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- Published: 02 Mar 2010
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- Author: JewishTreats
On Shabbat Jews recall the Biblical Creation account in Genesis, describing God creating the Heavens and the Earth in six days and resting on the seventh. It also recalls the giving of the Torah at Mount Sinai, when God commanded the Israelite nation to observe the seventh day and keep it holy.
Shabbat is considered a festive day, when a Jew is freed from the regular labors of everyday life, can contemplate the spiritual aspects of life, and can spend time with family. Traditionally, three festive meals are eaten: on Friday night, Saturday morning, and late Saturday afternoon. The day is also noted for those activities prohibited on Shabbat according to halakha (Jewish law).
Many Jews attend synagogue services on Shabbat even if they do not do so during the week. Services are held on Shabbat eve (Friday night), Shabbat morning (Saturday morning), and late Shabbat afternoon (Saturday afternoon).
With the exception of Yom Kippur, which is referred to in the Torah as the "Shabbat of Shabbats", days of public fasting are postponed or advanced if they coincide with Shabbat. Mourners sitting shivah (week of mourning subsequent to the death of a spouse or first-degree relative) outwardly conduct themselves normally for the duration of the day and are forbidden to display public signs of mourning.
According to Rabbinic literature, God via the Torah commands Jews to observe (refrain from forbidden activity) and remember (with words, thoughts, and actions) the Shabbat, and these two actions are symbolized by the two Shabbat candles which are lit before the onset of Shabbat by Jewish women, usually the mother/wife, though men who live alone are required to do so themselves. It is customary to light two candles, although some families light more, sometimes in accordance with the number of children.
Although most Shabbat laws are restrictive (see below), the fourth of the Ten Commandments in Exodus is taken by the Talmud to allude to the positive commandments of the Shabbat. These include: Honouring Shabbat (kavod Shabbat): Preparing for the upcoming Shabbat by bathing, having a haircut, and cleaning and beautifying the home (with flowers, for example). On Shabbat itself, wearing festive clothing and refraining from unpleasant conversation. It is customary to avoid talk about money or business matters on Shabbat.
On Friday afternoon there is a common practice to go to synagogue before Shabbat actually starts to recite the regular afternoon prayers right as Shabbat comes in and that way the prayer flows right into the welcoming of Shabbat in kabalat Shabbat. Though Shabbat starts according to the Jewish laws a few minutes before sunset, many Jews have the custom to add on to the Shabbat by taking away from the mundane of Friday and making that same time holy by accepting the Shabbat upon themselves early (this custom is reserved almost solely for the summer when sunset is extremely late. In the winter when sunset is very early this practice is very uncommon). This custom is called bringing in Shabbat early. Those who bring in Shabbat early simply go to synagogue and light Shabbat candles earlier than the specified time for their community. They do the full prayer service early and thus have more time for their first Shabbat meal, sing songs, or to simply enjoy the Shabbat.
The Kabalat Shabbat service is a festive one which highlights the arrival of the Shabbat. There are songs throughout the service to bring out the festive aura. In fact, there are special Carlebach Minyanim (services) which sing almost every paragraph in the service. The Carlebach minyanim pay little attention to the sentences and focus more on the tunes and the singing. There is much dancing and a Carlebach minyan can easily last a half hour longer than the regular services without the extra singing.
The actual evening service is very similar to the weeknight evening services with a few additions and changes with emphases on the origins of Shabbat from the torah and history. After the services there is a custom for the rabbi of a community to propose a question on the week’s torah portion for the congregation to ponder over Shabbat. Whether or not this question is posed the congregation’s announcements are given over for the goings on in the community for the rest of Shabbat.In a traditional home, the Friday night dinner is started by two songs; one is to welcome two Shabbat angels into the house and the other is to thank the wife for the work she has done over the past week. After blessings on wine and special bread (challah) a regular meal ensues. Some common Friday night foods include gefilte fish, chicken soup, meatballs, and any variety of chicken recipes. Each meal on Shabbat has its own group of songs to sing during meals as part of the concept Oneg Shabbat. Friday night has its own group of 6 or 7 commonly sung songs including menucha v’simcha (rest and happiness) and yom shabbaton (day of sabbatical). After all food is consumed and thanks prayers recited to conclude the meal, people often take the time before going to sleep to learn torah, read, socialize, or really anything they enjoy that is allowed on Shabbat. Among those who socialize groups of people hold “onegs” which are groups of people coming together to eat some more and do all the things mentioned above, just in a group. Onegs are common among youth groups and can be found among Jewish communities on college campuses.
Different streams of Judaism view the prohibition on work in different ways. Observant Orthodox and Conservative Jews refrain from performing the prohibited activities. These prohibited activities are exegetically derived – based on juxtaposition of corresponding Biblical passages – from the kinds of work that were necessary for the construction of the Tabernacle. They are not directly listed in the Torah; elsewhere, the Mishnah observes that "the laws of Shabbat [...] are like mountains hanging by a hair, for they are little Scripture but many laws". Many religious scholars have pointed out that these labors have in common activity that is "creative," or that exercises control or dominion over one's environment.
