to an infant’s skin for the purpose of cleaning the skin.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Purim- Laws Regarding the Megila Scroll
Purim – Does One Add Al Ha'nisim in Birkat Ha'mazon if the Meal Ends After Dark?
Purim – Sending Mishlo'ah Manot to a Mourner
Purim – When is the Preferred Time for the Purim Meal?
Handling a Megila on Shabbat
Purim Katan: Haman's Decree and Kashrut
"Purim Katan" – the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Days of Adar Rishon
Purim- Is Megilat Esther Considered Muktze on Shabbat
Purim- Machatzit Ha'shekel
Purim- Reading Haman's 10 Son's Names In One Breath, and Is It Permissible TO Recite The Berachot on The Megila If Less Than A Minyan
Purim- When and How To Recite Havdala When Purim Falls Out On Motza’ei Shabbat
Purim- An Explanation and Understanding of the Page with 10 Names in Megilat Esther
Purim- Some Halachot When Taanit Esther Is Observed On Thursday Prior To Purim That Falls Out On Saturday Night
Is It Permissible for A Sofer To Use Silk Screening Process When Producing a Megilah or Sefer Torah
Purim- Certain Required Characteristics of A Kosher Megilah
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found