Each week we discuss one familiar halakhic practice and try to show its beauty and meaning. The columns are based on Rabbi Meir's Meaning in Mitzvot on Kitzur Shulchan Arukh. Games on Shabbat Last week we discussed the general disapproval of a hasty stride, as well as the particular requirement to avoid a "broad stride" on Shabbat because of the prophetic commandment to avoid weekday "ways" on Shabbat. (Shabbat 113 based on Isaiah 58:13. Some commentators say that it is because of the demand to "turn away your foot", mentioned in the same verse.) This prohibition is suspended in the face of a mitzva. "Rebbe Zeira said, When I would see the scholars running to shiur on Shabbat I used to say, These scholars are desecrating the Shabbat! But since I heard Rav Tanchum say in the name of Rebbe Yehoshua ben Levi, A person should always run to hear the law, even on Shabbat, as it is written 'They will go after Hashem like a roaring lion' (Hoshea 11:10), I run too." (Berakhot 6b.) What kind of mitzva is important enough? The Semak writes that it is permissible to run even for Shabbat delight, oneg Shabbat. This includes games that involve running, or running to see something interesting. And so rules the Shulchan Arukh: "Youngsters who take pleasure in jumping and running, it is permissible. And also to see something they enjoy". (SA OC 301:2. This definitely does not include jumping and running for training, as stated explicitly in Tosefta Shabbat 16:22.) This includes also playing ball. While the Shulchan Arukh rules that playing ball on Shabbat is forbidden (SA OC 308:45), the reason is not the game per sebut rather the concern of forbidden melakha, and in any case the Rema writes that the custom is to be lenient. So far it seems that
playing games on Shabbat is not only permissible in itself, but is
actually a mitzva, one that can permit running, which is otherwise
forbidden. However, as the Beit Yosef points out (OC 308), there is
another prominent source bearing the opposite message. The
Yerushalmi on Taanit describes in great detail the destruction of
Beitar in the time of Bar Koziva. (Today he is often called Bar
Kokhva, but to the best of my knowledge the Talmud never uses this
name.) Why was it destroyed? One of the explanations is that they
used to play ball. Most commentators explain that they played on
Shabbat, as mentioned explicitly in Midrash Eikha Rabba (on Eikha
2:2). I haven't found any source that explicitly deals with this paradox, but from a few commentators it seems that an important distinction is the element of competition. A number of Rishonim explicitly mention that running and jumping are permitted "because they don't do so in order to earn". Apparently professional sports are nothing new and even in the time of the Rishonim it was common to put money on sports competitions. The Bach on OC 301 rules that the permission to run and jump for fun is only bediavad for this reason. This also seems to be implicit in the words of the Shulchan Arukh, which permits youngsters who enjoy jumping and running, not youngsters who enjoy winning. Competition for its own sake contradicts the spirit of Shabbat, which is entirely a spirit of harmony and cooperation. Playing sports is a positive occasional pastime for active youngsters, as long as the enjoyment is in the activity itself. But when the competitive urge becomes dominant, and the physical activity secondary, this is an inappropriate delight, one that is not considered an oneg Shabbat and doesn't justify haste on Shabbat. Publication Update: Both volumes of the book have already been through page design, type-setting, and proof reading. It won't be long now, IY"H, that we will see it IN PRINT. Rabbi Meir authors a popular weekly on-line Q&A column, "The Jewish Ethicist", which gives Jewish guidance on everyday ethical dilemmas in the workplace. The column is a joint project of the JCT Center for Business Ethics, Jerusalem College of Technology - Machon Lev; and Aish HaTorah. You can see the Jewish Ethicist, and submit your own Qs — www.jewishethicist.com or www.aish.com. [The
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