Melechet Tzad
Posted onIn this Torah shiur on Hilchot Shabbat, Rabbi Shimon Isaacson begins teaching Hilchot Tzad, trapping or hunting, and its contemporary applications.
In this Torah shiur on Hilchot Shabbat, Rabbi Shimon Isaacson begins teaching Hilchot Tzad, trapping or hunting, and its contemporary applications.
In this Torah class (shiur) on the laws of Shabbat, Rabbi Shimon Isaacson presents both the theoretical principles and the practical applications of the prohibition of trapping on Shabbat.
In this shiur (Torah class) on Hilchot Shabbat, Rabbi Shimon Isaacson completes his survey of the prohibition of trapping any living thing of Shabbat, and its practical applications.
In this Torah class (shiur) on Hilchot Shabbat, Rabbi Shimon Isaacson introduces the halachic basis for the melacha, prohibited activity of tofer, sewing.
In this Torah shiur (class) on Hilchot Shabbat, Rabbi Shion Isaacson teaches the practical applications of the melacha of Tofer, sewing and attaching, and introduces the related melacha of korei’a, tearing.
In this Torah class (shiur) on Melechet Zoreia, planting, Rabbi Shimon Isaacson introduces the melacha, prohibited action, with a halachic definition of planting. According to some, zoreia is defined by merely placing seeds in the ground, while others posit that the seeds must take root for zoreia to take place.
In this Torah shiur (class) on Hilchot Shabbat, Rabbi Shimon Isaacson differentiates between the primary prohibition (av melacha) of zoreia and its toldot (subsidiaries).
In this Torah lecture (shiur) on Hilchot Shabbat, Rabbi Shimon Isaacson discusses the practical areas where the melacha of zoreia comes up on Shabbos.
In this Torah class (shiur) on Hilchot Shabbat, Rabbi Shimon Isaacson completes his overview of the prohibition of planting (zoreia) on Shabbat, and introduces the next melacha, the prohibition of harvesting (kotzer).