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B"H
On Entering Into Holy Relationship:
Same-Sex Wedding Ceremonies in Judaism
Rabbi Yair Hillel Goelman
Elul 5761 (Aug. 2001)
Introduction
What I've written here is my attempt to explain what has gone into my
thinking about the issue of same-sex wedding ceremonies in Judaism. I owe a
special debt to the people who participated in the Or Shalom course I taught on
"Sexuality, Gender and Marriage in the Jewish Tradition" where we
examined both classical Jewish sources as well as material prepared by current
gay and lesbian Jewish thinkers. The many classes, discussions, questions we
entered into and the many tears, laughter and hugs that punctuated these
discussions have taught me so much and I thank all of you who entered into this
exploration with me. These issues are huge both in the Jewish textual tradition
and, more importantly, in the lived reality of our lives. Obviously, what I
present here is not "the whole story" and for those who wish to
further their own education in this area I would cite my own namesake in the
Talmud, Hillel the Elder: "Go and study!" (The full reading list the
sexuality course is available and a few complete reading packages can be
borrowed from Or Shalom).
In this article I discuss five related issues:
Sexuality in Judaism
Heterosexual intercourse in Judaism
Heterosexual marriage in Judaism
Homosexuality and Judaism
Same-sex wedding ceremonies in Judaism: Psychological, spiritual,
and liturgical considerations
In the last section I hope to summarize briefly (Ha!) what I have learned
and how I feel we can, in fact, honour same-sex couples who wish to enter into
holy relationships through sacred ceremony in a way that draws on and honours
our tradition.
1) Sexuality in Judaism
What do we mean by the terms "sex", "sexuality" and
"gender"? No, this isn't one of those stupidly academic questions
like how many angels can dance on the head of a pin. These are important
differentiations because, in fact, the tradition speaks at different times
about these related but distinct concepts. In the course at Or Shalom last fall
we used the term "sex" to differentiate between people born with
penises (males) and people born with vaginas (females)[1]. "Sexuality"
refers to one's sexual orientation and preferred kinds of sexual activity.
"Gender" is a social construction. Different societies define what
counts as more "masculine" or more "feminine"
characteristics in human beings.
In Judaism, one's "sex", just like any other aspect of your
physical body, is considered to be gift from G!d. Similarity, the expression of
one's "sexuality" in the world is seen as having the potential of
great blessing and joy or, on the other hand, the potential for abuse, violence
and pain. Judaism spends alot of time discussing how positive expressions of
one's sexuality can honour one's partner's humanity and connect with the
partner's G!dliness as well. Like all societies, Jewish communities have
constructed what were considered to be appropriate that
"gender-related" norms, expectations, roles and regulations.
In the course we began to understand the ways in which Judaism _ in
different ways and at different times _ developed ritual, liturgy, myth, law,
story and ceremony around our embodied sexualities. We saw that there were no
easy answers. There are positive commandments ("mitzvot aseh") regarding
what we should do with our sexuality as well as negative commandments
("mitzvot lo ta'aseh") that prohibit other sexual activities. We
learn that some activities are permissible ("reshut") that is, they
are neither obligatory nor are they prohibited. We also learned that there are
lots of questions that have been raised in our long tradition as well as
apparent omissions, oversights and inconsistencies, as well as poor information
or misinformation on the nature of our sexuality.
I think that is a fair statement to say that most traditional sources see
sexual pleasure as both a positive expression of both our godliness and our
humanity, but also something we should be wary of when it manifests itself as
"the evil inclination" that could lead to sexual greediness, abuse
and violence. We learned that the Jewish tradition sees sexual relationships to
be appropriate primarily within the context of marriage and that, conversely, a
major purpose of marriage was to provide a framework for positive sexual relationships.
So, now we turn to what halacha says about heterosexual intercourse.
2) Heterosexual intercourse in Judaism: On procreation and intimacy
Traditional Orthodox Judaism has strongly emphasized the role and importance
of procreation in heterosexual intercourse. The first positive commandment in
the Torah is "be fruitful and multiply." Further, the large number of
laws on family "purity" and husband-wife marital relations are
replete with instruction and information and prohibition that are designed to
ensure that the outcome of the heterosexual intercourse will be the birth of a
(healthy) baby. The emphasis on procreation can be seen in the many laws that
govern "taharat ha'mishpacha", the so-called laws of family purity.
