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25 Adar 5764 - March 18, 2004 | Mordecai Plaut, director Published Weekly
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NEWS
American Agudah Calls on Massachusetts to Preserve Integrity of Marriage
by Yated Ne'eman Staff

As the Massachusetts legislature debated a proposal to amend the state constitution to ban the redefinition of marriage, Agudath Israel of America released a statement stating Judaism's unqualified and exclusive embrace of traditional marriage. The statement stands in stark opposition to one recently offered by a local group of Reform, Conservative and Reconstructionist rabbis regarding the issue.

The non-Orthodox clerics published an advertisement supporting the Massachusetts Supreme Court's declaration that marriage may not be limited to its historical definition and calling on the state legislature to support that ruling. The non- Orthodox clergy went so far as to declare their support for unconventional marriage as "a religious commitment," and to condemn any abridgment of the right to such marriage as "a violation of our religious freedom."

Agudath Israel felt it necessary to counter this wrong view of the Jewish religious tradition with an unambiguous statement regarding Judaism's prohibition against immoral conduct, and to publicly oppose any governmental sanctioning of unconventional marriage.

The statement reads as follows:

Some supporters of redefining marriage claim to speak in the name of Judaism. They do not. They speak, in fact, against it.

A group of non-Orthodox Massachusetts rabbis has publicly asserted that they support unconventional marriage as "a religious commitment," and that denying its proponents marriage rights "would be a violation of our religious freedom."

While we are pained by the need to take this public stance, we cannot allow for the misperception that immoral unions are in consonance with the Torah's prescription for humankind.

And so we hereby state, clearly and without qualification, that the Torah forbids immoral acts, and sanctions only the union of a man and a woman in matrimony.

To the good citizens of the State of Massachusetts, and to all our fellow Americans, we say: It is up to us to affirm the integrity and sanctity of marriage in our great country.

And to our fellow Jews, we say: We are heirs to a timeless and holy wisdom. Judaism is not a mirror of society's shifting mores. Let us be a true light in an increasingly darkening world.

The Agudath Israel spokesman noted that the need for a public expression of the Jewish religion's attitude was twofold.

"First there is the essence of the statement itself, a correction of the mistaken impression that Judaism in some way considers immoral acts or unions morally acceptable.

"But there is also another concern here," he continued. "As members of broader society, we have a great stake in promoting the general public good, which we feel is best served by maintaining marriage in the traditional form.

"The Massachusetts judiciary's decision to destroy that tradition demands that we speak up and inform both Jews and non-Jews alike that American society is at a crucial moral crossroads."

 

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