The oneg is like a giant dessert sometimes held after a Shabbat service. At my temple, they serve, coffee, lemonade, sugar cookies, brownies, and fruit.
Anyone can attend a Shabbat service. Sometimes people need a different perspective in order to answer the questions they are seeking. As long as you are respectful of the service, I dont see any reason why someone could not attend.
No - Havdalah is the service at the end of Shabbat.
The spice box is not actually passed around until the very end of Shabbat. It is passed around toward the end of the concluding service of Shabbat, called Havdalah. One tradition explains that on Shabbat, each person is given an extra soul. The passing of the spice box at the end of Shabbat makes the loss of this extra soul a little less painful.
They're called Shabbat candles (Neirot Shabbat in Hebrew).
Yes, I think so.
The phrase "oneg Shabbat" means literally "joy of Sabbath" in Hebrew and has come to refer to the period after the Shabbat evening service when many synagogues extend the kiddush after the service with additional food, lectures or other activities. Kiddush after a Shabbat service is, at minimum, just a blessing, a cup of wine, another blessing, and a bite of bread. Add coffee, tea, cookies, cakes, herring, sometimes a little schnapps, and perhaps a featured guest giving a little talk, you'd have a cocktail party if it was a secular event. In a synagogue, on Friday evening, it's an oneg.
The oneg lunch would be during Shabbat, but I've never heard of a Kaddish lunch.
The phrase "oneg Shabbat" means literally "joy of Sabbath" in Hebrew and has come to refer to the period after the Shabbat evening service when many synagogues extend the kiddush after the service with additional food, lectures or other activities. Kiddush after a Shabbat service is, at minimum, just a blessing, a cup of wine, another blessing, and a bite of bread. Add coffee, tea, cookies, cakes, herring, sometimes a little schnapps, and perhaps a featured guest giving a little talk, you'd have a cocktail party if it was a secular event. In a synagogue, on Friday evening, it's an oneg.
After Shabbat, there is the Havdalah service.
You spelled it correctly!
At a shabbat service at your home or at a synogauge you may light the shabbat candles and say the shabbat blessings. Also some people follow it with hallah and/or a kiddush.
Oneg the Prober was created in 1977.
The spice box is the box used for the Havdalah service after Shabbat.
A Shabbat service typically lasts around 1-2 hours, although this can vary depending on the specific customs and traditions of the synagogue or community holding the service.
Anyone can attend a Shabbat service. Sometimes people need a different perspective in order to answer the questions they are seeking. As long as you are respectful of the service, I dont see any reason why someone could not attend.
Havdallah is a religious service where we say goodbye to Shabbat (The Sabbath) for the week.
No - Havdalah is the service at the end of Shabbat.