These laws stipulate that husband and wife are prohibited from engaging in
sexual intercourse while the woman is menstruating and for 7 days after her
period. Thus, the times that husband and wife are permitted (commanded to) have
intercourse are during ovulation, when the likelihood of conceiving are the
highest. The Talmud goes to great lengths to discuss how to best and most
precisely determine when a woman is bleeding and when she has stopped bleeding.
In short: Intercourse is forbidden during menstruation when conception is impossible
and prescribed during ovulation. A man may divorce his wife if after 10 years
of sexual relations they do not conceive a child.
Despite this strong emphasis on procreation, it is also clear that
procreation was never seen in Judaism as the only rationale for intercourse or
for marriage. The legalistic, folklore, kabbalistic and Hasidic literatures all
speak strongly about the importance of human intimacy for its own sake and the
holiness of sexual union. This material acknowledges that while procreation may
be a primary factor, sexual heterosexual intercourse is also expected to occur
even in situations where conception is impossible, such as when a woman is
already pregnant or has already crossed the threshold of menopause. A famous
medieval text entitled "Iggeret HaKodesh" (The Holy Letter) speaks
beautifully (and instructively) as to how the husband and wife should approach
each other's bodies with love, respect, sensitivity and the desire for mutual
satisfaction and gratification. The sexual act has immense spiritual
implications that go far beyond the specific couple who are coupling. Sex is
not, in the Jewish tradition, just about churning out babies. Further, the
historical emphasis on procreation did not anticipate the current reality in which
homosexual couples are raising children whom they conceived and gave birth to
in previous heterosexual relationships. Nor did they anticipate the continuing
revolution in reproductive technologies.
Summing up: Judaism recognizes our sexuality as an integral part of which we
are as individual human beings. Judaism stresses that our sexual relationships
and activities must be guided by an ethic of compassion and shared intimacy and
that the expression of our sexuality can lead us and others further on our path
toward G!d. The tradition is clear that our relationships be based on
sensitivity and caring towards our sexual partners and that it is fundamentally
wrong when sexuality is expressed through aggression, violence, or greed. The
major spiritual and legal framework the tradition created was the institution
of marriage, which was seen as the most appropriate, secure and dignified way
of protecting and elevating the sexual expression of both partners.
The twin blessings of procreation and intimacy through sexual intercourse
are presumed to take place within the context of marriage. In the next section,
I talk a little bit about heterosexual marriage in the Jewish tradition.
3) Heterosexual marriage in Judaism
In Judaism, the commitment to a sacred relationship between a man and woman
is called kiddushin in Hebrew. Kiddushin comes from the word kadosh (or
kiddush), meaning "holiness." The wedding ceremony sanctifies the
holy relationship between two individuals. In the Jewish tradition, kiddushin
provides many ways for a couple to enrich their relationship, each imbued with
emotional and spiritual meaning. The marriage of a man and woman in this plane
of reality is seen as an earthly representation of a cosmic unification of
masculine and feminine energies in the heavenly realms. The kabbalistic
literature says this: "When man faces woman and woman faces man, then G!d
sits on the throne of glory."
The wedding ceremony contains the heterosexual imagery of men and women
uniting with the potential to create new life. Prior to the wedding ceremony
itself is the traditional "veiling" ceremony in which the bride is
blessed as the "mother of future generations." The traditional seven
blessings include repeated references to G!d as the "Creator of
humanity" who has "formed human beings in G!d's own image" and
created within human beings the ability to recreate themselves "for
countless generations". Bride and groom are to be as happy as Adam and Eve
were in the Garden of Eden and twice the prayer invoked that the groom should
rejoice (using the word with sexual connotations) with his bride.
The ceremony, like all other Jewish ceremonial activities, is to be
approached with planning, consciousness, clear intent and the use of ritual and
symbols that reflect a deep spiritual understanding. As noted above, the
tradition goes to great lengths to describe how sexual relations with your
significant holy partner is woven into relationship of mutuality, love, respect
and sensitivity. The sexual aspect of a couple's marriage is to be approached
with consciousness and intent. In traditional communities both husband and wife
are taught the rules of "family purity" regarding when and how sexual
relations may/must be conducted and when they are forbidden.
