Wednesday, January 11, 2017

Does the Gay Issue Threaten the Continuity of Orthodoxy? by Rabbi Yitzchok Adlerstein

Cross-Currents

An essay penned by the lead educator at a Modern Orthodox high school warned of possible shock. “This may surprise many adults, but the reconciliation of the Torah’s discussion of homosexuality represents the single most formidable religious challenge for our young people today.”
The author’s declaration was every bit as surprising and shocking as he warned it would be. If true, we are looking at a systemic failure of Torah chinuch in significant parts of the Orthodox world. It would be to Orthodoxy what Galileo and Bruno had been to the Church – massive inability to respond appropriately to an intellectual challenge.
Reading on in the essay, the incredulity mounted.
More young people are “coming out” than ever before, and that repeatedly puts a face to this theological challenge…As they go off to college, students invariably face the painful moral dilemma created by the seemingly intractable conflict: believing in the primacy and validity of the Torah on the one hand, and following their hearts’ sense of morality with regard to loving and accepting their gay friends – or perhaps “coming out” themselves—on the other. All too often, this earnest challenge results in our children quietly losing faith in the Torah as a moral way of life. 
In my experience, many, if not most, 20 to 40-year olds in the modern Orthodox world struggle with the issue of homosexuality and the divinity of the Torah. They believe in a kind and just God and they want to believe in the divinity of the Torah. But at the same time they feel fairly certain that being gay is not a matter of choice. In the apparent conflict of these ideas, the first two premises seem to be losing ground.
 Could this really be? A Jewish people fiercely clings to its love and devotion to HKBH through millennia of persecution, pogroms, penury, ghettos, auto-da-fes, Crusades, exile, religious and racial hatred and a Holocaust – only to lose its faith over the banning of behavior foreign to 98% of the population?

In those rare moments when our adversaries forgot about us long enough not to visit those horrors upon us, we contemplated a world in which suffering, disease, child mortality, ever-present warfare, and the brutish subjugation of the many by the few were the rule, not the exception. And we went right on proclaiming the goodness of G-d, Who gave us the Torah we cherished! [...]we never relaxed our conviction about Hashem’s justice – although repeatedly given the opportunity. Moshe emes, v’soroso emes.
And the gay issue is the burden that is too difficult to bear, the one that will open the exit door to observance for Orthodox young people?[...]
In some parts of the community, the question is moot. Gays are not discussed. Even using the word is taboo. What you don’t think about can’t be much of an issue. But this is not the case elsewhere, where people talk about the problem, are aware of families that have children who have come out, and have embraced Rav Aharon Feldman’s now-classic position paper on the subject.[1] They struggle to comprehend the pain and loneliness of people they know about – but giving up on the foundations of Judaism is not part of the response. Why not?
Essentially, we’re asking why Torah chinuch in some parts of the community – certainly no stranger to their own problems – nonetheless is more successful in this area. What does it take to produce loyal Jews rather than emunah-challenged socially orthodox ones?
We should be devoting serious study to this and related issues – meaning the collection of real data analyzed by proper scientific methodologies. Such study remains, at the moment, a pipe-dream. In its absence, I will offer one thought, which should be taken as nothing more than the product of some decades of observation, coupled with personal conjecture.
Two phrases seem notably absent in the conversation in parts of the community, while very much in evidence in others. I believe that they have a profound effect on the orientation of young people. Those phrases are kabolas ole, and avodas Hashem. I rarely – if ever – hear them from my Modern Orthodox students and associates. I hear them often enough in parts of the community further to the right. [...]
The combination of these two phrases is a potent elixir, providing those who drink it with the strength to endure many challenges.
I would never suggest that these two concepts describe the inner life and the outer behavior of the majority of the right-of-center Orthodox world. There are indeed many lapses, in deed and in intent. But words – memes – are important. They help define the boundaries of our thoughts, even if they do not linearly dictate their exact content. They create expectations that exert pressure – sometimes consciously, sometimes not – on behavior. [...]
I don’t have the wherewithal to reintroduce these phrases into the everyday discussion of some parts of the Orthodox world. But for those who read the essay by the high school principal with horror, the reaction should be clear. We should ensure that concepts close to our minds and souls remain in sharp focus. Repeating concepts like kabolas ole and avodas Hashem too often is a far better approach than not often enough.
May it be His Will that they rub off on both our children and ourselves.
[1] Among other things, it reminds us that the Torah forbids behaviors, not orientation; that our dealings with those with SSAs should be compassionate and respectful, rather than contemptuous; that Orthodox men and women with SSAs have a contribution to make to the Orthodox community.

