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Torah Restoration Latter-day Saints

Restoring the Torah to the Restoration.

A fellowship of Latter-day Saints keeping Torah, walking the ancient paths, and embracing the covenant Yehovah made with the house of Israel — restored in our day through Joseph Smith and confirmed in the Hebrew scriptures.

"Stand ye in the ways, and see, and ask for the old paths, where is the good way, and walk therein, and ye shall find rest for your souls."

Jeremiah 6:16

Take your shoes off.
You are standing on holy ground.

If you have ever read the Book of Mormon alongside the Torah and felt them lean toward each other — if you have ever wondered why the feasts of Yehovah disappeared from a church that claims the fullness of His gospel — you are not alone, and you are not lost. You are early.

The covenant Israel made at Sinai was never abolished. Yeshua did not come to destroy the Torah but to fulfill it — to fill it full, to embody it, to write it on willing hearts. The Restoration through Joseph Smith did not replace the Hebrew covenant; it confirmed and extended it. The Book of Mormon is the Stick of Joseph. The Torah is its root system.

We exist to help you find your footing.

Three doors

Wherever you are, there is a way in.

For the curious

"I'm new to all this."

You sense something is missing in the gospel you grew up with. Begin here. We will walk you through what we believe, why we keep Torah as Latter-day Saints, and what to read first.

Start Here
For the awakening

"I'm leaving Babylon."

You haven't lost your faith. You've lost your patience with a counterfeit. You are not alone. Read what we mean by "Called Out of Babylon," and the questions we have answered along the way.

Hard Questions
For the gathered

"I'm already keeping Torah."

Welcome home. Join the weekly Torah portion, follow the feast calendar, and connect with the broader Netzarim community of Latter-day Israel.

Torah Study
From the Study

A few things worth reading.

Stick of Joseph
Crosswalk
Essay · Torah & Restoration

Eight things in the D&C that only make sense if you know the Torah

Section 132 reads differently when you've read Numbers 30. Section 89 reads differently when you've read Leviticus 11. Here are eight passages that permanently changed how we read the Doctrine and Covenants.

Read →
Called Out of Babylon
Essay · Covenant Identity

What "come out of her, my people" actually means in Revelation 18

Babylon is a system, not a city. The call to come out of her is not metaphor. Here is how to take it seriously without descending into fear or isolation.

Read →
שְׁמַע
Essay · Covenant Identity

The first of all commandments — what the Shema actually commands

Six words. The most recited declaration in Israel's history. Here is what each word means, what the text commands in response, and what it says about tefillin, mezuzah, and the oneness of Yehovah.

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Join us in the Study →
What we teach

A doctrinal snapshot.

One God, the Father, in the name of His Son.

We worship Yehovah through Yeshua the Messiah, the firstborn of the Father and the head of the New and Everlasting Covenant. The Name matters. We use it.

The Restoration is real.

Joseph Smith was called of God. The Book of Mormon is scripture. The covenants restored through him are still binding on the house of Israel — and the house of Israel is still being gathered.

Torah is not abolished.

What Yehovah wrote with His own finger He did not erase. The law is the schoolmaster, the wedding contract, and the path of love for those who keep covenant. Grace does not cancel it — grace enables it.

Israel is being gathered.

The Stick of Joseph and the Stick of Judah are being joined in our hands (Ezekiel 37). We are watching it happen, and we intend to be found on the right side of that joining.

Read our full statement of beliefs →
Olive tree at dawn — a symbol of Israel and the covenant
פרשת השבוע · Parashat HaShavua

Emor

Leviticus 21:1 — 24:23 · This week's portion

Yehovah speaks to the priests: you are held to a higher standard than those you serve. Then, in the same breath, He lists all seven of His appointed feasts — Passover through Sukkot. The holiness of the priesthood and the holiness of the calendar are given in the same portion. The feasts are not additions to holiness. They are holiness itself, appointed and recurring.

Study this week →

"Behold, mine house is a house of order, saith the Lord God, and not a house of confusion."

D&C 132:8

We are gathering an order, slowly and on purpose.
If that is the work of your heart too — come walk with us.

Get connected →

Walk this with us.

Once a week we send the Torah portion, the latest teaching, and a short note. Nothing else. No noise.