The 39 categories of melakhah are: ploughing earth, sowing, reaping, binding sheaves, threshing, winnowing, selecting, grinding, sifting, kneading, baking, shearing wool, washing wool, beating wool, dyeing wool, spinning, weaving, making two loops, weaving two threads, separating two threads, tying, untying, sewing stitches, tearing, trapping, slaughtering, flaying, tanning, scraping hide, marking hides, cutting hide to shape, writing two or more letters, erasing two or more letters, building, demolishing, extinguishing a fire, kindling a fire, putting the finishing touch on an object and transporting an object between the private domain and the public domain, or for a distance of 4 cubits within the public domain.
Each melakhah has derived prohibitions of various kinds. There are, therefore, many more forbidden activities on the Shabbat; all are traced back to one of the 39 above principal melakhot.
Given the above, the 39 melakhot are not so much activities as "categories of activity." For example, while "winnowing" usually refers exclusively to the separation of chaff from grain, and "selecting" refers exclusively to the separation of debris from grain, they refer in the Talmudic sense to any separation of intermixed materials which renders edible that which was inedible. Thus, filtering undrinkable water to make it drinkable falls under this category, as does picking small bones from fish. (Gefilte fish is one solution to this problem.)
Another view is that a device which is plugged into an electrical outlet of a wall becomes part of the building, but is nonfunctional while the switch is off; turning it on would then constitute "building" and turning it off would be "demolishing" (categories 35 and 34). Some schools of thought consider the use of electricity to be forbidden only by rabbinic injunction, rather than because it violates one of the original categories.
A common solution to the problem of electricity involves pre-set timers (Shabbat clocks) for electric appliances, to turn them on and off automatically, with no human intervention on Shabbat itself. Some Conservative authorities reject altogether the arguments for prohibiting the use of electricity.
A halachically authorized Shabbat module added to an Amigo power operated vehicle may be used on the observance of Shabbat for those with walking limitations. Often referred to as a Shabbat scooter or Amigo Shabbat, it is manufactured by Zomet Institute in Israel, each Shabbat module application is individually inspected and certified by a Zomet representative. It is intended only for individuals whose limited mobility is dependent on a POV/scooter or automobile consistently throughout the week.
Many observant Jews avoid the prohibition of "carrying" in the absence of an eruv by making their keys into a tie bar, or part of a belt buckle or brooch. The key thereby becomes a legitimate article of clothing or jewelry, which may be worn, rather than carried. Some also use an elastic band which has clips on both ends, and keys are placed between them as an integral link in the band, which may then be considered a belt.
In recent years, the Shabbat lamp has been developed to allow a light in a room to be turned on/off at will while the electricity remains on. A special mechanism blocks out the light when the off position is desired without violating Shabbat.
Various other legal principles closely delineate which activities constitute desecration of the Shabbat. Examples of these include the principle of shinui ("change" or "deviation"): A severe violation becomes a non-severe one if the prohibited act was performed in a way that would be considered abnormal on a weekday. Examples include writing with one's non-dominant hand (according to many rabbinic authorities). This legal principle operates bedi'avad (ex post facto) and does not cause a forbidden activity to be permitted barring extenuating circumstances.
More rabbinically traditional Reform and Reconstruction Jews believe that these halakhot in general may be valid, but that it is up to each individual to decide how and when to apply them. A small fraction of Jews, in the Progressive Jewish community, accept these laws much the same way as Orthodox Jews.
Humanistic Judaism: For Humanistic Jews, who celebrate Jewish culture and heritage without reference to a supernatural power, Shabbat is a day of pause. Shabbat observances incorporate Jewish rituals to help separate this special time from the mundane concerns of daily life. Keeping this traditional “time-out” provides an opportunity to gain perspective, to appreciate life, and to feel awed by the wonders of the world. Because Humanistic Jews believe in self-determination, they believe that Shabbat is a time to draw upon inner resources, share strength as a community, inspire and be inspired, and face the week ahead as the best possible versions of themselves.
Several Christian denominations, such as the Seventh-day Adventist Church, the Seventh Day Baptists, and the True Jesus Church, observe seventh-day Sabbath. Scriptural Sabbath is celebrated from Friday sunset to Saturday sunset. Some of Messianic Judaism considers its Sabbath to be kept according to Jewish doctrinal tradition, while most of Rabbinic Judaism disagrees.
The principle of weekly Sabbath also exists in other beliefs: compare the Babylonian calendar, the Buddhist uposatha, the Islamic jumu'ah, the Neopagan sabbat, the Bahá'í calendar, the Unification Church Ahn Shi Il, and the parody-religion Pastafarian weekend.
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