Mike Curtiss (28
March 2013)
"Why Judaism Rejected
Homosexuality"
Dear Doves,
Another step
toward a Totalitarian Marxist state is being debated today by
the Supreme Court of the land. We
need to remind ourselves why we must reject this step to
tryranny now and forever. Thank you for reading this long
and considerable article.
Agape,
Mike Curtiss
Judaism's Sexual Revolution: Why Judaism Rejected Homosexuality
Catholic Education Resource Center ^ | 1993 | Dennis Prager
Posted on March 26, 2013 11:43:27 PM CDT by Bratch
When Judaism demanded that all sexual activity be channeled into
marriage, it changed the world. The Torah's prohibition of
non-marital sex quite simply made the creation of Western
civilization possible.
Notice to Reader: "The Boards of both CERC Canada and CERC USA
are aware that the topic of homosexuality is a controversial one
that deeply affects the personal lives of many North Americans.
Both Boards strongly reiterate the Catechism's teaching that
people who self-identify as gays and lesbians must be treated
with 'respect, compassion, and sensitivity' (CCC #2358). The
Boards also support the Church's right to speak to aspects of
this issue in accordance with her own self-understanding.
Articles in this section have been chosen to cast light on how
the teachings of the Church intersect with the various social,
moral, and legal developments in secular society. CERC will not
publish articles which, in the opinion of the editor, expose
gays and lesbians to hatred or intolerance."
Societies that did not place boundaries around sexuality were
stymied in their development. The subsequent dominance of
the Western world can largely be attributed to the sexual
revolution initiated by Judaism and later carried forward by
Christianity.
This revolution consisted of forcing the sexual genie into the
marital bottle. It ensured that sex no longer dominated society,
heightened male-female love and sexuality (and thereby almost
alone created the possibility of love and eroticism within
marriage), and began the arduous task of elevating the status of
women.
It is probably impossible for us, who live thousands of years
after Judaism began this process, to perceive the extent to
which undisciplined sex can dominate man's life and the life of
society. Throughout the ancient world, and up to the recent past
in many parts of the world, sexuality infused virtually all of
society.
Human sexuality, especially male sexuality, is polymorphous, or
utterly wild (far more so than animal sexuality). Men have had
sex with women and with men; with little girls and young boys;
with a single partner and in large groups; with total strangers
and immediate family members; and with a variety of domesticated
animals. They have achieved orgasm with inanimate objects such
as leather, shoes, and other pieces of clothing, through
urinating and defecating on each other (interested readers can
see a photograph of the former at select art museums exhibiting
the works of the photographer Robert Mapplethorpe); by dressing
in women's garments; by watching other human beings being
tortured; by fondling children of either sex; by listening to a
woman's disembodied voice (e.g., "phone sex"); and, of course,
by looking at pictures of bodies or parts of bodies. There is
little, animate or inanimate, that has not excited some men to
orgasm. Of course, not all of these practices have been condoned
by societies — parent-child incest and seducing another's man's
wife have rarely been countenanced — but many have, and all
illustrate what the unchanneled, or in Freudian terms, the
"un-sublimated," sex drive can lead to.
De-sexualizing God and religion
Among the consequences of the unchanneled sex drive is the
sexualization of everything — including religion. Unless the sex
drive is appropriately harnessed (not squelched — which leads to
its own destructive consequences), higher religion could not
have developed. Thus, the first thing Judaism did was to
de-sexualize God: "In the beginning God created the heavens and
the earth" by his will, not through any sexual behavior. This
was an utterly radical break with all other religions, and it
alone changed human history. The gods of virtually all
civilizations engaged in sexual relations. In the Near East, the
Babylonian god Ishtar seduced a man, Gilgamesh, the Babylonian
hero. In Egyptian religion, the god Osiris had sexual relations
with his sister, the goddess Isis, and she conceived the god
Horus. In Canaan, El, the chief god, had sex with Asherah. In
Hindu belief, the god Krishna was sexually active, having had
many wives and pursuing Radha; the god Samba, son of Krishna,
seduced mortal women and men. In Greek beliefs, Zeus married
Hera, chased women, abducted the beautiful young male, Ganymede,
and masturbated at other times; Poseidon married Amphitrite,
pursued Demeter, and raped Tantalus. In Rome, the gods
sexually pursued both men and women.
