DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 774 KB)
Beracha Rishona Is Required When Eating Any Amount of Food

The Gemara in Masechet Berachot, Daf 35, says that one is obligated to make a Beracha Acharona after having consumed a certain minimal measure of food. From the Torah, one must make Birkat HaMazon at the end of a meal based on the Pasuk ‘ViAchalta ViSavta U’BeErachata Et Hashem Elokecha.’ The Gemara also discusses Beracha Rishona, which is a Rabbinical law that requires us to make a Beracha before we eat any amount of food.

Rabbi Yoseph ben Ephraim Caro (author of the Shulchan Aruch) asks a question on this topic in one of his books entitled ‘Kesef Mishne’ (a commentary on Rambam). He asks how can it be that we are stricter with a Rabbinical law than we are with a Torah law? Beracha Rishona is from the Rabbinate, and is required every time you eat, no matter how much is you eat. Beracha Acharona is from the Torah, and is only required after eating a certain minimal measure of food.

So Rav Yoseph Caro gives us a sound and logical answer to this question. The Rabbinate set this law of Beracha Rishona on any amount of food, in order to prevent a likely problem from arising. In general, people do not limit their food consumption to a predetermined minimal serving. One might plan to eat an ounce of cookies, but in reality eats 5 or 6 ounces before stopping. So if the Rabbinate based Beracha Rishona on a set amount of food, it would be very common to find someone who planned to eat less than the minimal amount, but in fact ate more. What would such a person do? The Rabbinate therefore decreed that Beracha Rishona should be made on any amount of food one eats.

The Teshuvot Bet Ephraim brings yet another answer to this question. The Gemara explains that the basis for making Beracha Rishona stems from the principal that one must make a Beracha when deriving any pleasure in this world. People derive pleasure when eating even from a morsel of food. But when it comes to Beracha Acharona, the Torah says ‘ViAchalta ViSavta’, meaning one makes Beracha Acharona only after he ate and was satiated. To become satiated, one must consume a minimal measure of food.

Halacha Lema'ase, one must make Beracha Rishona even if consuming just a tiny drop of food. This is according to the Rabbinate, for one derives pleasure from the food, and one can not really be sure how much he shall eat. But when it comes to Beracha Acharona, even though it’s from the Torah, one must have consumed certain minimal amounts.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
If One Counted the Wrong Day of the Omer, or Had the Wrong Day in Mind While Reciting the Beracha
Praying for the Bet Hamikdash After Counting the Omer
Reciting “Lamenase’ah Binginot” After Birkat Kohanim During the Omer Period
Buying New Clothes or Other Items During the Omer
Omer- In The Event A Person Knows He Will Be Unable To Count The Omer
When are Haircuts Allowed During the Omer?
Sefirat Ha’omer – Guidelines For One Who Travels to a Different Time Zone
Omer, The Sefira Period – Reciting She'he'hiyanu, Purchasing New Garments, Moving into a New Home, Renovating, and Hosting an Engagement Party
Sefirat Ha'omer – Reciting the Beracha Only After Determining Which Number to Count
Omer- May One Count the Omer with a Beracha After Correcting Somebody's Erroneous Counting?
If a Person Remembered to Count the Omer Only During Ben Ha'shemashot
Sefirat HaOmer- Can One Fulfill the Obligation of Sefirat Ha’omer by Listening to the Hazan’s Counting?
Sefirat Ha'omer – May a Person Count the Omer for Friday if He Had Already Recited Arbit?
Sefirat HaOmer- May One Count the Omer with a Beracha After Asking, "Is Today Such-and-Such Day"?
The Chazan's Counting of the Omer
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found