5

We know that the Gemara darshens the laws of Purim from Yom Kippur. If so why are we not obligated to fast on Purim?

יליף פורים פורים מיום הכפורים


This question is Purim Torah and is not intended to be taken completely seriously. See the Purim Torah policy.

4 Answers 4

5

The אחרים answer that the obligation isn't to fast but rather to afflict ourselves as the verse in Leviticus (23:27) states "On the tenth of the seventh month...You shall afflict yourselves". We fulfill this by "killing" ourselves whilst lying unconscious drunk. (As per the Seder Hayom)

5

We do not decree what the people won't follow, which is why we do not have two days of Yom Kippur in the diaspora even though we do for Rosh Hashana a few days earlier and Sukkot a few days later. It would be too dangerous to fast for 49 hours and the people wouldn't do it.

Fasting, we know, is something people can do, so you would think it would be required on Purim which is like (ki) Yom Kippur(im). However, as anybody who learned this lesson the hard way knows, drinking to the point of drunkenness on an empty stomach is a terrible idea. You thought you were afflicting yourself on Yom Kippur? That would be nothing compared to the morning after Purim.

If the rabbis required the fast then either people would ignore the fast or they would not drink. Drinking is more important, so we opt for that.

L'chayim!

2
  • I thought of that but we are dealing with Biblical precepts!! :) As such the principle of the unbearable decree is inoperative.
    – mevaqesh
    Commented Feb 19, 2015 at 3:09
  • Fasting on Yom Kippur is a biblical precept too, though. And yet we ease up on the strict interpretation of it. Or are you saying that yom tov sheni is the weak point here? Commented Feb 19, 2015 at 3:12
3

The question is answered in reverse by the achrei achronim. They point out that the gezeirah shava could work in the other direction -- why don't we feast on Y"K? The answer is in the name of the day, it is only "k"purim, like Purim. In what way is it different? Vnahafoch hu, in that everything is different!

1
  • That is going to be my next question...just wait.
    – mevaqesh
    Commented Feb 19, 2015 at 1:47
3

There's another g'zeira shava comparing "בתשעה לחדש בערב" (Vayikra 23:32, "on the ninth of the month in the evening") to "בערב היא באה" (Esther 2:14, "in the evening she would come") which compares Purim to Erev Yom Kippur. Just as eating on Erev Yom Kippur is a mitzva, so too is eating on Purim a mitzva.

Furthermore, just as eating on Erev Yom Kippur is equivalent to fasting on both Yom Kippur and Erev Yom Kippur (B'rachos 8b)1, so is Purim equivalent to fasting on Yom Kippur, Erev Yom Kippur, and Purim itself. Thus, by eating and feasting on Purim, we commemorate the three day fast of the Jews in the time of Esther (Esther 4:16).


1 כל האוכל ושותה בתשיעי מעלה עליו הכתוב כאילו מתענה תשיעי ועשירי

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged .