Have Questions or Comments?
Leave us some feedback and we'll reply back!

    Your Name (required)

    Your Email (required)

    Phone Number)

    In Reference to

    Your Message


    BERESHIT: G-D’S SIGNATURE

    Whenever an author
    or artist completes
    his work, he makes
    a point of appending
    his signature to the work. Somewhere
    on the title page of a book or a corner
    of a painting, we will find the author’s
    signature.
    In Parashat Bereshit, right at the
    beginning of the Torah, G-d puts His
    “signature” on the world’s creation.
    Our Sages tell us, “Hotamo Shel
    Ha’kadosh Baruch Hu Emet” – G-d’s
    signature is “Emet” – truth. The final
    letters of the first three words of the
    Torah – “Bereshit Bara Elokim” – are
    “Tav,” “Alef” and “Mem” – the letters
    of “Emet.” And the final three words
    of the creation story – “Bara Elokim
    La’asot” – likewise end with “Alef,”
    “Mem” and “Tav,” again spelling
    “Emet.”
    The centrality of “Emet” might also
    explain the reason why the Torah
    begins with the letter “Bet,” rather

    than with the first letter of the alphabet
    – “Alef” – as we might have expected.
    The numerical value of “Emet” is 441,
    and when we add the digits (4+4+1) –
    a system called “Mispar Katan” – we
    arrive at 9. “Sheker” (“falsehood”),
    meanwhile, has the numerical value
    of 600, which results in a “Mispar
    Katan” of 6. When we add together
    the first three numbers – 1+2+3 – we
    arrive at 6, and we arrive at this sum
    when we add every series of three
    letters after that. For example, 4+5+6
    equals 15, and the combined value of
    the digits is 6. Likewise, when we
    add 7+8+9, we arrive at 24, and the
    two digits combine to equal 6, and so
    forth. But if we start at the number
    2, every three numbers combine to
    equal 9. Thus, 2+3+4=9, and then
    5+6+7=18, and the two digits of 18
    combine to equal 9, and so on. Hence,
    the Torah begins with the second letter,
    “Bet,” which has the numerical value
    of 2, rather than “Alef,” which has the
    value of 1, because 1 begins a process

    of “Sheker” (6),
    whereas 2 begins the
    process of “Emet”
    (9).
    The Torah is the
    only purely “true”
    book, because it
    was written by the
    Almighty, whose
    signature is truth.
    There is no other
    book in the world
    that we cannot
    question at all. Even honest and
    reputable publications contain errors.
    I recall once a local publication ran
    a story about a brief, three-day trip
    that I once took. I assume this wasn’t
    intentional, but the article was riddled
    with mistakes and inaccuracies.
    Anything we ever read or hear must be
    taken with some degree of skepticism,
    because the writer or speaker is flawed
    and imperfect, and any information
    he conveys reflects, to one degree

    or another, his personal biases and
    agendas. But the Torah is perfectly
    true. We can and must accept every
    single word fully, wholeheartedly and
    unhesitatingly.
    Each year, when we start the Torah
    anew, we must recognize how
    fortunate we are to be able to study
    and practice the ultimate truth, the
    Torah, which expresses the wisdom
    of the Master of the world, whose
    signature is “Emet.”