TBT logo
Temple Beth Torah

Member, Union for Reform JudaismURJ logo

Serving Centreville, Chantilly, Clifton,
Fairfax, Herndon, Reston, Oakton,
Gainesville, Manassas and
the Northern Virginia Jewish Community

P.O. Box 2020
Centreville, Virginia 20122
Tel: (703) 263-2252

Welcome

Welcome to Temple Beth Torah. We are a growing Reform congregation serving the Northern Virginia communities of Centreville, Chantilly, Clifton, Fairfax, Gainesville, Herndon Manassas, and Oakton.

We are a community that builds friendships, promotes discussions, has fun, believes in learning, nurtures faith, supports community service, is a place prayer, and provides an education program for young children, teens, and adults. We are also one of the region’s fastest growing communities of interfaith families.

Please take a tour of our website, call us with your questions, and stop by for a visit. This website will provide you with information about joining us for the High Holidays, membership, and our religious school program.


Upcoming TBT Events

        TBT Members are strongly encouraged to attend the
annual membership meeting on May 18, 2008, 12:30 - 2 pm at the Goddard
School. Find out information about your congregation. Approve the new
board. Your input is important!

Pizza and babysitting will be provided

Membership

Temple Beth Torah offers membership options tailored for families, couples, single parent family and for single. After reading about Temple Beth Torah, if you would like to discuss our membership options please talk with our Membership Committee Chair. To learn more about our membership dues structure, please click here.

Beth Torah dedicates a recovered Torah

The first Torah to be owned by Temple Beth Torah has been purchased! We were proud and excited to hold our Torah dedication ceremony on Sunday, May 15 at St. John’s Episcopal Church.

This particular Torah traveled halfway around the world to be dedicated to Temple Beth Torah.

Rabbi Youlus, an expert "sofer" who restored our new Torah, said that he had recovered this Torah from a monastery in southern Russia. When he was first given the scroll by a Catholic priest there, Youlus said he was not sure if it could be restored. But, after six months of work that required rewriting 45 percent of the text, Youlus was able to renew the fire-damaged scroll...

Read the full article published by Times Community Newspapers about our Torah and the ceremony here or at Times Community Newspapers.

Pictured: Members and guests of Beth Torah in a ceremonial tradition parade around the synagogue in honor of the new Torah.