At Home in Torah

Judaism's sacred texts are a refuge and a place to grow.

Why does the Torah begin with the letter bet? The question receives many answers in Jewish tradition. One common answer is that since bet is the second letter, it shows there is no true beginning to study, it is an everlasting enterprise. Elie Wiesel answers it this way: “Bet is a house [both because of its shape and because it begins the word Bayit, home]… The Book of Books is a shelter, a dwelling place. A place in which men and women laugh and weep, read and write, work and sleep. A place in which people love one another before they start quarreling — or the other way around. In other words, it is a home.”

To study Torah is to enter a world in which we can be at home. Like home it invites us to reenter, again and again. Like home, it is sometimes uncomfortable, too close or suddenly alien to us. Like home, at times it forces us to live with people who irritate or upset us. But always it calls us back. It is both a spur and a refuge. Study Torah. Come home.

Rabbi David Wolpe’s musings are shared in My Jewish Learning’s Shabbat newsletter, Recharge, a weekly collection of readings to refresh your soul. Sign up to receive the newsletter.

Discover More

What Our Adversaries Teach 

Judaism teaches us to learn from our enemies.

A Final Musing, With Thanks

After 30 years, Rabbi David Wolpe shares his final column.

Thoughts and Prayers

Don't be confused about the function of Jewish prayer.