Given the sexual activity of the gods, it is not surprising that
the religions themselves were replete with all forms of sexual
activity. In the ancient Near Fast and elsewhere, virgins were
deflowered by priests prior to engaging in relations with their
husbands, and sacred or ritual prostitution was almost
universal. Psychiatrist and sexual historian Norman Sussman
describes the situation thus: "Male and female prostitutes,
serving temporarily or permanently and performing heterosexual,
homosexual oral-genital, bestial, and other forms of sexual
activities, dispense their favors in behalf of the temple."
Throughout the ancient Near East, from very early times, anal
intercourse formed a part of goddess worship. In ancient Egypt,
Mesopotamia, and Canaan, annual ceremonial intercourse took
place between the king and a priestess. Women prostitutes
had intercourse with male worshippers in the sanctuaries and
temples of ancient Mesopotamia, Phoenicia, Cyprus, Corinth,
Carthage, Sicily, Egypt, Libya, West Africa, and ancient and
modern India. In ancient Israel itself, there were repeated
attempts to re-introduce temple prostitution, resulting in
repeated Jewish wars against cultic sex. The Bible records that
the Judean king Asa "put away the qdeshim [temple male
prostitutes] out of the land"; that his successor, Jehosaphat
put away out of the land ...the remnant of the qdeshim that
remained in the days of his father Asa"; and that later, King
Josiah, in his religious reforms, "broke down the houses of the
qdeshim." In India until this century, certain Hindu cults have
required intercourse between monks and nuns, and wives would
have intercourse with priests who represent the god. Until it
was made illegal in 1948, when India gained independence, Hindu
temples in many parts of India had both women and boy
prostitutes. In the fourteenth century, the Chinese found
homosexual Tibetan religious rites practiced at the court of a
Mongol emperor. In Sri Lanka through this century,
Buddhist worship of the goddess Pattini has involved priests
dressed as women, and the consort of the goddess is symbolically
castrated.
Judaism placed controls on sexual activity. It could no longer
dominate religion and social life. It was to be sanctified —
which in Hebrew means "separated" — from the world and placed in
the home, in the bed of husband and wife. Judaism's restricting
of sexual behavior was one of the essential elements that
enabled society to progress. Along with ethical monotheism, the
revolution begun by the Torah when it declared war on the sexual
practices of the world wrought the most far-reaching changes in
history.
Inventing homosexuality
The revolutionary nature of Judaism's prohibiting all forms of
non-marital sex was nowhere more radical, more challenging to
the prevailing assumptions of mankind, than with regard to
homosexuality. Indeed, Judaism may be said to have invented the
notion of homosexuality, for in the ancient world sexuality was
not divided between heterosexuality and homosexuality. That
division was the Bible's doing. Before the Bible, the
world divided sexuality between penetrator (active partner) and
penetrated (passive partner).
As Martha Nussbaum, professor of philosophy at Brown University,
recently wrote, the ancients were no more concerned with
people's gender preference than people today are with others'
eating preferences:
Ancient categories of sexual experience
differed considerably from our own... The central distinction in
sexual morality was the distinction between active and passive
roles. The gender of the object... is not in itself morally
problematic. Boys and women are very often treated
interchangeably as objects of [male] desire. What is
socially important is to penetrate rather than to be penetrated.
Sex is understood fundamentally not as interaction, but as a
doing of some thing to someone...
Judaism changed all this. It rendered the "gender of the object"
very "morally problematic"; it declared that no one is
"interchangeable" sexually. And as a result, it ensured that sex
would in fact be "fundamentally interaction" and not simply "a
doing of something to someone".
To appreciate the extent of the revolution wrought by Judaism's
prohibiting homosexuality and demanding that all sexual
interaction be male-female, it is first necessary to appreciate
just how universally accepted, valued, and practiced
homosexuality has been throughout the world.
The one continuous exception was Jewish civilization — and a
thousand years later, Christian civilization. Other than the
Jews, "none of the archaic civilizations prohibited
homosexuality per se," Dr. David E. Greenberg notes. It was
Judaism alone that about 3,000 years ago declared homosexuality
wrong.
And it said so in the most powerful and unambiguous language it
could: "Thou shalt not lie with mankind, as with womankind; it
is an abomination." "And if a man lie with mankind, as with
womankind, both of them have committed an abomination." It is
Judaism's sexual morality, not homosexuality, that historically
has been deviant.
