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Geoffrey Alderman

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Geoffrey Alderman,

Geoffrey Alderman

Opinion

We don’t want ‘equal marriage’

March 22, 2012 19:21
2 min read

Last week the government launched a consultation on how the law might be changed to permit the introduction of civil marriage for same-sex relationships. From a variety of Christian clerics there has issued forth a variety of opinions for and against the proposition. My concern here is not with the Christian reaction, but with the Jewish.

However, to understand what is really being proposed, and to place this reaction in its proper context, we need to grasp the reality of the underlying issue, which is not actually about "equality" at all. Same-sex couples (or rather, some same-sex couples - I'll return to this in a moment) can already enter into civil partnerships. These legal arrangements confer upon them, in broad terms, the same rights and responsibilities as marriage confers upon heterosexual couples; if there are some residual anomalies, these can doubtless be addressed without any interference with the current legal status of marriage.

But this isn't what the gay and lesbian lobby wants. In regard to the current consultation the LGBT lobby's obsessive preoccupation is with the legal enforcement of a change to the definition of marriage, so as to confer upon homosexual relationships the same social status as that enjoyed by married heterosexual couples. The lobby has been singularly unsuccessful in bringing about this change through public pressure. So now it's demanding that the full force of the law be invoked to compel a change in attitude. To allay the fears of the religious it's being said that the reform would only apply to "civil" marriages. But human rights legislation will inevitably be used to foist the change upon places of worship.

Marriage - according to my dictionary - is "the legal union or contract made by a man and a woman to live as husband and wife". The ingredients are a man and a woman, not a man and a man. Orthodox Judaism has no problem with defending this, but adherents of the Liberal and Reform movements evidently do, as without the foundation of the Torah they have little to underpin their beliefs. Rabbi Laura Janner-Klausner proclaims that Reform welcomes the proposed legislation because "a recognition of equality of marriage for homosexuals as well as heterosexuals can only strengthen…the institution of marriage," while Liberal rabbi Aaron Goldstein declares his support for "full marriage equality."

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