[5] The religious Zionists of Hapoel Hamizrachi stressed that “Torah and Avodah” means that there is responsibility to demand social justice in every aspect of society.
It was a litigant in the legal case before the Supreme Court of Israel, arguing that Leah Shakdiel must be allowed to serve on the local religious council in Yeruham.
[7] In 1995, following the assassination of Yitzhak Rabin, the leadership of NTA called for religious children to be educated to think critically about important topics and not to be pulled toward fundamentalism.
[8] In 2012 NTA organized an alternative rally to remember Prime Minister Rabin for national religious youth.
In 2019 the organization stated: "Over the past three years, the [education] minister has certified a number of Talmud Torah schools that directly and indirectly screen students of low socioeconomic status and of Ethiopian descent.
[17] NTA reinforces the values of Torah and Avodah by teaching the social responsibility of the religious population within the broader national context.
NTA believes that youth groups such as Bnei Akiva should model social responsibility with equal opportunities for both genders to participate fully in religious life, without taking any particular political stances.
NTA advocates for a solution for the thousands of Israeli citizens who are unable to marry in Israel because of religious law restrictions.
"[30] The Yated Ne'eman newspaper noted, "Its board of governors includes Avi Weiss, Shlomo Riskin, and others, such as Benny Lau (i.e. Binyamin Lau), Daniel Sperber, and Tamar Ross, who join them in reforming Orthodoxy by ordaining women, lobbying for To’eivah marriage, diluting geirus standards and much more.
ITIM's Seth Farber, who previously censured the Chief Rabbinate of Israel for rejecting Reform conversions, also sits on the Ne’emanei Torah Va’Avodah board.
"[29] In 2019 Rabbi Amihai Eliyahu told Tehila Friedman, a former Chairwoman of Ne'emanei Torah Va'Avodah, that the organization was doing more harm than good to the religious Zionist community in Israel.
In a new format from 1998 until the present, the journal De'ot has been published publication of the organization, with contributions voices of the modern religious community in Israel.