A stability cell is a subset of the configuration space (C-space) of a set of actively controlled rigid bodies (e.g., a whole-arm manipulator) in contact with a passive body (e.g., a manipulated object) in which the contact state is guaranteed to be stable under the influence of Coulomb friction and external forces, A first-order stability cell is a subset of a stability cell with the following two properties: first, the state of contact uniquely determines the rate of change of the object's configuration given the rate of change of the manipulator's configuration; and second, the contact state cannot be altered by any infinitesimal variation in the generalized applied force. First-order stability cells can be used in planning whole-arm manipulation tasks in a manner analogous to the use of free-space cells in planning collision-free paths: a connectivity graph is constructed and searched for a path connecting the initial and goal configurations, A path through a free-space connectivity graph represents a motion plan that can be executed without fear of collisions, while a path through a stability-cell connectivity graph represents a whole-arm manipulation plan that can be executed without fear of ''dropping'' the object. The main contribution of this paper is the conceptual and analytical development of first-order stability cells of three-dimensional, rigid-body systems as conjunctions of equations and inequalities in the C-space variables, Additionally, our derivation leads to a new quasi-static jamming condition that takes into account the planned motion and kinematic structure of the active bodies.