Just as there is a way to step into kiddushin through the wedding ceremony,
there is a way to step out of the relationship through Jewish divorce
procedures, called gittin. Interestingly, the Bible itself says very little
about the legal requirements for a wedding ceremony, but is far more explicit
about the legal and spiritual means of ending a marriage. Like the wedding
ceremony and the spiritual foundations of the couple's sexual relationship, the
divorce ceremony is similarly approached with spiritual consciousness and
intent. The spiritual intensity of marriage bonds require that the untying of
those bonds also be performed with attention, respect and sensitivity.
There are three relevant points I want to highlight: (1) We have a holy
ceremony for publicly affirming that two soul mates are entering into a holy
covenant with on another. (2) Through the laws of family purity, the marriage
covenant includes explicit and well-understood guidelines regarding the
appropriate and inappropriate forms of sexual interaction. (3) The tradition
also articulates a clear and systematic way in which the formal marriage bonds
may be dissolved.
True, much (most?) of the imagery refers explicitly to marriage between men
and women and the complementarity of the masculine and the feminine. For many
centuries out tradition has assumed that one's sex, one's sexuality and one's
gender were all perfectly lined up in a specific way within each and every
individual. If you were born into a man's body it was assumed that that your
sexual preference would be for women and that you identified exclusively with
the social norms and expectations of what society thought of as
"masculine." The mirror image would hold for someone born into a
woman's body whose sexual preference was assumed to be for men and who
identified with gendered roles of being "feminine." These rigid
assumptions no longer hold.
There are interpretations that the kabbalistic images of the balance and
unification of male and female sexual energies are not necessarily restricted
to people who physically fit into the categories of men and women. There are
understandings the cosmic balance of masculine and feminine energies in the
world must also be affected within individuals. That is, that the feminine and
masculine parts of each individual must be recognized and balanced. And,
perhaps, that we can recognize and acknowledge the feminine and masculine
aspects of our sexual partners regardless of the body into which they were
born.
4) Homosexuality and Judaism:
Halachic, Non-Halachic and Neo-Halachic Perspectives
While the tradition speaks extensively about healthy love and sexual
relations between men and women, traditional sources are largely silent on the
question of same-sex relationships. The few cryptic lines in Leviticus that
prohibit a "man laying down with a man as he would lay with a woman"
have largely provided the foundation for what some have interpreted to mean a
blanket condemnation of all homosexual relationships. In a tradition that
values the power of text, the holy text of Torah offers very little in the way
of clarity. Commentators have pointed out that the verse in Leviticus should be
read in many different ways. In a tradition in which that which is prescribed,
prohibited and permitted is usually so explicit we are left with a textual
tradition which, in my opinion, is characterized by large silences,
fragmentary, ambiguous and even contradictory interpretations.
We learned in the course last fall by studying both traditional and
post-modern sources that many of the prohibitions of homosexual activity were
based largely on what we now know to be inaccurate or badly understood aspects
of human sexuality and on the fears of heterosexuals. Beyond these sweeping and
blanket prohibitions, however, we found in the tradition precious little
discussion about homosexual behaviour and no discussion at all about same sex
relationships and commitments. We noted that some aspects of homosexual
activity, for example lesbianism, were simply beyond the scope of the traditional
texts, much as women's sexuality in general was given little attention by the
male rabbis who dominated the discourse.
But before entering more deeply into the halachic discourse on
homosexuality, we must examine a much more serious question that has been
raised by radical feminist theologians like Judith Plaskow and Rachel Adler.
They argue, basically, that halacha itself is a discourse that is characterized
by misogyny and homophobia. My interpretation of their interpretation goes
something like this: In Orthodox interpretations of halacha, the only really
normative person is the adult, married, non-disabled heterosexual Jewish man
who has children (preferably boys). Deviating from any of these basic normative
characteristics will result in your marginalization in Jewish law. There are
fewer rights that accrue to you (i.e. serving as a witness ), there are fewer
laws you are obligated to fulfill and more prohibitions that you will face.
