Book on the laws of Shabbos












5















Which English book on the laws of Shabbos would you recommend?



One that is Halacha Lemaase with footnotes that show where the Halacha stems from and the differentiating opinions.










share|improve this question





























    5















    Which English book on the laws of Shabbos would you recommend?



    One that is Halacha Lemaase with footnotes that show where the Halacha stems from and the differentiating opinions.










    share|improve this question



























      5












      5








      5








      Which English book on the laws of Shabbos would you recommend?



      One that is Halacha Lemaase with footnotes that show where the Halacha stems from and the differentiating opinions.










      share|improve this question
















      Which English book on the laws of Shabbos would you recommend?



      One that is Halacha Lemaase with footnotes that show where the Halacha stems from and the differentiating opinions.







      shabbat product-recommendation jewish-books contemporary-halacha






      share|improve this question















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited Feb 27 at 16:15









      mbloch

      25.8k545131




      25.8k545131










      asked Feb 26 at 23:04









      MosheMoshe

      26911




      26911






















          3 Answers
          3






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          6














          There are multiple options depending on how much of a reference book you are searching for vs. something which is readable cover-to-cover to rehearse.





          • The 39 melochos is an amazing reference work but it is very heavy (ca. 2000 pages) and detailed. Serves best to check out or learn in depth a specific melacha with Hebrew footnotes to enable further study


          • Shemirath Shabbath KeHilchata remains a classic, can be read cover to cover (although a bit heavy) and doesn't address more recent technology innovations


          • R Simcha Bunim Cohen's set feels more readable since each volume only covers specific topics (e.g., the home, the kitchen, muktze, amira l'akum) and is focused on halacha l'maase but (Hebrew) footnotes bring a variety of opinions

          • R Daniel Braude's Learn Shabbos in Just 3 Minutes A Day is a very recent book which is structured along the 39 melachot, it brings the halacha for each with background, lots of practical day-to-day examples and sources (mostly SA, MB, SSK and piskei aharonim focused on R SZ Auerbach, R Eliashiv). Its title stems from the fact it is broken down in 500 or so sections which can be learned in a few minutes. It is both highly readable and quite deep






          share|improve this answer
























          • I am traveling at present but happy to provide a few "inside pictures" towards the end of the week if useful

            – mbloch
            Feb 27 at 3:47








          • 1





            Ty. Y'all are awesome. @mbloch

            – Moshe
            Feb 27 at 5:24





















          5














          Piskei Shabbas by Rabbi Eliezer Padwar is also very helpful sefer. It is 4 volumes (Yom tov as one vol) . It is in English and has footnotes. Many of the psakim are from Rav Moshe Feinstein ,and the Debercheiner Rav. Many people also use Rav Simcha Bunim Cohen's seforim ,which has good notes (Many times contain more lenient opinions). There is also Rav Shimon Eiders sefer on shabbas as well.



          enter image description here



          Sample page:



          enter image description here



          Rav Cohen's books:



          enter image description here



          Rabbi Eider:
          enter image description here






          share|improve this answer


























          • Do you know where I can buy the set? @sam

            – Moshe
            Feb 27 at 1:07











          • It's out of print for a long time,but check here amazon.com/…

            – sam
            Feb 27 at 1:12






          • 1





            +1 for Piskei Hilchos Shabbos. I loved that when I was younger, and as I grew, I enjoyed the Hebrew section in the back.

            – user6591
            Feb 28 at 3:03











          • It's great,but I think it is very strict for many things .

            – sam
            Feb 28 at 3:04



















          4














          The 39 Melochos by Rabbi Dovid Ribiat. I haven't used it that often myself, but in my experience of observing others this seems to be one of the most, if not the most, highly regarded English books about the laws of Shabbos. The few times that I have used it it seemed to do a good job of laying out the concepts and providing the relevant sources.






          share|improve this answer





















          • 1





            However you really need the Hebrew footnotes in the back. In the front he sometimes oversimplifies the concepts. (For halacha lemaaseh the front is probably fine.)

