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Rabbi Jeremy Gordon

ByRabbi Jeremy Gordon, Rabbi Jeremy Gordon

Opinion

Why gay sex is not immoral

October 28, 2011 11:37
2 min read

Orthodox Rabbis opposed to gay marriage - hardly worth a headline. But two prominent British Orthodox rabbis recently went further. Dayan Lichtenstein, head of the Federation Beth Din, suggested the Prime Minister's desire to sanction gay marriage was "a sign of moral decay," while Rabbi Alan Plancey seemed to suggest the government's plan was a sign of "standards of morality dropping". This goes too far.

The Bible outlaws male-to-male penetrative intercourse as a "toevah", but the King James translators perhaps let some of their own misgivings about homosexual intercourse impact on their choice of translation of it to mean an "abomination". In Leviticus and Deuteronomy we are told that eating pork or shellfish is a toevah but, despite steering clear of treif myself, I don't consider a person who does eat ham immoral.

When the term is first mentioned, in Genesis, it refers to the Egyptian perception of what it would mean to eat with a Jew. Most frequently, the term refers to Jews committing acts of cultic idolatry. A toevah is national and particular; not universal, not moral.

The Bible prohibits only a specific form of sexual behaviour as a toevah. It says nothing about lesbians and some scholars have suggested the proscribed behaviour isn't all forms of gay penetrative sex, rather a particular form of cultic prostitution. I'm not suggesting halachah permits all other forms of gay sexual engagement - it doesn't - merely that Jewish leaders who equate homosexual attraction and sexual behaviour with moral decay perpetuate two falsehoods.