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Seudat mitzvah

A seudat mitzvah (Hebrew: סעודת מצוה, "commanded meal"), in Judaism, is an obligatory festive meal, usually referring to the celebratory meal following the fulfillment of a mitzvah (commandment), such as a bar mitzvah, bat mitzvah, a wedding, a brit milah (ritual circumcision), or a siyum (completing a tractate of Talmud or Mishnah). Seudot fixed in the calendar (i.e., for holidays and fasts) are also considered seudot mitzvah, but many have their own, more commonly used names.

Seudat brit milah edit

Attendance at a brit milah (circumcision ceremony) and its subsequent seudah is of such great significance that Moshe Isserles ("the Rama") notes a Talmudic saying that one who is invited but does not participate in the seudat brit milah is ostracized by God.[1] For this reason, people are generally not invited, but merely informed of the brit's time and location.[2] Talmudic sages have compared a brit to a korban (Temple sacrifice), and eating at a seudat brit milah to eating a Temple sacrifice. Hasidic Jews generally insist on serving meat at a seudat brit milah since most Temple offerings were meat. Sharing a meal is considered a bonding experience celebrating the covenant between God and the Jews.[3]

Seudat Pidyon Haben edit

Unlike other seudot mitzvah in which the meal (seudah) follows the act or ceremony which warrants the festive meal, the pidyon haben or redemption ceremony for a first-born Jewish male child is part of the meal. The ceremony is led by a kohen, who ritually washes his hands, recites the blessing over bread, and partakes of some bread before beginning the ceremony. The ceremony, which follows a traditional text, is a verbal exchange between the kohen and the father of the child. The kohen asks the father if he prefers to keep his money or pay the equivalent of five silver shekels to redeem his child. The father chooses the latter option and hands over the money, as well as recites a special blessing ("al pidyon haben"). Then the kohen verbalizes the redemption, blesses the child, and says the traditional blessing over a cup of wine, which he then drinks. The seudat mitzvah continues with all guests in attendance washing for bread and partaking of the festive meal.

While attending the seudah for a pidyon haben, the Vilna Gaon was asked whether it was true that all the Torah's commandments are alluded to in Bereishit, the first portion of the Torah. After the Gaon affirmed this, he was asked where the commandment of pidyon haben was alluded to and the Gaon replied that it was in the word Bereshit, the Hebrew initials which stand for Ben Rishon Achar Sheloshim Yom Tifdeh or "a firstborn son after thirty days redeem".[4]

Seudat Bar Mitzvah edit

Solomon Luria noted that the occasion of a youth becoming obligated to obey the 613 commandments is to be celebrated with a religious feast, usually including a sermon the youth has prepared.[5] It is customary at a bar mitzvah meal for parents to give thanks and praise to God for giving them the merit to raise a child to be a bar mitzvah and to educate him in the ways of Torah and the commandments.[6] Rabbi Ovadiah Yosef[7] holds that a Bat Mitzvah is also a seudat mitzvah.

Seudat Siyum Masechet edit

Based on the Talmud and Midrash, the seudah celebration upon the completion of a Talmudic tractate is considered a seudat mitzvah.[8] This seudah is made to rejoice over the accomplishment, and also to motivate and inspire others to do the same. Chaim Elazar Spira, the Munkacser Rebbe", observed in his work Sha'ar Yissachar that the evil inclination does not want to see this type of shared joy, noting that one of the names of the evil inclination, "Samael", may be seen as an acronym for Siyum Masechet Ain La'asot, or "do not make a siyum".[9]

Seudat Hoda'ah edit

Seudat Hoda'ah (Hebrew: סעודת הודיה)[10] literally means a meal of thanksgiving.[11]

At a public meal[12] that is given to recognize the good – Hakarat HaTov – the beneficiary gives something to others – the ability to say blessings – Brachot.

Seudat nissuin edit

During the festive meal, seudat nissuin following a Jewish wedding, guests participate in the mitzvah (commandment) of L'Sameach Chatan v'Kallah, to bring joy to the groom and bride. The emphasis of the celebration is on entertaining the newlyweds. At Orthodox wedding meals, men and women dance separately – sometimes separated by a mechitza ("divider") – for reasons of tzniut (modesty). At the end of the seudat nissuin, Birkat HaMazon (Grace After Meals) is recited, and the Sheva Berachot (seven blessings) that were recited under the chupah (wedding canopy) are repeated.

