According To the Torah, is The 14th of Nisan, The First Day of The Passover a Work Day or Is It a No Work Day?

 



According To the Torah, is The 14th of Nisan, The First Day of The Passover a Work Day or Is It a No Work Day?



According to the Torah, the 14th of Nisan is not a full festival day in the sense of being a “no work” day like the first and last days of the festivals. It is primarily the day of preparation for Passover. Here’s the breakdown:

  1. Torah references:

    • Exodus 12:3–6: The Israelites were commanded to select the Passover lamb on the 10th of Nisan and keep it until the 14th.

    • Exodus 12:6: The lamb is to be slaughtered “at twilight” on the 14th.

    • Exodus 12:16: The first and seventh days of Passover are “holy convocations” (mikra kodesh), during which no ordinary work is to be done. The 14th itself is not included here.

  2. Practical implications:

    • The 14th of Nisan is a working day, but it is a day of preparation for the Passover sacrifice. People were expected to clean the house of chametz (leavened bread) and prepare the lamb.

    • Actual restrictions on work apply from the evening of the 14th onward, which is the beginning of the 15th of Nisan—the first day of the Feast of Unleavened Bread and the start of the festival proper.

Summary:

  • 14th of Nisan: Work day, day of preparation.

  • Evening of 14th → 15th of Nisan: Festival begins, no work day according to Torah.

So, the Torah treats the 14th as a preparatory day, not a prohibited work day. The real “no work” festival begins in the evening when the 15th of Nisan starts.





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