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Glossary›Shabbat

Glossary

Shabbat

The Jewish day of rest observed from Friday sunset to Saturday nightfall, marking the seventh day of creation with cessation from creative work.

What is Shabbat?

Shabbat (also Sabbath) is the weekly day of rest in Judaism, observed from approximately eighteen minutes before sunset on Friday until nightfall on Saturday when three stars are visible. Rooted in the biblical creation narrative and the fourth of the Ten Commandments, Shabbat requires cessation from melachah—categories of creative work defined by rabbinic tradition—and centers on prayer, study, festive meals, and family time. It is considered the most important Jewish observance, described in the Talmud as equal in weight to all other commandments combined.

Origins & Lineage

Shabbat originates in the Hebrew Bible’s creation account (Genesis 2:1-3), where God rests on the seventh day after creating the world and sanctifies it. The commandment to observe Shabbat appears twice in the Torah: in Exodus 20:8-11 (framed as remembrance of creation) and Deuteronomy 5:12-15 (framed as remembrance of the Exodus from Egypt). The practice predates the destruction of the First Temple in 586 BCE, with the prophet Jeremiah referencing Shabbat observance in the 6th century BCE.

Rabbinic Judaism, codified in the Mishnah (circa 200 CE) and Talmud (circa 500 CE), elaborated Shabbat law extensively. Tractate Shabbat in the Talmud defines 39 categories of prohibited work (avot melachah) derived from activities used to construct the biblical Tabernacle, including plowing, writing, kindling fire, and carrying objects between domains. Medieval authorities like Maimonides (12th century) and the Shulchan Aruch (16th century) further systematized these laws, creating the legal framework Orthodox communities follow today.

How It’s Practiced

Shabbat begins with candle lighting, traditionally performed by women eighteen minutes before sunset, accompanied by a blessing. Families then attend or conduct Kabbalat Shabbat (welcoming the Sabbath) prayer services, which conclude with the Kiddush blessing over wine and two loaves of braided challah bread, representing the double portion of manna provided to Israelites in the wilderness.

The Friday evening meal is festive, often including multiple courses, singing of zemirot (Sabbath hymns), and words of Torah study. Saturday morning features the week’s longest synagogue service, including a public Torah reading and additional prayers. A second festive meal follows, then an afternoon of rest—napping, walking, studying, or conversing. The day concludes with Havdalah, a ceremony using wine, spices, and a braided candle to mark the separation between sacred and ordinary time.

Observant Jews refrain from the 39 categories of creative work and their derivatives, which in contemporary practice means abstaining from driving, using electricity, cooking, writing, handling money, and using electronic devices. Reform and Conservative movements interpret these restrictions more liberally, emphasizing spiritual rest over technical observance.

Shabbat Today

Shabbat observance ranges from strict Orthodox adherence to selective practice among secular Jews. Many Jewish Renewal and progressive communities have reclaimed Shabbat as a countercultural act of resistance to constant productivity, framing the practice as spiritual ecology. Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel’s influential book The Sabbath (1951) describes it as a “sanctuary in time” and has inspired interfaith interest in Sabbath practice.

Non-Jews encounter Shabbat through interfaith families, Jewish-Buddhist “JuBu” communities, and Christian Sabbath movements that look to Jewish practice for guidance. Some mindfulness teachers reference Shabbat as a weekly digital detox or contemplative discipline. Chabad houses on college campuses offer Shabbat dinners that introduce thousands of young adults to the tradition annually. The “Shabbat Project,” launched in South Africa in 2013, now coordinates global communal Shabbat observance.

Common Misconceptions

Shabbat is not simply “going to synagogue” or a day of religious services. The heart of the practice is cessation and presence, not increased religious activity. It is not arbitrary rule-following; traditional Judaism views the restrictions as creating the container for freedom and delight, described in liturgy as oneg Shabbat (Sabbath joy).

Shabbat observance is not uniform. Practices vary dramatically between Orthodox, Conservative, Reform, and Reconstructionist denominations, as well as Sephardic and Ashkenazi ethnic traditions. Not all restrictions are biblical; most derive from rabbinic interpretation over two millennia. The day is not somber or ascetic—rabbinic tradition encourages eating well, wearing festive clothes, and marital intimacy on Shabbat.

How to Begin

Begin by attending a Friday night Shabbat dinner in a Jewish community or home—many synagogues and Chabad centers welcome newcomers. Start with candle lighting and a technology-free meal. Wayne Muller’s Sabbath: Finding Rest, Renewal, and Delight in Our Busy Lives offers an accessible interfaith perspective, while Abraham Joshua Heschel’s The Sabbath remains the philosophical classic. For traditional practice, consult Aryeh Kaplan’s Sabbath: Day of Eternity or attend an Introduction to Shabbat class at a local synagogue.

Experiment with a partial observance: try one Shabbat without screens or work, noticing what arises in the space created. Many practitioners report the first Shabbat feels restrictive; the rhythm emerges over repeated practice.

Related terms

sabbathmindfulnesssacred timedigital detoxcontemplative practicejewish meditation
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