Shabbat Shalom and Chag Sameach — may this Friday's candles meet the menorah's flames in a quiet, perfect chorus.
Hanukkah Wishes Shabbat Shalom
Send your friends and family Hanukkah wishes and blessings. From festive songs to meaningful Shabbat and Shalom salutations, find unique and inspiring words to commemorate this joyous occasion.
Wishing you a Hanukkah Shabbat where the challah is warm, the wine is poured slow, and the room hums with belonging.
May the eighth candle and the Sabbath candles share the same windowsill and the same blessing on your behalf.
Shabbat Shalom — may rest find you tonight as gently as oil finds a wick, and stay through every lit hour.
Here's to the rare grace of Hanukkah falling on Shabbat — double light, double blessings, double the hush at dusk.
May your home tonight smell of latkes and challah at once, and your heart hold gratitude enough for both.
Wishing you a Shabbat Shalom where the dreidel rests beside the kiddush cup, both holy in their own quiet way.
May the songs you sing tonight — Hanerot Halalu, Shalom Aleichem — braid together into one long, gentle prayer.
Shabbat Shalom and Chag Urim Sameach — may the lights you kindle outlast the week and warm the one ahead.
Here's to candles lit before sunset, blessings spoken without rush, and family who arrived early just to help.
May this Hanukkah Shabbat ease whatever the week wore down and replace it with something quieter and stronger.
Wishing you the deep peace of a Friday that's also a festival — fewer demands, more presence, slower bites.
Shabbat Shalom — may the menorah and the Shabbat candles flicker like two hands holding yours through winter.
May the rest of Shabbat soften you and the joy of Hanukkah brighten you — both at once, in the same breath.
Here's to a table set for both — kiddush cup and dreidel, challah and sufganiyot, prayer and laughter overlapping.
Wishing you a Shabbat Shalom rich in candlelight, song, and the kind of silence that says everything's all right.
May your Friday night feel doubly sacred this week — and may you feel doubly grateful for everyone around it.
Shabbat Shalom and Happy Hanukkah — may both blessings rest on your shoulders gently, the way they were meant to.
Here's to two sets of flames whispering the same thing: you are loved, you are held, you are home.
May the Shabbat queen meet the Hanukkah miracle at your door and stay long past havdalah's first star.
Wishing you peace tonight — the deliberate kind that comes from lighting things slowly and meaning every word.
Shabbat Shalom — may your soul this evening feel like the menorah's reflection in the window: warm, multiplied, calm.
Here's to a Hanukkah Shabbat where nobody checks the time and everyone notices the light a little longer.
May the blessings spoken over wine and candles tonight settle deep — into bones, into rooms, into next week's worries.
Wishing you a Shabbat Shalom of singing children, full plates, and grandparents quietly pleased with how it all turned out.