Seudat havraah edit

Seudat havraah is the "meal of consolation" or comfort provided for a mourner upon his or her return from the cemetery following interment of the deceased.[13] It usually consists of foods symbolic of life such as boiled eggs and lentil soup. The Talmud states that the lentil stew Jacob was preparing (Genesis 25:29), and for which Esau sold his birthright, was the seudat havraah for his father Isaac who was beginning to sit shiva for his father Abraham.[14]

Seudat Shabbat and Seudat Yom Tov edit

These include three meals on the Sabbath, as well as two (dinner and lunch) on each festival day making four each (outside Israel) for Shavuot, Rosh HaShana, Sukkot, two each for Shemini Atzeret and Simchat Torah, eight (outside Israel) for Passover. The Passover Seders are seudot mitzvah. Except for Seudah Shlishit (the "third meal" of Shabbat) all of these meals are preceded by Kiddush (the blessing, made over wine, recognizing the holiness of the day). If one recites Kiddush, Jewish law states that one must immediately eat the seudah in the same place that he heard/recited Kiddush.[15] At Shabbat meals, it is customary to sing Zemirot (songs), learn Torah (as at meals in general) and discuss the week's portion of Scripture.

Seudah HaMafseket edit

Seudah HaMafseket[16] is the "separating meal" eaten before the fasts of Yom Kippur and Tisha B'Av.

The pre-Yom Kippur meal is a festive meal, which may include meat.[17]

At the pre-Tisha B'Av meal it is forbidden to eat meat, wine, or more than one cooked food.[18] Alcoholic beverages should be avoided. The meal is eaten sitting on the ground or a low seat. It is customary to eat a hardboiled egg, and also a piece of bread dipped into ashes, and to say, "This is the Tisha B'Av meal." During the meal, three men should not sit together so they will not have to recite the Grace after Meals as a group. None of these restrictions apply when Tisha B'Av occurs on Shabbat or Sunday.[19][20][21]

Seudat Purim edit

 
Purim painting, untitled. Safed, Israel, 19th century. Hasidic Jews celebrating Purim with a Sephardic Jew (left). The inscription is part of a passage from the Talmud urging Jews to imbibe enough alcohol so that they will not know the difference between the phrases "cursed is Haman" and "blessed is Mordechai."

On Purim day, typically toward evening, a festive meal called Seudat Purim is held, with wine as a prominent beverage, where drunkenness is not uncommon. The custom of drinking at this meal stems from a statement in the Talmud attributed to a rabbi named Rava that says one should drink on Purim until he can "no longer distinguish between arur Haman ('Cursed is Haman') and baruch Mordechai ('Blessed is Mordecai')." The reason Rava instituted the custom of drinking may have been as a critique of treating Mordecai as a hero, instead of a villain.[22] Another view is that these phrases have the same numerical value, and some authorities, including the Be'er Hagolah and Magen Avraham, have ruled that one should drink wine until he is unable to calculate these numerical values.)

