Ask The Rabbi...
June 25, 1994 Issue #27

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This edition contains:
1.  How do you keep Shabbat in a place where the sun always shines?
2.  Is man intrinsically evil?

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Peter Spill from England wrote:

>Dear Rabbi,
>
>When I was in Helsinki in the summer months it virtually never got dark 
>and I had trouble getting to sleep.  I asked myself the question:  "What 
>happens on Shabbat if it never gets dark.  How does one determine when 
>Shabbat goes out?"  My Rabbi told me that Shabbat is not technically over 
>until three stars have come out. I asked this question of four Rabbis in 
>my home town and none of them could give me an answer. 


* * * * * * * * * * * 

Dear Peter,

The Talmud defines "night" as the period of time that begins with "Tzeit 
Hakochavim" (when stars are visible).  The Shulchan Aruch qualifies by 
stating that you must be able to see 3 small stars.  This is further 
qualified by halachic authorities who rule that the sighting of stars 
constitutes night only if there is no red glow that follows sunset.  [One 
of my sons recently came in on a Saturday evening and told me that he saw 3 
stars so Shabbat was over. I looked out the window and it was clearly light 
outside.  Puzzled, I asked him where he saw the stars.  He told me that he 
had just tripped and bumped his head, and saw them right in front of his 
eyes :-) ].  

So what happens in a place where the sky never darkens?  The problem here 
is not that the day never ends, but that we cannot tell when the day has 
ended because there is no Tzeit Hakochavim.  Therefore:
a.  You begin Shabbat after sunset (even though there is no darkening of 
    the sky for the few minutes that the sun sinks below the horizon).
b.  Kiddush for Friday "night" needs to be recited before 
    "halachic-midnight." Halachic-midnight is at twelve 60-minute 
    hours after the time that the sun was directly overhead.
c.  After midnight it is certainly Shabbat and the "light" is considered 
    "morning."  Since you are not allowed to make kiddush in the morning 
    until after Shacharit, if you did not say kiddush by now (because the 
    sun did not "set" below the horizon until after midnight), then you 
    would not say it until after Shacharit.
d.  You continue to refrain from weekday activities until Saturday night 
    after midnight -- by then Shabbat is certainly over. 
e.  Here again you first pray weekday Shacharit, and then recite Havdallah.  
    This is because you are not allowed to make Havdallah in the morning 
    before Shacharit.

After doing this, you'll probably want to plan your next visit to Helsinki 
for the springtime instead.

Sources:
o  Talmud - Brachot 2a, Shabbat 35 and Megillah 20.
o  Shulchan Aruch - Orach Chaim 293:2.
o  Rabbi Yisroel Meir Kagen - Biur Halacha, Orach Chaim 293:2.
o  My son Sruli.
o  Rabbi Harfenes in the book "Yisroel VeHazmanim", section 21.

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Bryan at Columbia University writes:

>Does the fact that we have a Yetzer Hara mean that Man is 
>intrinsically evil? 

* * * * * * * * * * * 

Dear Bryan,

The Yetzer Hara is commonly translated as the "Evil inclination."  Rabbi 
Moshe Chaim Luzzatto (the Ramchal) in "The Way of G-d" describes the role 
of the Yetzer Hara in man's quest for perfection.

    "Man is the creature created for the purpose of being drawn close to 
    G-d.  He is placed between perfection and deficiency, with the power to
    earn perfection.  Man must earn this perfection, however, through his
    own free will...

    Man's inclinations are therefore balanced between good [Yetzer Hatov]
    and evil [Yetzer Hara], and he is not compelled toward either of them.
    He has the power of choice and is able to choose either side knowingly
    and willingly..."

The Ramchal explains that this balance existed prior to the sin of Adam.
After his sin, however, he became more inclined to listen to the wiles of 
his Yetzer Hara.  His job is now two-fold:  First, he must even the balance 
between the spiritual and the physical.  Then, he can work to perfect his 
soul until his spiritual so overwhelms the physical that the physical 
becomes elevated to its level of perfection.
	 
The Yetzer Hara is an inclination to "stray," but Man has the wherewithal 
to overcome it.  The pull of the Yetzer Hara is the more powerful of the 
two inclinations, but is by no means impossible to conquer. 

The Torah states: 

    "G-d said to Cain, 'Why are you so furious? Why are you depressed?  If
     you do good, will there not be special privilege?  And if you do not
     do good, sin is crouching at the door.  It lusts after you but you can
     dominate it.'"

And  the Talmud tells us how:

    "So said the Holy One, blessed be he, to Israel: 'My son I created the
     Yetzer Hara and I created for it the Torah as an antidote. If you toil
     in Torah you will not be handed over into his hands...'"
 
Sources:
o  Rabbi Moshe Chaim Luzzatto - The Way of G-d, 
   translated by Rabbi Aryeh Kaplan, Feldheim Publishers.
o  The Book of Genesis, 4:6-7, 
   [translation by Rabbi Aryeh Kaplan in "The Living Torah", 
   Moznaim Publishing Company]. 
o  The Talmud - Tractate Kiddushin, p.30b.

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