(no subject)
Jul. 14th, 2003 11:14 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
A couple of times, Rabbi Shmuley Boteach has written on Beliefnet about homosexuality in the Bible -- declaring that it is a religious sin, and not a moral or ethical sin -- making it just as sinful as, say, eating shellfish.
Basically what this means is that it is not inherently wrong, it is just something that Jews, as they observe the rules and laws of their religious teachings, are supposed to avoid.
This has some interesting ramifications. For example, it may have the effect of making Reform Judaism more tolerant of gays and lesbians in general, but LESS tolerant of gays and lesbians who are practicing Jews.
Secondly, one is tempted to ask what benefit one has from adhering to codes or laws that one knows are "religious" vs. ethical -- IOW if they serve mainly to identify the Jewish community, isn't this an arbitrary and stylized distinction that has little inherent meaning?
Basically what this means is that it is not inherently wrong, it is just something that Jews, as they observe the rules and laws of their religious teachings, are supposed to avoid.
This has some interesting ramifications. For example, it may have the effect of making Reform Judaism more tolerant of gays and lesbians in general, but LESS tolerant of gays and lesbians who are practicing Jews.
Secondly, one is tempted to ask what benefit one has from adhering to codes or laws that one knows are "religious" vs. ethical -- IOW if they serve mainly to identify the Jewish community, isn't this an arbitrary and stylized distinction that has little inherent meaning?
no subject
Date: 2003-07-14 09:16 am (UTC)(no subject)
From:& furthermore
From:Re: & furthermore
From:no subject
Date: 2003-07-14 10:00 am (UTC)This, oddly enough, seems to go along with the other topic you posted today. Or maybe not so odd - they both have to do with issues of sin or right vs. wrong, good vs. evil.
Jewish concept of Law
Date: 2003-07-14 10:14 am (UTC)not suppose this, nor of course should you, as my
own thought on these questions... But perhaps it
is worth to say that an Orthodox Jewish idea
(I say "an" because people may differ but I think
it is a fairly deeply thought sense of that idea)
is that the Law is not always for an apparant reason
but because these are tracks of the movement of things
above as reflected here and are to be followed in
effect not because they are the "right way or the wrong
way but the army way"...this adherance to the paths
of the supernal is for the Jew and not for all...
there are places where this thought strains and to my
sense breaks down, nor do I know that Orthodox(as
distinct from Reform Jews) would addopt a distinction
of morality and law, it sounds like a fellow attempting
to be pc and faithful to his thought at the same time which
can lead to breakdowns of order...
but this just to point up a perhaps Kabbalistically sound
(again saying as in another context I did what the
likutei amrim tanya observes that even the tree of life
is but an image and a dream) distinction of the paths
above reflected here and the merely rationally moral.
and again this is to express as I understand it a Jewish
thought rather than my own,
+Seraphim.
Re: Jewish concept of Law
From:an unresolved disjunction behind it maybe
From:Re: an unresolved disjunction behind it maybe
From:shellfish
Date: 2003-07-14 08:21 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2003-07-15 07:33 pm (UTC)So in some fundamentalist churches today, Gentiles who themselves don't follow Jewish law have been known to require converted Jews to do so. Nice.
This also explains why conservative Christians believe why Jewish law relating to homosexuality is relevant to Gentiles and that relating to shellfish is not, as homosexuality qualifies as "fornication", i.e., sexual immorality.
But I don't think it would occur to the average conservative Gentile Christians to have a problem with rare steaks or check to make sure that the chicken that provided the drumsticks wasn't strangled...
Personally I think the prohibition on homosexuality probably originally had to do with discouraging forms of sex that did not produce children within the patriarchal extended family structure, just as many dietary laws appear to have originated for health reasons.
(no subject)
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