            – Heshy
            Feb 26 at 23:43











          • See also comments to judaism.stackexchange.com/a/742/170

            – msh210
            Feb 27 at 0:46






          • 3





            Also most of the leneinces are in the Hebrew footnotes

            – sam
            Feb 27 at 0:52



















          3 Answers
          3






          active

          oldest

          votes








          3 Answers
          3






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          6














          There are multiple options depending on how much of a reference book you are searching for vs. something which is readable cover-to-cover to rehearse.





          • The 39 melochos is an amazing reference work but it is very heavy (ca. 2000 pages) and detailed. Serves best to check out or learn in depth a specific melacha with Hebrew footnotes to enable further study


          • Shemirath Shabbath KeHilchata remains a classic, can be read cover to cover (although a bit heavy) and doesn't address more recent technology innovations


          • R Simcha Bunim Cohen's set feels more readable since each volume only covers specific topics (e.g., the home, the kitchen, muktze, amira l'akum) and is focused on halacha l'maase but (Hebrew) footnotes bring a variety of opinions

          • R Daniel Braude's Learn Shabbos in Just 3 Minutes A Day is a very recent book which is structured along the 39 melachot, it brings the halacha for each with background, lots of practical day-to-day examples and sources (mostly SA, MB, SSK and piskei aharonim focused on R SZ Auerbach, R Eliashiv). Its title stems from the fact it is broken down in 500 or so sections which can be learned in a few minutes. It is both highly readable and quite deep






          share|improve this answer
























          • I am traveling at present but happy to provide a few "inside pictures" towards the end of the week if useful

            – mbloch
            Feb 27 at 3:47








          • 1





            Ty. Y'all are awesome. @mbloch

            – Moshe
            Feb 27 at 5:24


















          6














          There are multiple options depending on how much of a reference book you are searching for vs. something which is readable cover-to-cover to rehearse.





          • The 39 melochos is an amazing reference work but it is very heavy (ca. 2000 pages) and detailed. Serves best to check out or learn in depth a specific melacha with Hebrew footnotes to enable further study


          • Shemirath Shabbath KeHilchata remains a classic, can be read cover to cover (although a bit heavy) and doesn't address more recent technology innovations


          • R Simcha Bunim Cohen's set feels more readable since each volume only covers specific topics (e.g., the home, the kitchen, muktze, amira l'akum) and is focused on halacha l'maase but (Hebrew) footnotes bring a variety of opinions

          • R Daniel Braude's Learn Shabbos in Just 3 Minutes A Day is a very recent book which is structured along the 39 melachot, it brings the halacha for each with background, lots of practical day-to-day examples and sources (mostly SA, MB, SSK and piskei aharonim focused on R SZ Auerbach, R Eliashiv). Its title stems from the fact it is broken down in 500 or so sections which can be learned in a few minutes. It is both highly readable and quite deep






          share|improve this answer
























          • I am traveling at present but happy to provide a few "inside pictures" towards the end of the week if useful

            – mbloch
            Feb 27 at 3:47








          • 1





            Ty. Y'all are awesome. @mbloch

            – Moshe
            Feb 27 at 5:24
















          6












          6








          6







          There are multiple options depending on how much of a reference book you are searching for vs. something which is readable cover-to-cover to rehearse.





          • The 39 melochos is an amazing reference work but it is very heavy (ca. 2000 pages) and detailed. Serves best to check out or learn in depth a specific melacha with Hebrew footnotes to enable further study


          • Shemirath Shabbath KeHilchata remains a classic, can be read cover to cover (although a bit heavy) and doesn't address more recent technology innovations


          • R Simcha Bunim Cohen's set feels more readable since each volume only covers specific topics (e.g., the home, the kitchen, muktze, amira l'akum) and is focused on halacha l'maase but (Hebrew) footnotes bring a variety of opinions

          • R Daniel Braude's Learn Shabbos in Just 3 Minutes A Day is a very recent book which is structured along the 39 melachot, it brings the halacha for each with background, lots of practical day-to-day examples and sources (mostly SA, MB, SSK and piskei aharonim focused on R SZ Auerbach, R Eliashiv). Its title stems from the fact it is broken down in 500 or so sections which can be learned in a few minutes. It is both highly readable and quite deep






          share|improve this answer













          There are multiple options depending on how much of a reference book you are searching for vs. something which is readable cover-to-cover to rehearse.