Children and disabled people face specific legal obstacles. Both married and
unmarried women face huge legal barriers in religious and civil law. Persons
accused or suspected of homosexuality are excluded from the mainstream of
Jewish religious life. Women homosexuals are prominent by their huge absence in
the halacha. They were so far off the radar screen of the men who created and
interpreted Jewish law, that the lack of specific prohibitions speaks volumes
of how little these men understood the sexuality of heterosexual women as well
as Lesbians.
These are powerful arguments that force us to re-examine traditional sources
altogether. After a lot of thought I realize that what troubles me in Plaskow
and Adler is the extreme neatness and simplicity of their arguments. For me it
resonates with too much "throwing the baby out with the bath water".
I agree with them that there are strong elements in the tradition that are
misogynistic and homophobic and we must deal with those areas critically. My
sense is that the homophobia and misogyny were "laminated" into our
tradition at specific times and were based on prevailing societal views at
those times. But halacha also provides a remedy within itself to deal with such
situations when we clearly see that the social laminate is largely an
historical artifact that, instead of revealing core truths about Judaism,
actually distorts some of our most central and fundamental assumptions about
our humanity and our divinity.
I want to offer two cases in which, to the best of my knowledge, certain
groups of people were discriminated against in halacha and those legal
discriminations were overturned in light of changing realties and new
knowledge. One is the case of suicide. The taking of any life _ your own or the
lives of others _ is absolutely forbidden. But Jewish law has also instructed
us that Jews who do commit suicide are not to be buried in a Jewish cemetery
or, if they are, in a separate section of the cemetery. This practice is almost
never practiced today because of the assumption suicidal ideation is almost
always considered an expression of some form of mental illness. Depression,
despair and the desire to end one's life are now seen in Judaism as a tragic
medical condition. The almost universal practice now is honour both the life
and death of the person who commits suicide by giving them the same respectful
funeral that all Jews are given. Our ancients who prohibited the burial of
suicides in Jewish cemeteries were working with a set of social assumptions
that got laminated into practice. We have evolved. New information has come to
light. Traditions have changed.
Another example: in the Talmud, deafness (and other conditions) were seen as
indications of idiocy and mental incompetence. There are long debates in which
rabbis debate whether deaf people can lead prayer services or whether a hearing
person can say "amen" to the prayer of a deaf person. The assumption
was that the deaf were mentally incompetent, didn't know what they were saying
and so were incapable of leading prayers. In the 19th centuries the biological
and medical dimensions of deafness were being established and educators and
psychologists began to demonstrate that deaf people were not different from
hearing people in terms of intelligence. This information came to the attention
of a number of leading Orthodox rabbis. The looked into the research and the
new knowledge that was becoming available and wrote major treatises instructing
their communities that the deaf were no longer to be marginalized,
discriminated against or demeaned. We have evolved. New information has come to
light. Traditions have changed.
My argument with Plaskow and Adler, then is that I have not given up on
halacha as a source of and framework for the creation of just and egalitarian
Jewish communities and practices. I am heartened by the halachic remedies that
are in place specifically to make changes in halacha. The halacha does, I
believe, permit us to replace the old laminated picture of homophobia with a
new representation based on the dignity and sexualities of all persons. And so,
we proceed to the question of same-sex wedding ceremonies in the Jewish
tradition.
5) Same-sex wedding ceremonies in Judaism:
Spiritual, legal and liturgical considerations
Some years ago I looked into the possibility of becoming a provincially
approved "Marriage Commisionaire" in British Columbia. Currently, I
am permitted by the province to perform weddings through my affiliation with Or
Shalom, but I was curious about what the status of "Marriage
Commisionaire" might give me. (I had this fantasy that I would have some
sort of authority to force people to get married. I saw myself pulling a car
over to the side of the road and saying, "You seem like a nice couple. Can
I see your marriage license please? Don't have one? Ok, I'm going to ask you to
exit the vehicle, keep your hands where I can see them and to step away from
the car. Fine, ok. Now, by the power vested in me by the Province of British
Columbia I hereby proclaim you to be married. You may get back in the car and
please have a nice day. And Mazal Tov".)
