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Glossary›Torah

Glossary

Torah

The foundational text of Judaism, comprising the Five Books of Moses and serving as the written law and divine instruction given at Mount Sinai.

What is Torah?

Torah refers to the Five Books of Moses—Genesis (Bereshit), Exodus (Shemot), Leviticus (Vayikra), Numbers (Bamidbar), and Deuteronomy (Devarim)—which constitute the foundational sacred text of Judaism. In its narrowest sense, Torah denotes this written scripture, believed by traditional Jews to have been revealed by God to Moses at Mount Sinai around the 13th century BCE. In broader usage, Torah encompasses both the Written Law (Torah she-bi-khtav) and the Oral Law (Torah she-ba’al peh), which includes rabbinic interpretations compiled in the Mishnah and Talmud. The term can extend further to encompass all Jewish law, teaching, and wisdom.

The Torah scroll (Sefer Torah) used in synagogue worship is handwritten on parchment by a specially trained scribe (sofer) following precise calligraphic and ritual requirements that have remained unchanged for centuries. It contains 304,805 Hebrew letters written without vowel points or punctuation, maintaining the ancient manuscript tradition.

Origins & Lineage

According to Jewish tradition, God gave the Torah to Moses on Mount Sinai following the Israelites’ exodus from Egypt, conventionally dated to the 13th century BCE during the Late Bronze Age. The receiving of the Torah occurred in the third month after the exodus, an event commemorated annually during the festival of Shavuot. Moses then transcribed the divine revelation over the subsequent forty years in the wilderness.

Historical-critical scholarship, emerging in the 19th century, proposes the Documentary Hypothesis, which suggests the Torah was compiled from multiple textual sources (designated J, E, D, and P) between the 10th and 5th centuries BCE, with final redaction occurring during or after the Babylonian exile (586-538 BCE). This academic perspective coexists with traditional religious belief, creating ongoing scholarly and theological dialogue.

The Masoretes, Jewish scribal scholars working between the 6th and 10th centuries CE in Tiberias and Babylon, standardized the Hebrew text and developed the system of vowel points (niqqud) and cantillation marks (te’amim) still used today. The oldest complete Torah manuscript, the Leningrad Codex, dates to 1008 CE, though fragments from the Dead Sea Scrolls (dated 3rd century BCE to 1st century CE) contain portions of every Torah book except Esther.

How It’s Practiced

Torah study (Talmud Torah) is considered a paramount commandment in Judaism. Traditional practice involves reading the entire Torah publicly over an annual cycle (or triennial cycle in some communities), with designated portions (parashiyot) read each Sabbath. On Mondays, Thursdays, and Sabbath afternoons, shorter selections are chanted from the scroll using a specialized cantillation system that has preserved pronunciation and musical tradition for over a millennium.

In synagogue services, the Torah scroll is ceremonially removed from the ark (aron kodesh), processed through the congregation, and read from a raised platform (bimah). A trained reader (ba’al kriah) chants the Hebrew text without vowels, while congregants follow along. At least seven people are called up (aliyot) to recite blessings before and after sections are read.

Daily Torah study takes multiple forms: close textual analysis of the original Hebrew; study of classical commentaries by scholars such as Rashi (1040-1105), Ibn Ezra (1089-1167), and Nahmanides (1194-1270); and exploration of mystical interpretations found in Kabbalistic works like the Zohar. Yeshivas (traditional academies) structure entire curricula around intensive Torah and Talmud study, often engaging in chavruta—paired learning where students debate and analyze texts together.

Torah Today

Contemporary seekers encounter Torah through diverse channels. Adult education programs in synagogues offer weekly classes exploring Torah portions through traditional and contemporary lenses. Online platforms provide daily Torah study podcasts, video lectures, and text study apps translating ancient commentary for modern audiences. Organizations like Mechon Hadar, Pardes Institute, and Hadar Institute offer immersive learning programs for students at all levels.

Interfaith communities increasingly engage with Torah as part of Abrahamic dialogue, recognizing its influence on Christianity and Islam. Academic settings approach Torah through religious studies, Near Eastern archaeology, and comparative literature departments. Jewish Renewal and Neo-Hasidic movements emphasize mystical and spiritual dimensions of Torah study, often incorporating meditation and contemplative practices.

Artistic interpretations proliferate: calligraphers create illuminated Torah verses, musicians compose settings for traditional chants, and contemporary midrash (interpretive storytelling) reimagines biblical narratives through feminist, ecological, and social justice frameworks.

Common Misconceptions

Torah is not synonymous with the entire Hebrew Bible—the Tanakh includes Torah (Five Books), Nevi’im (Prophets), and Ketuvim (Writings). Many conflate “Old Testament” with Torah, but these are distinct categories with different canonical arrangements and emphases.

Torah study is not limited to rabbis or scholars; it remains a practice accessible to all Jews regardless of gender, age, or education level, though historical access has varied by community and era. The text is not primarily a historical document or simple rulebook—Jewish tradition emphasizes continuous interpretation, finding multiple layers of meaning (peshat, remez, derash, sod) within each verse.

Torah is not fixed in interpretation. The principle that “these and these are the words of the living God” (elu v’elu divrei Elohim chayim) acknowledges legitimate disagreement in understanding. The text does not provide explicit answers to most modern ethical questions, requiring ongoing interpretive work through established hermeneutical methods.

How to Begin

Start with a printed edition that includes translation and commentary. The Torah: A Modern Commentary (edited by W. Gunther Plaut) or The JPS Torah Commentary series provide scholarly annotations. For accessible narrative approach, consider Everett Fox’s The Five Books of Moses, which preserves Hebrew wordplay in English.

Attend a Sabbath morning service at a local synagogue to witness Torah reading and hear the weekly portion chanted. Many congregations welcome visitors and offer parallel study sessions. Explore online resources like Sefaria.org, which provides free access to Torah text with multiple English translations and classical commentaries in hyperlinked format.

Join a weekly Torah study group—many synagogues, JCCs, and Chabad centers offer open discussions requiring no prior knowledge. For structured learning, consider introductory courses through the Shalom Hartman Institute, Mechon Hadar’s digital offerings, or local adult education programs. Begin with one verse or story that intrigues you, reading multiple commentaries to discover the interpretive tradition’s richness.

Related terms

kabbalahtalmudmidrashshabbathebrew biblejewish mysticism
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