          • The 39 melochos is an amazing reference work but it is very heavy (ca. 2000 pages) and detailed. Serves best to check out or learn in depth a specific melacha with Hebrew footnotes to enable further study


          • Shemirath Shabbath KeHilchata remains a classic, can be read cover to cover (although a bit heavy) and doesn't address more recent technology innovations


          • R Simcha Bunim Cohen's set feels more readable since each volume only covers specific topics (e.g., the home, the kitchen, muktze, amira l'akum) and is focused on halacha l'maase but (Hebrew) footnotes bring a variety of opinions

          • R Daniel Braude's Learn Shabbos in Just 3 Minutes A Day is a very recent book which is structured along the 39 melachot, it brings the halacha for each with background, lots of practical day-to-day examples and sources (mostly SA, MB, SSK and piskei aharonim focused on R SZ Auerbach, R Eliashiv). Its title stems from the fact it is broken down in 500 or so sections which can be learned in a few minutes. It is both highly readable and quite deep







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Feb 27 at 3:47









          mblochmbloch

          25.8k545131




          25.8k545131













          • I am traveling at present but happy to provide a few "inside pictures" towards the end of the week if useful

            – mbloch
            Feb 27 at 3:47








          • 1





            Ty. Y'all are awesome. @mbloch

            – Moshe
            Feb 27 at 5:24





















          • I am traveling at present but happy to provide a few "inside pictures" towards the end of the week if useful

            – mbloch
            Feb 27 at 3:47








          • 1





            Ty. Y'all are awesome. @mbloch

            – Moshe
            Feb 27 at 5:24



















          I am traveling at present but happy to provide a few "inside pictures" towards the end of the week if useful

          – mbloch
          Feb 27 at 3:47







          I am traveling at present but happy to provide a few "inside pictures" towards the end of the week if useful

          – mbloch
          Feb 27 at 3:47






          1




          1





          Ty. Y'all are awesome. @mbloch

          – Moshe
          Feb 27 at 5:24







          Ty. Y'all are awesome. @mbloch

          – Moshe
          Feb 27 at 5:24













          5














          Piskei Shabbas by Rabbi Eliezer Padwar is also very helpful sefer. It is 4 volumes (Yom tov as one vol) . It is in English and has footnotes. Many of the psakim are from Rav Moshe Feinstein ,and the Debercheiner Rav. Many people also use Rav Simcha Bunim Cohen's seforim ,which has good notes (Many times contain more lenient opinions). There is also Rav Shimon Eiders sefer on shabbas as well.



          enter image description here



          Sample page:



          enter image description here



          Rav Cohen's books:



          enter image description here



          Rabbi Eider:
          enter image description here






          share|improve this answer


























          • Do you know where I can buy the set? @sam

            – Moshe
            Feb 27 at 1:07











          • It's out of print for a long time,but check here amazon.com/…

            – sam
            Feb 27 at 1:12






          • 1





            +1 for Piskei Hilchos Shabbos. I loved that when I was younger, and as I grew, I enjoyed the Hebrew section in the back.

            – user6591
            Feb 28 at 3:03











          • It's great,but I think it is very strict for many things .

            – sam
            Feb 28 at 3:04
















          5














          Piskei Shabbas by Rabbi Eliezer Padwar is also very helpful sefer. It is 4 volumes (Yom tov as one vol) . It is in English and has footnotes. Many of the psakim are from Rav Moshe Feinstein ,and the Debercheiner Rav. Many people also use Rav Simcha Bunim Cohen's seforim ,which has good notes (Many times contain more lenient opinions). There is also Rav Shimon Eiders sefer on shabbas as well.



          enter image description here



          Sample page:



          enter image description here



          Rav Cohen's books:



          enter image description here



          Rabbi Eider:
          enter image description here






          share|improve this answer


























          • Do you know where I can buy the set? @sam

            – Moshe
            Feb 27 at 1:07











          • It's out of print for a long time,but check here amazon.com/…

            – sam
            Feb 27 at 1:12






          • 1





            +1 for Piskei Hilchos Shabbos. I loved that when I was younger, and as I grew, I enjoyed the Hebrew section in the back.