Greenberg, whose The Construction of Homosexuality is the most
thorough historical study of homosexuality ever written,
summarizes the ubiquitous nature of homosexuality in these
words: "With only a few exceptions, male homosexuality was not
stigmatized or repressed so long as it conformed to norms
regarding gender and the relative ages and statuses of the
partners... The major exceptions to this acceptance seem to have
arisen in two circumstances." Both of these circumstances were
Jewish.
Bible truth
The Hebrew Bible, in particular the Torah (The Five Books of
Moses), has done more to civilize the world than any other book
or idea in history. It is the Hebrew Bible that gave humanity
such ideas as a universal, moral, loving God; ethical
obligations to this God; the need for history to move forward to
moral and spiritual redemption; the belief that history has
meaning; and the notion that human freedom and social justice
are the divinely desired states for all people. It gave the
world the Ten Commandments, ethical monotheism, and the concept
of holiness (the goal of raising human beings from the
animal-like to the God-like). Therefore, when this Bible makes
strong moral proclamations, I listen with great respect.
And regarding male homosexuality — female homosexuality is not
mentioned — this Bible speaks in such clear and direct language
that one does not have to be a religious fundamentalist in order
to be influenced by its views. All that is necessary is to
consider oneself a serious Jew or Christian.
Jews or Christians who take the Bible's views on homosexuality
seriously are not obligated to prove that they are not
fundamentalists or literalists, let alone bigots (though, of
course, people have used the Bible to defend bigotry). Rather,
those who claim homosexuality is compatible with Judaism or
Christianity bear the burden of proof to reconcile this view
with their Bible. Given the unambiguous nature of the biblical
attitude toward homosexuality, however, such a reconciliation is
not possible. All that is possible is to declare: "I am
aware that the Bible condemns homosexuality, and I consider the
Bible wrong." That would be an intellectually honest
approach. But this approach leads to another problem. If
one chooses which of the Bible's moral injunctions to take
seriously (and the Bible states its prohibition of homosexuality
not only as a law, but as a value — "it is an abomination"), of
what moral use is the Bible?
Advocates of the religious acceptance of homosexuality respond
that while the Bible is morally advanced in some areas, it is
morally regressive in others. Its condemnation of homosexuality
is one example, and the Torah's permitting slavery is another.
Far from being immoral, however, the Torah's prohibition of
homosexuality was a major part of its liberation (1) of the
human being from the bonds of unrestrained sexuality and (2) of
women from being peripheral to men's lives. As for slavery,
while the Bible declares homosexuality wrong, it never declares
slavery good.
Those who advocate religious acceptance of homosexuality also
argue that the Bible prescribes the death penalty for a
multitude of sins, including such seemingly inconsequential acts
as gathering wood on the Sabbath. Thus, the fact that the Torah
declares homosexuality a capital offense may mean that
homosexuality is no more grave an offense than some violation of
the Sabbath. And since we no longer condemn people who violate
the Sabbath, why continue to condemn people who engage in
homosexual acts?
The answer is that we do not derive our approach toward
homosexuality from the fact that the Torah made it a capital
offense. We learn it from the fact that the Bible makes a moral
statement about homosexuality. It makes no statement about
gathering wood on the Sabbath. The Torah uses its strongest term
of censure — "abomination" — to describe homosexuality. It is
the Bible's moral evaluation of homosexuality that distinguishes
homosexuality from other offenses, capital or otherwise. As
Professor Greenberg, who betrays no inclination toward religious
belief writes, "When the word toevah ("abomination") does appear
in the Hebrew Bible, it is sometimes applied to idolatry, cult
prostitution, magic, or divination, and is sometimes used more
generally. It always conveys great repugnance" (emphasis
added). Moreover, the Bible lists homosexuality together
with child sacrifice among the "abominations" practiced by the
peoples living in the land about to be conquered by the Jews.
The two are certainly not morally equatable, but they both
characterized a morally primitive world that Judaism set out to
destroy. They both characterized a way of life opposite to the
one that God demanded of Jews (and even of non-Jew —
homosexuality is among the sexual offenses that constitute one
of the "seven laws of the children of Noah" that Judaism holds
all people must observe). Finally, the Bible adds a unique
threat to the Jews if they engage in homosexuality and the other
offenses of the Canaanites: "You will be vomited out of the
land" just as the non-Jews who practise these things were
vomited out of the land. Again, as Greenberg notes, this threat
"suggests that the offenses were considered serious indeed."
