Torah study
Torah study, or Talmud Torah, constitutes the scholarly and devotional analysis of Judaism's core sacred texts, primarily the Written Torah—the Five Books of Moses—and the Oral Torah, including the Mishnah, Gemara forming the Talmud, and subsequent rabbinic commentaries such as the works of Rashi and the Tosafists.[1][2] This practice serves not merely as a means to comprehend divine law but as an intrinsic form of worship, embodying God's wisdom and guiding ethical and ritual observance.[1][2] Regarded as a paramount mitzvah, Torah study is prioritized in Jewish tradition above many other commandments, with rabbinic sources asserting its study leads to the fulfillment of all mitzvot and merits profound spiritual rewards, including preparation for the afterlife.[3][2] It demands rigorous dialectical methods, emphasizing debate, memorization, and application to daily life, fostering intellectual discipline and communal discourse.[1][3] Institutionally, Torah study occurs in yeshivas—dedicated academies for advanced Talmudic learning—whose origins trace to ancient Jewish centers in Babylonia and the Land of Israel, evolving into structured systems in medieval and modern Europe and beyond, where students engage in full-time immersion often from adolescence.[4][5] This tradition has preserved Jewish continuity amid historical dispersions and persecutions, while adapting to contemporary contexts without diluting its emphasis on textual fidelity and interpretive depth.[4][6]