            – user6591
            Feb 28 at 3:03











          • It's great,but I think it is very strict for many things .

            – sam
            Feb 28 at 3:04














          5












          5








          5







          Piskei Shabbas by Rabbi Eliezer Padwar is also very helpful sefer. It is 4 volumes (Yom tov as one vol) . It is in English and has footnotes. Many of the psakim are from Rav Moshe Feinstein ,and the Debercheiner Rav. Many people also use Rav Simcha Bunim Cohen's seforim ,which has good notes (Many times contain more lenient opinions). There is also Rav Shimon Eiders sefer on shabbas as well.



          enter image description here



          Sample page:



          enter image description here



          Rav Cohen's books:



          enter image description here



          Rabbi Eider:
          enter image description here






          share|improve this answer















          Piskei Shabbas by Rabbi Eliezer Padwar is also very helpful sefer. It is 4 volumes (Yom tov as one vol) . It is in English and has footnotes. Many of the psakim are from Rav Moshe Feinstein ,and the Debercheiner Rav. Many people also use Rav Simcha Bunim Cohen's seforim ,which has good notes (Many times contain more lenient opinions). There is also Rav Shimon Eiders sefer on shabbas as well.



          enter image description here



          Sample page:



          enter image description here



          Rav Cohen's books:



          enter image description here



          Rabbi Eider:
          enter image description here







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Feb 27 at 1:06

























          answered Feb 27 at 0:55









          samsam

          26.1k14899




          26.1k14899













          • Do you know where I can buy the set? @sam

            – Moshe
            Feb 27 at 1:07











          • It's out of print for a long time,but check here amazon.com/…

            – sam
            Feb 27 at 1:12






          • 1





            +1 for Piskei Hilchos Shabbos. I loved that when I was younger, and as I grew, I enjoyed the Hebrew section in the back.

            – user6591
            Feb 28 at 3:03











          • It's great,but I think it is very strict for many things .

            – sam
            Feb 28 at 3:04



















          • Do you know where I can buy the set? @sam

            – Moshe
            Feb 27 at 1:07











          • It's out of print for a long time,but check here amazon.com/…

            – sam
            Feb 27 at 1:12






          • 1





            +1 for Piskei Hilchos Shabbos. I loved that when I was younger, and as I grew, I enjoyed the Hebrew section in the back.

            – user6591
            Feb 28 at 3:03











          • It's great,but I think it is very strict for many things .

            – sam
            Feb 28 at 3:04

















          Do you know where I can buy the set? @sam

          – Moshe
          Feb 27 at 1:07





          Do you know where I can buy the set? @sam

          – Moshe
          Feb 27 at 1:07













          It's out of print for a long time,but check here amazon.com/…

          – sam
          Feb 27 at 1:12





          It's out of print for a long time,but check here amazon.com/…

          – sam
          Feb 27 at 1:12




          1




          1





          +1 for Piskei Hilchos Shabbos. I loved that when I was younger, and as I grew, I enjoyed the Hebrew section in the back.

          – user6591
          Feb 28 at 3:03





          +1 for Piskei Hilchos Shabbos. I loved that when I was younger, and as I grew, I enjoyed the Hebrew section in the back.

          – user6591
          Feb 28 at 3:03













          It's great,but I think it is very strict for many things .

          – sam
          Feb 28 at 3:04





          It's great,but I think it is very strict for many things .