Choose life
Judaism cannot make peace with homosexuality because
homosexuality denies many of Judaism's most fundamental
principles. It denies life, it denies God's expressed desire
that men and women cohabit, and it denies the root structure
that Judaism wishes for all mankind, the family.
If one can speak of Judaism's essence, it is contained in the
Torah statement, "I have set before you life and death, the
blessing and the curse, and you shall choose life." Judaism
affirms whatever enhances life, and it opposes or separates
whatever represents death. Thus, a Jewish priest (cohen) is to
concern himself only with life. Perhaps alone among world
religions, Judaism forbade its priests to come into contact with
the dead. To cite some other examples, meat (death) is separated
from milk (life); menstruation (death) is separated from sexual
intercourse (life); carnivorous animals (death) are separated
from vegetarian, kosher, animals (life). This is probably why
the Torah juxtaposes child sacrifice with male
homosexuality. Though they are not morally analogous, both
represent death: one deprives children of life, the other
prevents their having life. This parallelism is present in the
Talmud: "He who does not engage in propagation of the race is as
though he had shed blood."
GOD'S FIRST DECLARATION about man (the human being generally,
and the male specifically) is, "It is not good for man to be
alone." Now, presumably, in order to solve the problem of man's
aloneness, God could have made another man or even a community
of men. But instead God solved man's aloneness by creating one
other person, a woman — not a man, not a few women, not a
community of men and women. Man's solitude was not a function of
his not being with other people; it was a function of his being
without a woman. Of course, Judaism also holds that women need
men. But both the Torah statement and Jewish law have been
more adamant about men marrying than about women marrying.
Judaism is worried about what happens to men and to society when
men do not channel their passions into marriage. In this regard,
the Torah and Judaism were highly prescient: the overwhelming
majority of violent crimes are committed by unmarried men. Thus,
male celibacy, a sacred state in many religions, is a sin in
Judaism. In order to become fully human, male and female must
join. In the words of Genesis, "God created the human ... male
and female He created them." The union of male and female is not
merely some lovely ideal; it is the essence of the Jewish
outlook on becoming human. To deny it is tantamount to denying a
primary purpose of life.
Few Jews need to be informed of the centrality of family to
Jewish life. Throughout their history, one of the Jews' most
distinguishing characteristics has been their commitment to
family life. To Judaism, the family — not the nation, and not
the individual — is to be the fundamental unit, the building
block of society. Thus, when God blesses Abraham He says,
"Through you all the families of the earth will be blessed."
The enemy of women
Yet another reason for Judaism's opposition to homosexuality is
homosexuality's negative effect on women.
One of the most remarkable aspects of contemporary societies'
acceptance of homosexuality is the lack of outcry from and on
behalf of women. I say "outcry" because there is certainly much
quiet crying by women over this issue, as heard in the frequent
lament from single women that so many single men are gay. But
the major reason for anyone concerned with women's equality to
be concerned with homosexuality is the direct correlation
between the prevalence of male homosexuality and the relegation
of women to a low social role. The improvement of the condition
of women has only occurred in Western civilization, the
civilization least tolerant of homosexuality.
In societies where men sought out men for love and sex, women
were relegated to society's periphery. Thus, for example,
ancient Greece, which elevated homosexuality to an ideal, was
characterized by "a misogynistic attitude," in Norman Sussman's
words. Homosexuality in ancient Greece, he writes, "was closely
linked to an idealized concept of the man as the focus of
intellectual and physical activities...The woman was seen as
serving but two roles. As a wife, she ran the home. As a
courtesan, she satisfied male sexual desires." Classicist Eva
Keuls describes Athens at its height of philosophical and
artistic greatness as "a society dominated by men who sequester
their wives and daughters, denigrate the female role in
reproduction, erect monuments to the male genitalia, have sex
with the sons of their peers..."
In medieval France, when men stressed male-male love, it
"implied a corresponding lack of interest in women. In the Song
of Roland, a French mini-epic given its final form in the late
eleventh or twelfth century, women appear only as shadowy
marginal figures: "The deepest signs of affection in the poem,
as well as in similar ones appear in the love of man for man..."
The women of Arab society, wherein male homosexuality has been
widespread, remain in a notably low state in the modern world.
This may be a coincidence, but common sense suggests a linkage.
