Pisqa’ 1351
1
“Then, on the seventh day—it is a Closure-festival 2 for HASHEM your God . . .
your shall do no productive work”3 (Dt.16:8-21).
Rabbi says:
is it possible to say that
a person should be cloistered (`atzur)4 with the disciple-circle
for the entire day?
The Teaching states:
“Count for yourselves . . . seven complete weeks” (Lv.23:15)5—
[for yourselves implies that leisure is permitted on a Festival]!
Is it possible to say that
a person should eat and drink
for the entire day?
The Teaching states:
“It is a Closure-festival for HASHEM your God” (Dt.16:8).
Well now—how is this done?
Devote part of the day to the disciple-circle,
and part of the day to eating and drinking!
2
R. Ishmael says:
Since we have nowhere learned
that the Common-festival days6
are prohibited for productive work,
on what basis do we know that
the Common-festival days
are prohibited for productive work?
The Teaching states:
“Six days shall you eat unleavened-bread;
then, on the seventh day—it is a Closure-festival”7 (Dt.16:8)—
is it possible to say that
just as you are entirely closeted-in on the seventh day,
you should also be entirely closeted-in on the sixth day?8
Or [perhaps this is the proper inference]:
just as you cease productive work on the seventh day,
you should also cease productive work on the sixth day?
The Teaching states:
“Six days shall you eat unleavened-bread,
then, on the seventh day—it is a Closure-festival for HASHEM your God” (Dt.16:8).
Thus, the seventh day is closed-down for all productive work,
but the sixth day is not closed-down for all productive work.9
So we see that
Scripture transmits to sages alone
[the right to legislate]
which day is prohibited for productive work
and which day is permitted;
which type of work is prohibited
and which type of work is permitted.
- H:177-178; JN1:326-327.
- In rabbinic parlance, the term `Atzeret refers exclusively to the early summer festival of Shavuot (also known as the “First-fruits festival”). The Closure-festivals associated in the Bible with the last day of Passover (Dt.16:8) and the Festival of Huts (Lv. 23:36) have generally been assimilated, by name, to the preceding Common-festival days, despite still being counted as formal days of rest, on which many forms of labor are proscribed.
- RH includes Dt.16:21 in the quotation. This clarifies the point of the exegesis.
- Note the assonance with `Atzeret.
- Commentators dispute precisely which verse is cited. Candidates include: Lv. 23:36 and Nu. 29:35, each of which uses the words “for yourselves” (lakhem) in the context of festival legislation.
- Heb: yemei mo`ed. This refers to the intermediate days between the festival days of Sukkot and Passover. In rabbinic custom these are days of semi-rest. See M. M.Q. 3:1-4.
- Cf. Mechilta Ishmael, paskha’,. 9.
- //Sifre Nu. 151
- //Sifra, ‘emor, par. 12:4.