Halacha for Wednesday 27 Sivan 5784 July 3 2024

Question: May one take a shower on Shabbat?

Answer: In the previous Halacha, we have explained that according to Maran Rabbeinu Ovadia Yosef zt”l, one may use hot water heated by a solar water heater (common in Israel) to wash one’s hands, dishes, and the like. However, washing one’s entire body (or even a majority of one’s body) with hot water is forbidden on Shabbat. Even if the water was heated before the onset of Shabbat and even if was heated by a solar water heater, there is nevertheless a rabbinic enactment prohibiting the washing of the majority of one’s body with hot water on Shabbat based on the Baraita (Shabbat 39b). The Gemara there explains that the reason for this enactment was because originally, it was customary to bathe in hot water on Shabbat and as a result of this, the Sages saw that the bathhouse attendants would transgress several prohibitions and desecrate the Shabbat in order to heat the water at which point they then decreed that it was forbidden to bathe in hot water on Shabbat. As a result, all bathing in hot water became forbidden, even if the water has been heated in a permissible manner, such as before the onset of Shabbat or by a solar water heater. Even if one does not wash one’s entire body at once and merely does so part by part, this is nevertheless forbidden. Nonetheless, washing only a small portion of one’s body is permissible when using water heated before the onset of Shabbat or water heated by a solar water heater, as we have explained in the previous Halacha. However, it is completely forbidden to use water heated by an electric or gas (with a pilot, common in the United States) boiler on Shabbat because of the prohibition of cooking on Shabbat.

Thus, if a woman must immerse in the Mikveh on Shabbat night and the water in the Mikveh is hot and she can neither immerse in such water on Shabbat because of the rabbinic enactment prohibiting bathing in hot water nor before the onset of Shabbat (as one must wait until night following the seventh clean day to immerse), according to Maran Rabbeinu Ovadia Yosef zt”l, such a woman must immerse during twilight of Friday evening, i.e. any time between sunset and approximately thirteen and a half seasonal minutes past sunset, for there is still considered a doubt during this time whether or not Shabbat has begun. Since the prohibition to bathe in hot water on Shabbat is not a Torah prohibition and is merely rabbinic, there is room to allow doing so during this time span during which a doubt still exists as to whether or not Shabbat has entered. This is indeed the most halachically preferable solution to immersing in a Mikveh on Shabbat night. When Maran zt”l first issued this ruling many years ago, it was still customary for woman to only immerse in the Mikveh on Friday evening after the period of twilight and the Mikveh attendants would not allow women to immerse during twilight. Maran zt”l went from place to place and from city to city where he proceeded to summon the various Mikveh attendants and instructed them to allow women (primarily Sephardic women) to immerse in the Mikveh at this time so that they would not be forced to immerse in hot water on Shabbat. Thank G-d, Maran zt”l’s ruling has spread all over the world regarding this issue and the vast majority of Mikveh attendants, especially in communities where there is a large contingency of Sephardic Jews, allow women to immerse in the Mikveh on Friday evening immediately following sunset and as a result, women who need to do so avoid any unnecessary halachic problems. Nevertheless, if for whatever reason a woman was unable to immerse in a hot Mikveh during the time of twilight on Friday evening, Maran zt”l rules that this is not reason enough to push off her immersion to a different night and she may act leniently and immerse in the Mikveh even after the time of twilight has passed since there is no other alternative.

Important Note: Based on the above, although there is room for leniency for Ashkenazi men to immerse in a hot Mikveh on Shabbat, according to the Sephardic and Middle Eastern tradition, there is absolutely no room to allow men to immerse in a hot Mikveh on Shabbat due to the rabbinic enactment forbidding bathing in hot water. If a Sephardic man wishes to immerse in a Mikveh on Shabbat, he may do so only in a Mikveh where the water is cold (as we shall discuss in further in the following Halacha).

In the following Halachot, we shall discuss whether or not certain individuals may act leniently and wash their bodies with hot water on Shabbat.

8 Halachot Most Popular

The Laws of Hearing Parashat Zachor- A Special Sermon

“Remember What Amalek Has Done to You” On the Shabbat preceding Purim, which is this coming Shabbat, after the opening of the Ark immediately following Shacharit prayers, two Sifrei Torah are removed; in the first one, we read the weekly Parasha (which is Parashat Tetzaveh this year, 57......

Read Halacha

Parashat Ki Tissa - Shabbat Purim Meshulash 5785

From HaGaon Rav Zevadia HaCohen Shlit”a, The Head of the Batei Din in Tel Aviv (translated by our dear friend Rav Daniel Levy Shlit”a, Leeds UK) Explaining Why the Jewish People Were Punished so Harshly for Eating Non-Kosher Food at Achashverosh’s Feast This year, 5785, the ......

Read Halacha

Arriving Late to or Skipping Some Portions of the Megillah Reading

Every member of the Jewish nation is obligated to read the Megillah on the day of Purim. One must read it during the night and once again the next day, as the verse states, “My G-d, I call out to you during the day, and you do not answer; during the night I have no rest.” This verse is w......

Read Halacha

The Laws of Bowing During the Amida Prayer-Continued

In the previous Halacha we have discussed the basic laws of bowing during the Amida prayer, i.e. at the beginning and end of the “Magen Avraham” and “Modim” blessings. We have likewise explained the proper way to bow. Let us now discuss whether or not the custom that many hav......

Read Halacha


The Custom of the “Commemoration of the Half-Shekel”- The Seventh of Adar

In the beginning of Parashat Ki-Tisa, which we read again not long ago for Parashat Shekalim, the Torah commands the Jewish nation to donate a Half-Shekel during the times when the Bet Hamikdash stood. This Mitzvah was auspicious in that it protected the Jewish nation from all plague; indeed, the......

Read Halacha

Parashat Terumah and Parashat Shekalim

From HaGaon Rav Zevadia HaCohen Shlit”a, The Head of the Batei Din in Tel Aviv (translated by our dear friend Rav Daniel Levy Shlit”a, Leeds UK) Will We Be Like the Cherubs above the Ark of Testimony, Like Pure and Innocent Children, Or Like the Destructive Angels Guarding Gan Eden? ......

Read Halacha

The Laws of Concentration During the Amida Prayer - The Laws of Bowing During the Amida Prayer

Question: At what points of the Amida should one bow and what is the correct method of bowing? Answer: Our Sages that one should bow several times during the Amida prayer. The blessings during which one must bow within the Amida are as follows: At the beginning and end of the “Magen Avra......

Read Halacha

Mincha Prayer on the Fast of the Tenth of Tevet

By popular request: This year when the Fast of the Tenth of Tevet coincides with Erev Shabbat, what is the best time for Mincha prayers to be held? The Custom Throughout the Year In general, Mincha on Friday afternoons is held in the synagogue approximately twenty minutes before sunset, after wh......

Read Halacha