So, too, in traditional Chinese culture, the low state of women
has been linked to widespread homosexuality. As a French
physician reported from China in the nineteenth century,
"Chinese women were such docile, homebound dullards that the
men, like those of ancient Greece, sought courtesans and boys."
While traditional Judaism is not as egalitarian as many late
twentieth century Jews would like, it was Judaism — very much
through its insistence on marriage and family and its rejection
of infidelity and homosexuality — that initiated the process of
elevating the status of women. While other cultures were writing
homoerotic poetry, the Jews wrote the Song of Songs, one of the
most beautiful poems depicting male-female sensual love ever
written.
A final reason for opposition to homosexuality is the homosexual
"lifestyle." While it is possible for male homosexuals to live
lives of fidelity comparable to those of heterosexual males, it
is usually not the case. While the typical lesbian has had fewer
than ten "lovers," the typical male homosexual in America has
had over 500. In general, neither homosexuals nor heterosexuals
confront the fact that it is this male homosexual lifestyle,
more than the specific homosexual act, that disturbs most
people. This is probably why less attention is paid to female
homosexuality. When male sexuality is not controlled, the
consequences are considerably more destructive than when female
sexuality is not controlled. Men rape. Women do not. Men,
not women, engage in fetishes. Men are more frequently consumed
by their sex drive, and wander from sex partner to sex partner.
Men, not women, are sexually sadistic. The indiscriminate sex
that characterizes much of male homosexual life represents the
antithesis of Judaism's goal of elevating human life from the
animal-like to the Godlike.
The Jewish sexual ideal
Judaism has a sexual ideal — marital sex. All other forms of
sexual behavior, though not equally wrong, deviate from that
ideal. The further they deviate, the stronger Judaism's
antipathy to that behavior. Thus, there are varying degrees of
sexual wrongs. There is, one could say, a continuum of wrong
which goes from premarital sex, to celibacy, to adultery, and on
to homosexuality, incest, and bestiality. We can better
understand why Judaism rejects homosexuality if we first
understand its attitudes toward these other unacceptable
practices. For example, normative Judaism forcefully rejects the
claim that never marrying is an equally valid lifestyle to
marriage. Judaism states that a life without marrying is a less
holy, less complete, and a less Jewish life. Thus, only a
married man was allowed to be a high priest, and only a man who
had children could sit as a judge on the Jewish supreme court,
the Sanhedrin. To put it in modern terms, while an unmarried
rabbi can be the spiritual leader of a congregation, he would be
dismissed by almost any congregation if he publicly argued that
remaining single were as Jewishly valid a way of life as
marriage. Despite all this, no Jew could argue that single Jews
must be ostracized from Jewish communal life. Single Jews are to
be loved and included in Jewish family, social, and religious
life.
These attitudes toward not marrying should help clarify
Judaism's attitude toward homosexuality. First,
homosexuality contradicts the Jewish ideal. Second, it cannot be
held to be equally valid. Third, those publicly committed to it
may not serve as public Jewish role models. But fourth,
homosexuals must be included in Jewish communal life and loved
as fellow human beings and as Jews. Still, we cannot open
the Jewish door to non-marital sex. For once one argues that any
non-marital form of sexual behavior is the moral equal of
marital sex, the door is opened to all other forms of sexual
expression. If consensual homosexual activity is valid, why not
consensual incest between adults? Why is sex between an adult
brother and sister more objectionable than sex between two adult
men? If a couple agrees, why not allow consensual adultery? Once
non-marital sex is validated, how can we draw any line? Why
shouldn't gay liberation be followed by incest liberation?
Accepting homosexuality as the social, moral, or religious
equivalent of heterosexuality would constitute the first modern
assault on the extremely hard won, millennia-old battle for a
family-based, sexually monogamous society. While it is labeled
as "progress," the acceptance of homosexuality would not be new
at all.
Again, Judaism's sexual ideals, especially its opposition to
homosexuality, rendered Jews different from the earliest times
to the present. As early as the second century B.C., Jewish
writers were noting the vast differences between Jewish sexual
and family life and that of their non-Jewish neighbors. In the
Syballine Oracles, written by an Egyptian Jew probably between
163 and 45 B.C., the author compared Jews to the other nations:
The Jews "are mindful of holy wedlock, and they do not engage in
impious intercourse with male children, as do Phoenicians,
Egyptians, and Romans, specious Greece and many nations of
others, Persians and Galatians and all Asia." And in our times.
sex historian Amo Karlen wrote that according to the sex
researcher Alfred Kinsey, "Homosexuality was phenomenally rare
among Orthodox Jews."