13 comments:

  1. On one side you have teenagers who think that forbidding their girls to wear tefillin means Orthodoxy isn't for them. On the other side you have teenagers who think the name of the male organ is "the limb" and the female organ is "the grave" or "that there place". Is there no one competent in the middle?

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  2. Ok. Another episode of "Theories from Joe" where Joe let's his imagination mix with his experience and spins a cotton candy comment.

    Roll 'em.

    I think that the reason that some people who are otherwise strong in standing with the Torah still maintain that homosexual behavior is acceptable is because they want to make heterosexual immorality acceptable.

    Get it? The underlying attitude a man may be expressing is: "I would like to live in a community that accepts 'gay' behavior, that accepts two men who are 'married'. How much more so, then, they'll accept me if I have a series of girlfriends I am living with."

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  3. You like explicit talk? Isn't it good enough if everyone understands what's being said? The Torah went out of it's way, so to speak, to write אשר איננו טהורה, instead of simply טמאה, to teach the value of the cleanest finest form of speech, for people who are lofty, as we say ורוממתנו מכל הלשונות (no pun necessarily intended). Why do you appose that?

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  4. In addition to Rav Feldmans article, check out these:

    http://vintagefrumteens.blogspot.com/search/label/CHIZUK-----to%20one%20with%20homosexual%20tendencies

    http://vintagefrumteens.blogspot.com/search/label/CHIZUK-----to%20one%20with%20homosexual%20tendencies%202

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  5. I think that you're 100% correct!

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  6. FedupwithcorruprabbisJanuary 12, 2017 at 3:22 PM

    My question to Rabbi Adlerstein is : You are worried about the gay issue eroding Orthodoxy but you yourself acted as a witness against Meir Kin in civil court against Halocho. It is against Halocho to prosecute a Jew in Secular court, yet you felt an obligation to join the pro feminist rabbis in persecuting him in the civil courts? Therefore why are you so troubled that YU and other modern Orthodox people are starting to accept homosexuality?

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  7. I don't Oppose it. But I love how people bring that proof to support the "And we don't say dirty things" position. As if the Torah does not say, dozens of times straight out, "tamei hu" or "tamei yehiyeh" and the like. There are times for delicate language and there are times for simple accuracy.

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  8. Actually there's a psychological defence mechanism in which a person, troubled by "evil thoughts", becomes a crusader against those thoughts. Why else do you think so many Republicans who campaigned against gay marriage were found out to be closet homosexuals?

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  9. A friend told me this about his son (paraphrase): "My son knew since he was five years old that was gay."

    There was an article where a young man described growing in an observant home and going to Yeshivas. And how when he was, I think, a pre-teen, that his teacher and his father became concerned about his behavior. They thought they could talk him out of acting "gay". The young man writes that he disregarded their pressure, and now identifies as gay.

    That being said, I still got the distinct impression my friend nurtured his son's leanings. All this despite sending the the boy for at least twelve years to Jewish schools.

    My friend totally accepts his son and his son-in-law.

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  10. Please teach me then. What are the times that using the term אבר, when it is clear to all exactly what's being referred to, would not work well enough?

    And so you have a question with which you think that you disprove Chazal who teach us to learn from אשר איננו טהורה, to speak in a fine language. I guess Chazal maybe didn't know of those psukim to which you refer. Right? So therefore you think you can disregard their clear instruction. But the first attribute of a true scholar is to know that the great body of wisdom is bigger than he/she is, and don't be so quick to think you know better. Because the one who has little respect for the greater wisdom and thinks he'she knows best, is a fool, who doesn't begin to fathom the greatness of true wisdom.

    So first of all, respect the directions of Chazal because they were חכמי אמת, and if you have a question about their words, ask it with humility. If you're fortunate to get an answer that you can understand, that's great. And if not, than you will have to be left knowing that you aren't wise enough to grasp the depths of Chazal's words, which is, in and of itself, a valuable thing to know, for every person who is truly seeking wisdom.

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  11. Wow. I remember a Gemorah in Sotah (don't remember where...) says something to the tune that when a a father did not properly stop his daughter from misbehaving sexually, it is indicative that he himself has been fooling around.....

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  12. Yep. Is this pseudo psychology supposed to discredit what Joe is saying, which is logically understandable to most people?

    There is truth that an overstated attack is meant to hide certain things. But who are the crusaders over here? And what percentage are your "so many Republicans"? Less than three percent?!

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  13. The closeness and acceptance that the Yidden are shown today may be more dangerous spiritually than the oppression shown in earlier generations. They felt the attack against them, today the acceptance is not viewed as an attack, on the contrary. A similar difference between waking up on time and going to sleep on time. Waking up you feel the urgency. Going to sleep on time you don't.

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