The Three Pillars: Torah, Avodah, Gemilut Chasadim
Shimon HaTzaddik: “The world stands on three things: Torah, Avodah (service of God), and acts of loving-kindness.”
Summary. Pirkei Avot 1:2 records Shimon HaTzaddik’s teaching that the world stands on three things: Torah (study), Avodah (worship), and Gemilut Chasadim (acts of loving-kindness). These three are the architecture of Jewish religious life. Torah is the cultivation of the mind; Avodah, of the heart; Gemilut Chasadim, of the hand. The three are not optional add-ons to Judaism; they are Judaism. Every observance, every mitzvah, every Jewish practice falls into one or more of these categories.
Torah
Torah here means not only the Five Books of Moses but the entirety of Jewish learning — Tanakh, Mishnah, Talmud, Midrash, commentaries, halachic literature, Mussar, Machshava, Kabbalah. Torah study is a mitzvah independent of any practical application; the act of learning is itself worship. The Mishnah (Pe’ah 1:1) lists Talmud Torah among the mitzvot “whose fruits a person eats in this world while the principal remains for the World to Come.”
Avodah
Avodah is service of God, and in the Beit HaMikdash period meant primarily the sacrificial service. After the destruction of the Second Temple in 70 CE, the Rabbis taught that prayer (tefilla) takes the place of sacrifice (Talmud Berachot 26b, drawing on Hosea 14:3). The three daily services — Shacharit, Mincha, Ma’ariv — were instituted in correspondence with the morning, afternoon, and evening Temple sacrifices.
Gemilut Chasadim
Acts of loving-kindness are the practical, interpersonal mitzvot: visiting the sick (bikkur cholim), comforting mourners (nichum aveilim), welcoming guests (hachnasat orchim), dowering brides (hachnasat kallah), burying the dead (kevurat hameitim), and the wider ethical demands of the Torah. The Talmud (Sukkah 49b) teaches that gemilut chasadim is greater than tzedakah (charity) in three ways: it is performed with one’s person rather than only one’s money; it is given to the rich as well as the poor; it benefits the dead as well as the living.
Why Three?
Maimonides in his Commentary on Avot reads the three pillars as corresponding to the three relationships of the human being: with God (Avodah), with self (Torah), and with the world (Gemilut Chasadim). A life of Torah without Avodah is intellectualism; Avodah without Torah is empty ritual; Gemilut Chasadim without either becomes mere philanthropy. The three together constitute the full posture of a Jew in the world.
Where Denominations Diverge
This Mishnaic framework is universally embraced across all denominations. Reform Judaism’s emphasis on tikkun olam can be read as an elevation of gemilut chasadim; the Conservative movement’s renewed emphasis on Talmud Torah recovers the first pillar; the Hasidic emphasis on kavvanah (intention) in prayer foregrounds Avodah.
Sources
Mishnah, Pirkei Avot 1:2.
Mishnah, Pe’ah 1:1.
Talmud Bavli, Berachot 26b; Sukkah 49b.
Hosea 14:3.
Rambam, Commentary on Avot 1:2.
Further Reading
Rabbi Adin Steinsaltz, A Guide to Jewish Prayer.
Rabbi Joseph Telushkin, A Code of Jewish Ethics (vols. 1–2).
Rabbi Lord Jonathan Sacks, To Heal a Fractured World.