According to the rules at the time there were two major conditions I had to
agree to in order to even be considered for appointment as a Marriage
Commisionaire. First, I had to be available 365 days a year, day or night to
perform wedding ceremonies. Second, I had to promise to never, ever mention G!d
or any other religious deity. These conditions made me realize that the
Marriage Commissionaire job was not for me. First of all, in planning all
Jewish weddings the specific date is extremely important. The Jewish calendar
is very much the lifeblood of our spiritual life and being attuned to the
rhythms and qualities of time is part of our Jewish consciousness. There are
days we are prohibited from having weddings, there are some time periods during
which weddings are prohibited and there are days that are especially propitious
for having weddings. Also, given what I've written above about what I see as
the profound manifestation and presence of G!d in wedding (and other)
ceremonies, I couldn't conceive of having a G!d-less ceremony.
This little exercise made me realize that I was, at heart, not a Marriage
Commisionaire at all but, rather, what is referred to in our tradition as a
misader kiddushin. The misader kiddushin, the person who guides the couple
through the Jewish wedding ceremony, is responsible for bringing together the
software of Jewish wedding technology (the prayers, rituals) with the
appropriate hardware (ring, huppah, glass) and to customize a ceremony that
fits this particular couple on this particular day. My tool kit, as it were,
has given me access to certain specific tools.
Around the same time that I was exploring the Marriage Commisionaire
possibility I received a call from non-Jewish friends asking me to do their
wedding ceremony. I was honoured, flattered and, frankly, a little challenged
by the task. I had to wonder what parts of my tool kit as a misader kiddushin
could be used in a wedding of two non-Jews. This made me reflect really deeply
not just on the symbols and rituals in Jewish ceremonies, but on the underlying
intent and integrity of the rituals themselves. Which _ if any _ were uniquely
Jewish expressions and which _ if any _ could be applied more broadly to people
in other religious traditions or _ in this case _ people who identified with no
religious tradition.
They called to discuss the date and the ceremony and told me that they had
found a beautiful church where they wanted to get married on a certain Saturday
afternoon. Interesting. Could I walk to the church on Shabbat/Saturday? Could I
"work" on Saturday/Shabbat? We designed a ceremony with readings from
different traditions and an integration of rituals from different traditions.
Ultimately we did the ceremony in their backyard on a Sunday and by all accounts
it was a very special and meaningful event. But for me it felt strange to pick
and choose from different traditions and to come up a kind of "greatest
hits" ceremony. I wasn't sure what the underlying spiritual intent of the
ceremony was. Afterward, I felt fairly certain that I would probably not do
another no-Jewish ceremony again for the same reason that I could not be a
Marriage Commissionare. My spiritual tool kit has enabled and empowered me to
act as a misader kiddushin but has not provided me with the insights, knowledge
and rituals to take responsibility for a non-Jewish wedding ceremony with the
same level of integrity and confidence that I feel in doing a Jewish wedding
ceremony.
I tell these two stories in order to say something about myself as a misader
kiddushin. First, I feel that my job in a wedding ceremony is to serve as the
spiritual accompanist to the couple getting married. For me this means both
knowing the couple and knowing how I can connect the liturgy, ritual and
symbols to this particular couple. Second, I have to consider what spiritual
tools I actually have in my spiritual toolkit and whether I know how to use
them. As I found out in the two stories I told you above, I'm not always sure
what tools I have or how to use them.
And so, in considering the voices of our living tradition and the voices of
our people living the tradition, it has become clear to me that homosexual
couples must have the same access as heterosexual couples to sacred ceremony.
This is an incontrovertible human right and spiritual gift which cannot be
denied in a tradition that values the sanctity of every life and the biblical
dictum of lo tov heyot he'adam levado, "it is not good for someone to [go
through life] alone". In sacred ceremony each partner publicly declares
that s/he is entering into a holy and exclusive relationship with his or her
partner. To maintain continuity with Jewish tradition, I would also see the
need to begin to articulate what we might see as appropriate "family
purity laws" that frame sexual expectations and boundaries and to consider
what same-sex divorce ceremonies would also look like.