          – sam
          Feb 28 at 3:04











          4














          The 39 Melochos by Rabbi Dovid Ribiat. I haven't used it that often myself, but in my experience of observing others this seems to be one of the most, if not the most, highly regarded English books about the laws of Shabbos. The few times that I have used it it seemed to do a good job of laying out the concepts and providing the relevant sources.






          share|improve this answer





















          • 1





            However you really need the Hebrew footnotes in the back. In the front he sometimes oversimplifies the concepts. (For halacha lemaaseh the front is probably fine.)

            – Heshy
            Feb 26 at 23:43











          • See also comments to judaism.stackexchange.com/a/742/170

            – msh210
            Feb 27 at 0:46






          • 3





            Also most of the leneinces are in the Hebrew footnotes

            – sam
            Feb 27 at 0:52
















          4














          The 39 Melochos by Rabbi Dovid Ribiat. I haven't used it that often myself, but in my experience of observing others this seems to be one of the most, if not the most, highly regarded English books about the laws of Shabbos. The few times that I have used it it seemed to do a good job of laying out the concepts and providing the relevant sources.






          share|improve this answer





















          • 1





            However you really need the Hebrew footnotes in the back. In the front he sometimes oversimplifies the concepts. (For halacha lemaaseh the front is probably fine.)

            – Heshy
            Feb 26 at 23:43











          • See also comments to judaism.stackexchange.com/a/742/170

            – msh210
            Feb 27 at 0:46






          • 3





            Also most of the leneinces are in the Hebrew footnotes

            – sam
            Feb 27 at 0:52














          4












          4








          4







          The 39 Melochos by Rabbi Dovid Ribiat. I haven't used it that often myself, but in my experience of observing others this seems to be one of the most, if not the most, highly regarded English books about the laws of Shabbos. The few times that I have used it it seemed to do a good job of laying out the concepts and providing the relevant sources.






          share|improve this answer















          The 39 Melochos by Rabbi Dovid Ribiat. I haven't used it that often myself, but in my experience of observing others this seems to be one of the most, if not the most, highly regarded English books about the laws of Shabbos. The few times that I have used it it seemed to do a good job of laying out the concepts and providing the relevant sources.







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Feb 26 at 23:39

























          answered Feb 26 at 23:25









          AlexAlex

          21.5k153127




          21.5k153127








          • 1





            However you really need the Hebrew footnotes in the back. In the front he sometimes oversimplifies the concepts. (For halacha lemaaseh the front is probably fine.)

            – Heshy
            Feb 26 at 23:43











          • See also comments to judaism.stackexchange.com/a/742/170

            – msh210
            Feb 27 at 0:46






          • 3





            Also most of the leneinces are in the Hebrew footnotes

            – sam
            Feb 27 at 0:52














          • 1





            However you really need the Hebrew footnotes in the back. In the front he sometimes oversimplifies the concepts. (For halacha lemaaseh the front is probably fine.)

            – Heshy
            Feb 26 at 23:43











          • See also comments to judaism.stackexchange.com/a/742/170

            – msh210
            Feb 27 at 0:46






          • 3





            Also most of the leneinces are in the Hebrew footnotes

            – sam
            Feb 27 at 0:52








          1




          1





          However you really need the Hebrew footnotes in the back. In the front he sometimes oversimplifies the concepts. (For halacha lemaaseh the front is probably fine.)

          – Heshy
          Feb 26 at 23:43





          However you really need the Hebrew footnotes in the back. In the front he sometimes oversimplifies the concepts. (For halacha lemaaseh the front is probably fine.)

          – Heshy
          Feb 26 at 23:43













          See also comments to judaism.stackexchange.com/a/742/170

          – msh210
          Feb 27 at 0:46





          See also comments to judaism.stackexchange.com/a/742/170

          – msh210
          Feb 27 at 0:46




          3




          3





          Also most of the leneinces are in the Hebrew footnotes

          – sam
          Feb 27 at 0:52





          Also most of the leneinces are in the Hebrew footnotes

          – sam
          Feb 27 at 0:52



          Popular posts from this blog

          How to send String Array data to Server using php in android

          Title Spacing in Bjornstrup Chapter, Removing Chapter Number From Contents

          Is anime1.com a legal site for watching anime?