DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 332 KB)
The Proper Time to Begin Se’uda Shelishit; Reciting Birkat Hamazon After Se’uda Shelishit Over a Cup of Wine

It is proper to begin Se’uda Shelishit (the third Shabbat meal) before sundown on Shabbat. One may begin the meal even just several minutes before sundown and continue eating beyond sundown.

If one was unable to begin Se’uda Shelishit before sunset, then he may begin the meal even after sundown, within the period of Ben Ha’shemashot, which extends for 13.5 minutes after sundown.

It is proper to recite Birkat Hamazon after Se’uda Shelishit over a cup of wine. After completing Birkat Hamazon, the one who led Birkat Hamazon may drink the wine, and, according to Hacham Ovadia Yosef, he may also give the cup to other people at the table so they have a sip of the wine. There are authorities who maintain that one should not drink the cup of wine used for Birkat Hamazon at Se’uda Shelishit, as it should rather be used for Habdala. Sephardic practice, however, does not follow this view, and it is thus permissible for the one who led Birkat Hamazon to drink the cup of wine, and for the others at the meal to sip some of the wine, after Birkat Hamazon.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
May A Seller Compensate For Partial Defect Or Must He Issue Full Refund?
Does A Purchaser Have The Right To Return A Defective Item
Damages Caused to a Car That is Blocking a Driveway or a Street
The Status of a Witness Who Received Money to Testify
Which Transgressions Render a Person Disqualified From Serving as a Witness?
Why are Women Disqualified From Serving as Witnesses?
May a Sinner Serve as a Witness If He Thought He Was Doing a Misva When He Sinned?
The Disqualification of “Shameless” People From Serving as Witnesses
Who is Disqualified From Serving as a Witness?
Watching a Lost Item Until it is Returned to its Owner
Who Keeps Money That is Found in a Private Backyard, or in a Store?
Returning and Claiming Lost Items
Hashabat Abeda – The Obligation to Return Lost Objects
Reading “Shenayim Mikra Ve’ehad Targum”
The Importance of Avoiding Anger
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found