Moral and psychological questions
To all the arguments offered against homosexuality the most
frequent response is: But homosexuals have no choice. To many
people this claim is so emotionally powerful that no further
reflection seems necessary. How can we oppose actions that
people have not chosen? The question is much more instructive
when posed in a more specific way: Is homosexuality biologically
programmed from birth, or is it socially and psychologically
induced? There is clearly no one answer that accounts for all
homosexuals. What can be said for certain is that some
homosexuals were started along that path in early childhood, and
that most homosexuals, having had sex with both sexes, have
chosen homosexuality along with or in preference to
heterosexuality.
We can say "chosen" because the vast majority of gay men have
had intercourse with women. As a four-year study of 128
gay men by a UCLA professor of psychology revealed, "More than
92 percent of the gay men had dated a woman at some time,
two-thirds had sexual intercourse with a woman." As of now, the
one theory we can rule out is that homosexuals are biologically
programmed to be homosexual. Despite an understandably great
desire on the part of many to prove it (and my own inclination
to believe it), there is simply no evidence that homosexuality
is biologically determined. Of course, one could argue
homosexuality is biologically determined, but that society, if
it suppresses it enough, causes most homosexuals to suppress
their homosexuality. Yet, if this argument is true, if society
can successfully repress homosexual inclinations, it can lead to
either of two conclusions — that society should do so for its
own sake, or that society should not do so for the individual's
sake. Once again we come back to the question of values. Or one
could argue that people are naturally (i.e., biologically)
bisexual (and given the data I have seen on human sexuality,
this may well be true). Ironically, however, if this is true,
the argument that homosexuality is chosen is strengthened, not
weakened. For if we all have bisexual tendencies, and most
of us successfully suppress our homosexual impulses, then
obviously homosexuality is frequently both surmountable and
chosen. And once again we are brought back to our original
question of what sexual ideal society ought to foster —
heterosexual marital or homosexual sex.
I conclude:
Homosexuality may be biologically induced
(though no evidence of this exists). but is certainly
psychologically ingrained (perhaps indelibly) at a very early
age in some cases. Presumably, these individuals always
have had sexual desires only for their own sex. Historically
speaking, they appear to constitute a minority among
homosexuals.
In many cases, homosexuality appears not to
be indelibly ingrained. These individuals have gravitated toward
homosexuality from heterosexual experiences, or have always been
bisexual, or live in a society that encourages homosexuality. As
Greenberg, who is very sympathetic to gay liberation, writes,
"Biologists who view most traits as inherited, and psychologists
who think sexual preferences are largely determined in early
childhood, may pay little attention to the finding that many gay
people have had extensive heterosexual experience."
Therefore, the evidence overwhelmingly leads
to this conclusion: By and large, it is society, not the
individual, that chooses whether homosexuality will be widely
practiced. A society's values, much more than individual
tendencies, determine the extent of homosexuality in that
society. Thus, we can have great sympathy for the exclusively
homosexual individual while strongly opposing social acceptance
of homosexuality. In this way we retain both our hearts
and our values.
Is homosexuality an illness?
Society, in short, can consider homosexuality right or wrong
whether or not it is chosen. Society can also consider
homosexuality normal or ill whether or not it is chosen.
Though the father of psychoanalysis, Sigmund Freud, did not
think that in and of itself homosexuality meant that a person
was sick, according to his standards of psychosexual
development, he considered homosexuality to be an arrested
development. But until 1973, psychiatry did consider
homosexuality an illness. To cite one of countless examples, Dr.
Leo Rangell, a psychoanalyst, wrote that he had "never seen a
male homosexual who did not also turn out to have a phobia of
the vagina."
In 1973, the American Psychiatric Association (APA) removed
homosexuality from its official listing of mental illnesses in
its Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Psychiatric Disorders.
Gay activists have used this as a major weapon in their battle
for societal acceptance of homosexuality. But, for many reasons,
the APA decision has not resolved the question of whether
homosexuality is an illness, and the question may well be
unresolvable. Given the mixed moral and judgmental record of
psychiatry, especially since the 1960s, all one may conclude
from the APA's decision to remove homosexuality from its list of
illnesses is that while it may have been right, organized
psychiatry has given us little reason to trust its judgment on
politically charged issues. For these reasons, the fact that the
American Psychiatric Association no longer labels homosexuality
an illness should not persuade anyone that it is not. Given the
subjective nature of the term "mental illness," given the power
of gay activists, and given the political views of the APA
leadership (as opposed to most of its members), the
association's vote means nothing to many observers.