This saying was codified in the Rif, Rosh, Tur, Shulchan Aruch (Orach Chayim 695), and is interpreted simply (as explained above) by the Chatam Sofer. This interpretation of the Talmudic statement, or the acceptance of the statement itself, is disputed (for various reasons) by the Ba'alei Tosafot (based on the Jerusalem Talmud), Maimonides, Rabbeinu Ephraim, Ba'al HaMa'or, Ran, Orchot Chaim, Be'er Hagolah, Magen Avraham, Taz, Rema, Vilna Gaon, Maharsha, Rashash, Tzeidah LaDerech, Hagahot Maimoniyot, Ra'avyah, Korban N'tan'el, Bach, Maharil, P'ri M'gadim, Kol Bo, Chochmat Mano'ach, Mishnah Berurah (by the Chafetz Chaim), and others. These authorities all advocate drinking wine in some quantity, but all (excepting Hagahot Maimoniyot and Ra'avyah) discourage the level of drunkenness suggested by the Chatam Sofer. The Rema says that one should only drink a little more than he is used to drinking, and then try to fall asleep (whereupon he certainly will not be able to tell the difference between the two phrases indicated by the Talmud). This position is shared by the Kol Bo and Mishnah Berurah, and is similar to that of Maimonides.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Yoreh De'ah 265:12; see Babylonian Talmud Pesachim 113b; Tosafot Pesachim 114a s.v. "Veein"
  2. ^ Abraham Hirsch Eisenstadt, Pitchei Teshuva Yoreh Deah 265:18; Arukh HaShulkhan 265:37
  3. ^ Rabbi Howard Jachter, "Minhagim of Brit Milah", Kol Torah, accessed March 19, 2006.
  4. ^ Rabbi Dov Eliach, "Hashem's Torah is Perfect and Complete: The Vilna Gaon's Monumental Torah Edifice" 2006-07-28 at the Wayback Machine, Dei'ah veDibur, accessed March 19, 2006
  5. ^ Yam Shel Shlomo, Bava Kamma 7:37
  6. ^ Rabbi Nissan Dovid Dubo, "Yalkut Bar Mitzvah: Bar Mitzvah Customs" 2006-05-18 at the Wayback Machine, Chabad Lubavitch, accessed March 16, 2006.
  7. ^ Yabia Omer 2:29
  8. ^ Solomon Luria, Yam Shel Shlomo], Bava Kamma, Merubah 37; Maharam Mintz 119; Shach, Yoreh De'ah 246:37
  9. ^ Shlomo Katz, "Matos-Masei: Power of Prayer", Torah.org, accessed March 19, 2006.
  10. ^ sometimes called Seudat HoDaYa "At the bottom of the pool".
  11. ^ "Testimonials".
  12. ^ ".. as a Seudas Hodaa for his recovery .." "Kew Gardens Synagogue" (PDF).
  13. ^ Rabbi Mordechai Torczyner, "Initial Meal Post-Burial - Seudat Havraah", AishDas, accessed March 16, 2006.
  14. ^ Bava Batra 16b
  15. ^ Talmud Bavli, Pesachim 101a
  16. ^ Alt. Seuda mafseket
  17. ^ "Yom Kippur: How We Prepare" 2005-11-03 at the Wayback Machine, National Jewish Outreach Program, accessed March 16, 2006.
  18. ^ Mishna, Taanit 26b; Babylonian Talmud Taanit 30a
  19. ^ "Tisha B'Av (The Ninth of Av)", Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations of America, accessed March 16, 2006.
  20. ^ "Tisha BeAv: The Fast of the Ninth of Av", Ahavat Israel, accessed March 16, 2006.
  21. ^ Taanis,29b: see Rashi
  22. ^ Eliach, Ayalon. "Mordechai the villain: The untold story of drinking on Purim". Haaretz.


