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Judaism

Was the Chief Rabbi right to speak on gay marriage?

We examine the issues behind Lord Sacks’s controversial intervention on same-sex ceremonies

July 20, 2012 11:55
Standing up for same-sex equality: participants at a World Pride rally in London

By

Simon Rocker,

Simon Rocker

3 min read

A wry smile might have crossed the lips of anyone who read the JC letters page last week. Not often do you find the chairman of the Reform movement jumping to the defence of the Chief Rabbi, after he had been attacked for opposing government plans to introduce civil marriage for gay and lesbian couples.

The Reform, of course, do not share Lord Sacks’s objections to equal marriage: quite the contrary. But they do uphold the right of religious readers to speak out on social and moral issues.

The Chief Rabbi had come under fire from 21 prominent Jews — among them actor Stephen Fry — who believed he should simply have kept quiet rather than risk dragging the Jewish community into a contentious public debate. Since there was no question of religious bodies being forced to conduct same-sex ceremonies, they argued, there was no reason for the Orthodox authorities to enter the fray.

His critics also observed that while it may be one thing for the Chief Rabbi to preach Torah values to his own Jewish constituency, it was quite another to try to impose them on secular British society. However, their protest overlooks one important point.