Studying Torah in the Synagogue

Yet I have been to them as a little sanctuary [in the countries where they have come] (Ezekiel 11:16). R. Isaac said: This [is referring to] the synagogues and study halls in Babylonia. And R. Eleazar said: This [is referring to] the house of our master, [i.e., Rav,] in Babylonia, [from which Torah issues forth to the entire world].

Rava interpreted [a verse] homiletically: What is [the meaning of that] which is written: Lord, You have been our dwelling place [in all generations] (Psalm 90:1)? This [is referring to] the synagogues and study halls. Abaye said: Initially, I used to study [Torah] in [my] home and pray in the synagogue. Once I heard [and understood] that which [King] David says: Lord, I love the habitation of Your house (Psalm 26:8), I would [always] study [Torah] in the synagogue, [to express my love for the place in which the Divine Presence resides].

It is taught [in a baraita]: R. Eleazar ha-Kappar says: In the future, the synagogues and the study halls in Babylonia will be [transported and] reestablished in Erets Yisrael, as it is stated: Surely, like Tabor among the mountains, and like Carmel by the sea, so shall he come (Jeremiah 46:18). [There is a tradition that these mountains came to Sinai at the giving of the Torah and demanded that the Torah should be given upon them.] And are [these] matters not [inferred through an] a fortiori [argument]: Just as Tabor and Carmel, which came only momentarily to study Torah, were [relocated and] established in Erets Yisrael [in reward for their actions], all the more so [should] the synagogues and study halls [in Babylonia], in which the Torah is read and disseminated, [be relocated to Erets Yisrael].

Translation adapted from the Noé Edition of the Koren Talmud Bavli.

Credits

From Koren Talmud Bavli, Noé Edition, trans. Adin Even-Israel Steinsaltz (Jerusalem: Koren Publishers Jerusalem, 2019). Accessed via the William Davidson digital edition, sefaria.org. Adapted with permission of Koren Publishers Ltd.

Published in: The Posen Library of Jewish Culture and Civilization, vol. 2: Emerging Judaism.

Engage with this Source

Upon the destruction of the Temple (Hebrew sing., mikdash) in Jerusalem—the dwelling place of God’s presence—where did God’s presence go? The rabbis in b. Megillah 29a suggest that it relocated to local synagogues and study houses (sing., bet midrash), which became “small sanctuaries” (pl., mikdashim) wherein God’s presence rests. This shift reveals a rabbinic innovation: rather than concentrate divine worship within a single sacred site, the rabbis expanded it into local communities, making it possible for Jewish life to flourish after the Temple’s destruction while also asserting rabbinic authority over local centers of prayer and study. This text shows how the rabbis redesignated sacred space in a world without the Temple, extending it beyond the boundaries of Jerusalem.

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