seudat, mitzvah, seudat, mitzvah, hebrew, סעודת, מצוה, commanded, meal, judaism, obligatory, festive, meal, usually, referring, celebratory, meal, following, fulfillment, mitzvah, commandment, such, mitzvah, mitzvah, wedding, brit, milah, ritual, circumcision,. A seudat mitzvah Hebrew סעודת מצוה commanded meal in Judaism is an obligatory festive meal usually referring to the celebratory meal following the fulfillment of a mitzvah commandment such as a bar mitzvah bat mitzvah a wedding a brit milah ritual circumcision or a siyum completing a tractate of Talmud or Mishnah Seudot fixed in the calendar i e for holidays and fasts are also considered seudot mitzvah but many have their own more commonly used names Contents 1 Seudat brit milah 2 Seudat Pidyon Haben 3 Seudat Bar Mitzvah 4 Seudat Siyum Masechet 5 Seudat Hoda ah 6 Seudat nissuin 7 Seudat havraah 8 Seudat Shabbat and Seudat Yom Tov 9 Seudah HaMafseket 10 Seudat Purim 11 See also 12 ReferencesSeudat brit milah editAttendance at a brit milah circumcision ceremony and its subsequent seudah is of such great significance that Moshe Isserles the Rama notes a Talmudic saying that one who is invited but does not participate in the seudat brit milah is ostracized by God 1 For this reason people are generally not invited but merely informed of the brit s time and location 2 Talmudic sages have compared a brit to a korban Temple sacrifice and eating at a seudat brit milah to eating a Temple sacrifice Hasidic Jews generally insist on serving meat at a seudat brit milah since most Temple offerings were meat Sharing a meal is considered a bonding experience celebrating the covenant between God and the Jews 3 Seudat Pidyon Haben editMain article Pidyon haben Unlike other seudot mitzvah in which the meal seudah follows the act or ceremony which warrants the festive meal the pidyon haben or redemption ceremony for a first born Jewish male child is part of the meal The ceremony is led by a kohen who ritually washes his hands recites the blessing over bread and partakes of some bread before beginning the ceremony The ceremony which follows a traditional text is a verbal exchange between the kohen and the father of the child The kohen asks the father if he prefers to keep his money or pay the equivalent of five silver shekels to redeem his child The father chooses the latter option and hands over the money as well as recites a special blessing al pidyon haben Then the kohen verbalizes the redemption blesses the child and says the traditional blessing over a cup of wine which he then drinks The seudat mitzvah continues with all guests in attendance washing for bread and partaking of the festive meal While attending the seudah for a pidyon haben the Vilna Gaon was asked whether it was true that all the Torah s commandments are alluded to in Bereishit the first portion of the Torah After the Gaon affirmed this he was asked where the commandment of pidyon haben was alluded to and the Gaon replied that it was in the word Bereshit the Hebrew initials which stand for Ben Rishon Achar Sheloshim Yom Tifdeh or a firstborn son after thirty days redeem 4 Seudat Bar Mitzvah editSolomon Luria noted that the occasion of a youth becoming obligated to obey the 613 commandments is to be celebrated with a religious feast usually including a sermon the youth has prepared 5 It is customary at a bar mitzvah meal for parents to give thanks and praise to God for giving them the merit to raise a child to be a bar mitzvah and to educate him in the ways of Torah and the commandments 6 Rabbi Ovadiah Yosef 7 holds that a Bat Mitzvah is also a seudat mitzvah Seudat Siyum Masechet editBased on the Talmud and Midrash the seudah celebration upon the completion of a Talmudic tractate is considered a seudat mitzvah 8 This seudah is made to rejoice over the accomplishment and also to motivate and inspire others to do the same Chaim Elazar Spira the Munkacser Rebbe observed in his work Sha ar Yissachar that the evil inclination does not want to see this type of shared joy noting that one of the names of the evil inclination Samael may be seen as an acronym for Siyum Masechet Ain La asot or do not make a siyum 9 Seudat Hoda ah editSeudat Hoda ah Hebrew סעודת הודיה 10 literally means a meal of thanksgiving 11 At a public meal 12 that is given to recognize the good Hakarat HaTov the beneficiary gives something to others the ability to say blessings Brachot Seudat nissuin editDuring the festive meal seudat nissuin following a Jewish wedding guests participate in the mitzvah commandment of L Sameach Chatan v Kallah to bring joy to the groom and bride The emphasis of the celebration is on entertaining the newlyweds At Orthodox wedding meals men and women dance separately sometimes separated by a mechitza divider for reasons of tzniut modesty At the end of the seudat nissuin Birkat HaMazon Grace After Meals is recited and the Sheva Berachot seven blessings that were recited under the chupah wedding canopy are repeated Seudat havraah editSeudat havraah is the meal of consolation or comfort provided for a mourner upon his or her return from the cemetery following interment of the deceased 13 It usually consists of foods symbolic of life such as boiled eggs and lentil soup The Talmud states that the lentil stew Jacob was preparing Genesis 25 29 and for which Esau sold his birthright was the seudat havraah for his father Isaac who was beginning to sit shiva for his father Abraham 14 Seudat Shabbat and Seudat Yom