The Purpose and Meaning of Sex in Judaism
Judaism
approves of sex and sexual pleasure, valuing it as a means toward procreation
and companionship.
By Michael Gold
Reprinted with permission of the author from Does
God Belong in the Bedroom?. The author can be reached at RabbiGold@aol.com.
The Torah never explicitly lays out a sexual ethic; rather,
it hints at certain attitudes in numerous passages. These attitudes are further
explored in the rabbinic interpretations of these passages articulated in the
Talmud and midrash.
The Torah sees the world and
everything in it as essentially good: “And God saw all that He made, and found
it very good” (Gen. 1:30). This goodness includes sexual activity. After
creating human beings, God blesses them and tells them, “Be fertile and
increase, fill the earth and master it” (Gen. 1:28). Thus sexual activity is a
basic part of God’s creation; as such it must be good. For the most part,
Judaism rejected the negative teachings about sex that later became prevalent
in Christianity. In fact, the rabbis throughout the talmudic period and the
Middle Ages often spoke of sexual relations as a wonderful part of God’s
creation. One famous passage teaches:
“We the
possessors of the Holy Torah believe that God, may He be praised, created all,
as His wisdom decreed, and did not create anything ugly or shameful. For if sexual
intercourse were repulsive, then the reproductive organs are also repulsive…If
the reproductive organs are repulsive, how did the Creator fashion something
blemished? If that were so, we should find that His deeds were not perfect.”
(from “The Holy Letter,” attributed to Nahmanides)
Sexual relations, at the proper time and in the proper
context, are part of God’s plan and are essentially good.
In the Torah, human beings are
portrayed as sexual creatures. When God creates Adam, God’s immediate response
is that Adam has no fitting helper—that is, no sexual partner. Adam gives names
to all the various animals, but none is found to be a fitting partner for him:
“So the LORD God
cast a deep sleep upon the man; and, while he slept, He took one of his ribs and
closed up the flesh at that spot. And the LORD God fashioned the rib that He
had taken from the man into a woman; and He brought her to the man. Then the
man said, ‘This one at last is bone of my bones and flesh of my flesh. This one
shall be called Woman, for from man was she taken.’ Hence a man leaves his
father and mother and clings to his wife, so that they become one flesh” (Gen.
2:21‑24).
The creation stories in the Torah
suggest two purposes of sexual activity. The first and most obvious is procreation.
Sex is part of God’s plan for populating the world; it fulfills God’s will for
both animals and humans. The rabbis used the words of Isaiah as a proof text:
“The Creator of heaven who alone is God. Who formed the earth and made it, Who
alone established it. He did not create it a waste, but formed it for
habitation” (Isaiah 45:18).
The second purpose of sexual
relations is companionship, which the Torah seems to regard as an even greater
justification for sexual relations than procreation. In Jewish tradition, the
belief that “it is not good for man to be alone” is as important if not more
important than the command to “be fruitful and increase.” The Torah uses the
term yada—“to know”—to indicate a
sexual relationship. Sex is thus considered more than a mere biological act; it
involves intimate knowledge shared by two human beings.
The positive attitude of Judaism toward sexuality stands
in sharp contrast with a more negative picture that developed in early
Christianity. Although Christians disagreed on the nature of Adam’s sin in the
Bible, it was generally believed to be tied up with sexuality. Paul
particularly emphasized this attitude. According to Elaine Pagels, a Christian
scholar:
“He [Paul] often speaks of marriage in negative
terms, as a sop for those too weak to do what is best: renounce sexual activity
altogether. Paul admits that marriage is ‘not sin’ yet argues that it makes
both partners slaves to each other’s sexual needs and desires, no longer free
to devote their energies ‘to the Lord’ [1 Cor. 7:1‑35].”
Admittedly, Paul was speaking to
a community that believed the kingdom of God was imminent. Even after such
hopes failed, however, this identification of sex with sin was further
developed by the early fathers of the church, particularly Augustine, and has
remained influential in Christianity to this day.
Rabbi Michael Gold is the rabbi at Temple Beth Torah,
Tamarac Jewish Center in Tamarac, Florida. He is the author of four books, and
his articles have appeared in Moment, Judaism, Jewish
Spectator, B’nai Brith International Jewish Monthly, and numerous
other publications. He also served as co-chair of the Rabbinical Assembly’s
committee on human sexuality.