What is the most appropriate ceremony in which a same-sex couple will enter
into a sacred and exclusive commitment to one another? Some gay and Lesbian
writers have claimed that the whole concept and institution of marriage is a
relic of a misogynistic and homophobic past and same-sex commitment ceremonies
should be a new and distinct form of ceremony. Some same-sex ceremonies have
used the identical wording and liturgy as the heterosexual ceremony with minor
corrections for gendered grammar and other wording changes. One close friend of
mine adapted the Saturday night havdala ceremony into a beautiful ceremonial
framework within which two Lesbians expressed their love, their commitment and
their desire to build a Jewish home together. We live in exciting times with
much exciting discussion on homosexual wedding ceremonies in general and Jewish
homosexual wedding ceremonies in particular. It is a lively and discussion and
one that, in my mind, has not yet achieved consensus. I cite this wide range of
examples to show that there is far from a consensus regarding the content and
format of same-sex wedding ceremonies. We must therefore acknowledge that what
works for one particular couple and one particular rabbi in one particular
situation may not always work somewhere else with someone else.
Ceremonies, language and ritual have integrity in and of themselves. A case
in point comes from the development of the brit banot and simhat bat ceremonies
that have been developed in the past 30 years or so. Until the late 1960's the
birth of a baby girl was _celebrated' only by the father taking an aliya in
shule and naming the baby. In the past 30 years we have seen the development of
many different and exquisite ceremonies that welcome the birth of the baby girl
that parallel those of a boy's brit milah in joy and celebration. We now have
ceremonies of "brit banot" and "simhat bat" that resonate
deeply with traditional forms of prayer and yet are both creative and modern at
the same time. These ceremonies for girls did not simply use the wording of
traditional ceremonies with liberal doses of white-out. The liturgy
acknowledges and draws on an emerging and re-discovered theology of the
feminine in Jewish spirituality.
Had we simply adapted the language and ritual of the traditional brit for
boys, we would have lost out on the beautiful and embracing ceremonies that
have been developed by women for women entering into the covenant of Sarah and
Abraham. An emerging feminist theology both nurtured _ and has been nurtured by
_ the skilled and creative development of meaningful ceremony for women that
has not been developed not so much with white-out and word processors, but with
caring hearts and intuition. Our emerging knowledge of the further mysteries of
sex, sexuality and gender present us with an opportunity to articulate a
theology that embraces and celebrates the sacred joining of two partners of the
same sex.
The ceremony itself, though, is only one of three critical pieces that I
believe must be developed in articulating a theology of homosexual couples. The
are two other pieces. One is the development of a parallel theory and practice
of taharat hamishpacha, the traditional laws of "family purity" that
provide guidelines and safety zones that frame couples' sexual interactions.
The other is the development of appropriate and relevant procedures for
divorce. For me, the ceremony that joins a same-sex couple together is one very
important part of allowing same-sex couples the same rights and privileges of
all heterosexual couples. Equality and parity before Jewish law and custom must
also, I believe, pertain to the continuing holiness of their sexual
relationship and to a mutually agreed upon framework for or the dissolving of a
same-sex union.
I look forward to working with my friends in the Or Shalom community as we
continue, together, to creatively search out and to create ceremony and ritual
that that speak from our hearts and to our heart. I look forward to doing so in
a way that accords respect to the tradition. In the words of Rabbi Mordecai
Kaplan, the tradition has a vote but not a veto. I look forward to continuing
this task in a way that accords respect to all Jews.
Conclusion
I am in the debt of many who have devoted thought, caring and research to
these questions. I've been slow but I am also confident that the proposal R' David Mivasair and I have forwarded to
the Board and the community is the right one. This proposal will hopefully
allow both R' David and me to be responsive to same-sex couples in the Or
Shalom community to try and provide them with a meaningful sacred ceremony. We
must remember that the word halacha does not really mean "Jewish
law." Derived from the verb "to walk", halacha means "the
path." We are all walking the path of personal, social and community
development together and may it be the will of Holy One Source of All Blessing
that we will continue to walk the path with sincerity and sensitivity. Kain
yi'hee ratzon.
This article accompanies the policy proposal entitled, "On Broadening Our Vision of Holy Relationship: A
Proposal to the Or Shalom Community".
[1]
Yes, yes, yes....there are persons who do not fall neatly and clearly in one or
the other category. In fact, the Talmud refers to the "tum-tum and
adrogynous" person whose bodies are either neither clearly male or female
or, in some ways, both male and female. The point remains the same:
"Sex" is a biological factor as opposed to a social or legal factor.
Return to "Teachings from Our Rabbis and
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