Tov editSee also Shabbat meals These include three meals on the Sabbath as well as two dinner and lunch on each festival day making four each outside Israel for Shavuot Rosh HaShana Sukkot two each for Shemini Atzeret and Simchat Torah eight outside Israel for Passover The Passover Seders are seudot mitzvah Except for Seudah Shlishit the third meal of Shabbat all of these meals are preceded by Kiddush the blessing made over wine recognizing the holiness of the day If one recites Kiddush Jewish law states that one must immediately eat the seudah in the same place that he heard recited Kiddush 15 At Shabbat meals it is customary to sing Zemirot songs learn Torah as at meals in general and discuss the week s portion of Scripture Seudah HaMafseket editSeudah HaMafseket 16 is the separating meal eaten before the fasts of Yom Kippur and Tisha B Av The pre Yom Kippur meal is a festive meal which may include meat 17 At the pre Tisha B Av meal it is forbidden to eat meat wine or more than one cooked food 18 Alcoholic beverages should be avoided The meal is eaten sitting on the ground or a low seat It is customary to eat a hardboiled egg and also a piece of bread dipped into ashes and to say This is the Tisha B Av meal During the meal three men should not sit together so they will not have to recite the Grace after Meals as a group None of these restrictions apply when Tisha B Av occurs on Shabbat or Sunday 19 20 21 Seudat Purim edit nbsp Purim painting untitled Safed Israel 19th century Hasidic Jews celebrating Purim with a Sephardic Jew left The inscription is part of a passage from the Talmud urging Jews to imbibe enough alcohol so that they will not know the difference between the phrases cursed is Haman and blessed is Mordechai On Purim day typically toward evening a festive meal called Seudat Purim is held with wine as a prominent beverage where drunkenness is not uncommon The custom of drinking at this meal stems from a statement in the Talmud attributed to a rabbi named Rava that says one should drink on Purim until he can no longer distinguish between arur Haman Cursed is Haman and baruch Mordechai Blessed is Mordecai The reason Rava instituted the custom of drinking may have been as a critique of treating Mordecai as a hero instead of a villain 22 Another view is that these phrases have the same numerical value and some authorities including the Be er Hagolah and Magen Avraham have ruled that one should drink wine until he is unable to calculate these numerical values This saying was codified in the Rif Rosh Tur Shulchan Aruch Orach Chayim 695 and is interpreted simply as explained above by the Chatam Sofer This interpretation of the Talmudic statement or the acceptance of the statement itself is disputed for various reasons by the Ba alei Tosafot based on the Jerusalem Talmud Maimonides Rabbeinu Ephraim Ba al HaMa or Ran Orchot Chaim Be er Hagolah Magen Avraham Taz Rema Vilna Gaon Maharsha Rashash Tzeidah LaDerech Hagahot Maimoniyot Ra avyah Korban N tan el Bach Maharil P ri M gadim Kol Bo Chochmat Mano ach Mishnah Berurah by the Chafetz Chaim and others These authorities all advocate drinking wine in some quantity but all excepting Hagahot Maimoniyot and Ra avyah discourage the level of drunkenness suggested by the Chatam Sofer The Rema says that one should only drink a little more than he is used to drinking and then try to fall asleep whereupon he certainly will not be able to tell the difference between the two phrases indicated by the Talmud This position is shared by the Kol Bo and Mishnah Berurah and is similar to that of Maimonides See also edit nbsp Food portal nbsp Judaism portalShabbat meals Seudah Shlishit Melaveh malkah Psalm 100 Hakarat HaTovReferences edit Yoreh De ah 265 12 see Babylonian Talmud Pesachim 113b Tosafot Pesachim 114a s v Veein Abraham Hirsch Eisenstadt Pitchei Teshuva Yoreh Deah 265 18 Arukh HaShulkhan 265 37 Rabbi Howard Jachter Minhagim of Brit Milah Kol Torah accessed March 19 2006 Rabbi Dov Eliach Hashem s Torah is Perfect and Complete The Vilna Gaon s Monumental Torah Edifice Archived 2006 07 28 at the Wayback Machine Dei ah veDibur accessed March 19 2006 Yam Shel Shlomo Bava Kamma 7 37 Rabbi Nissan Dovid Dubo Yalkut Bar Mitzvah Bar Mitzvah Customs Archived 2006 05 18 at the Wayback Machine Chabad Lubavitch accessed March 16 2006 Yabia Omer 2 29 Solomon Luria Yam Shel Shlomo Bava Kamma Merubah 37 Maharam Mintz 119 Shach Yoreh De ah 246 37 Shlomo Katz Matos Masei Power of Prayer Torah org accessed March 19 2006 sometimes called Seudat HoDaYa At the bottom of the pool Testimonials as a Seudas Hodaa for his recovery Kew Gardens Synagogue PDF Rabbi Mordechai Torczyner Initial Meal Post Burial Seudat Havraah AishDas accessed March 16 2006 Bava Batra 16b Talmud Bavli Pesachim 101a Alt Seuda mafseket Yom Kippur How We Prepare Archived 2005 11 03 at the Wayback Machine National Jewish Outreach Program accessed March 16 2006 Mishna Taanit 26b Babylonian Talmud Taanit 30a Tisha B Av The Ninth of Av Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations of America accessed March 16 2006 Tisha BeAv The Fast of the Ninth of Av Ahavat Israel accessed March 16 2006 Taanis 29b see Rashi Eliach Ayalon Mordechai the villain The untold story of drinking on Purim Haaretz Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Seudat mitzvah amp oldid 1215563589 Seudah HaMafseket, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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