If social pressures forced psychiatrists in the past to label
homosexuality an illness, how can we be certain that social
pressures in our time have not forced them to label it normal?
Are present-day psychiatrists less influenced by societal
pressures than were their predecessors? I doubt it. So, putting
aside psychiatry's ambivalence about homosexuality, let us pose
the question in this way: "Assuming there is such a thing as
normal, is it normal for a man to be incapable of making love to
a woman (or vice versa)?"
Presumably, there are only three possible answers:
Most homosexuals can make love to a woman,
but they find such an act repulsive or simply prefer making love
to men.
Yes, it is normal.
No, it is not normal.
If the first response is offered, then we have to acknowledge
that the homosexual has chosen his homosexuality. And we may
then ask whether someone who chooses to love the same sex rather
than the opposite sex has made this decision from a
psychologically healthy basis. If the second response is
offered, each of us is free to assess this answer for him or
herself. I, for one, do not believe that a man's inability to
make love to a woman can be labeled normal. While such a man may
be a healthy and fine human being in every other area of life,
and quite possibly more kind, industrious, and ethical than many
heterosexuals, in this one area he cannot be called normal. And
the reason for considering homosexuality abnormal is not its
minority status. Even if the majority of men became incapable of
making love to women, it would still not be normal. Men are
designed to make love to women, and vice versa. The eye provides
an appropriate analogy: If the majority of the population became
blind, blindness would still be abnormal. The eye was designed
to see. That is why I choose the third response — that
homosexuality is unhealthy. This is said, however, with the
understanding that in the psychological arena, "illness" can be
a description of one's values rather than of objective science
(which may simply not exist in this area).
Man and woman he made them
To a world which divided human sexuality between penetrator and
penetrated, Judaism said, "You are wrong — sexuality is to be
divided between male and female." To a world which saw women as
baby producers unworthy of romantic and sexual attention,
Judaism said "You are wrong — women must be the sole focus of
men's erotic love." To a world which said that sensual feelings
and physical beauty were life's supreme goods, Judaism said,
"You are wrong — ethics and holiness are the supreme goods." A
thousand years before Roman emperors kept naked boys, Jewish
kings were commanded to write and keep a sefer torah, a book of
the Torah.
In all my research on this subject, nothing moved me more than
the Talmudic law that Jews were forbidden to sell slaves or
sheep to non-Jews, lest the non-Jews engage in homosexuality and
bestiality. That was the world in which rabbis wrote the Talmud,
and in which, earlier, the Bible was written. Asked what is the
single greatest revelation I have derived from all my
researches, I always respond, "That there had to have been
divine revelation to produce the Torah." The Torah was simply
too different from the rest of the world, too against man's
nature, to have been solely man-made.
The creation of Western civilization has been a terribly
difficult and unique thing. It took a constant delaying of
gratification, and a re-channeling of natural instincts; and
these disciplines have not always been well received. There have
been numerous attempts to undo Judeo-Christian civilization, not
infrequently by Jews (through radical politics) and Christians
(through anti-Semitism).
The bedrock of this civilization, and of Jewish life, has been
the centrality and purity of family life. But the family is not
a natural unit so much as it is a value that must be cultivated
and protected. The Greeks assaulted the family in the name of
beauty and Eros. The Marxists assaulted the family in the name
of progress. And today, gay liberation assaults it in the name
of compassion and equality. I understand why gays would do this.
Life has been miserable for many of them. What I have not
understood was why Jews or Christians would join the assault. I
do now. They do not know what is at stake. At stake is our
civilization.
It is very easy to forget what Judaism has wrought and what
Christians have created in the West. But those who loathe this
civilization never forget. The radical Stanford University
faculty and students who recently chanted, "Hey, hey, ho, ho,
Western civ has got to go," were referring to much more than
their university's syllabus. And no one is chanting that
song more forcefully than those who believe and advocate that
sexual behavior doesn't play a role in building or eroding
civilization. The acceptance of homosexuality as the equal
of heterosexual marital love signifies the decline of Western
civilization as surely as the rejection of homosexuality and
other nonmarital sex made the creation of this civilization
possible.