Sometimes Officiation at an Intermarriage Supports
the Jewish Future
It's important for
the non-Jewish spouse to support the Jewish partner's religious identity, live
in a Jewish home, and bring up Jewish children.
By Rabbi Neil Kominsky
The issue of whether
to officiate at an intermarriage is a complicated one for liberal rabbis. On
whatever side of the issue they fall, they usually share a serious concern for
the Jewish future. Rabbi Kominsky, who will in some cases perform
intermarriages, stresses the priority of the Jewish identity of the family and
of the Jewish spouse. Rabbi Lieberman whose article follows, believes that an
interfaith wedding is by definition not a Jewish wedding and, hence, not a
place where he feels appropriate officiating. However, he emphasizes the need
for Jewish clergy to provide caring support for the interfaith couple and the
decisions they face--both before and after the actual wedding ceremony.
Reprinted with permission of InterfaithFamily.com.
It usually starts with a phone call. The voice on the line
is very tentative, afraid of being rebuffed or giving offense: "Somebody gave
me your name and... umm... do you officiate at interfaith marriages?"
My reply--"Sometimes. Can you tell me a little about
your situation?"--elicits a sigh of relief, followed by a torrent of
information, feelings, and concerns. Once we've worked through the
preliminaries on the phone--the rabbi will be the only officiant; I don't do
weddings on Shabbat; and yes, that includes Saturday at 7:30 in June; the date
and place are viable for me--we schedule an appointment so that I can meet
face-to-face with both partners and talk.
Does This Relationship Support a Jewish Future?
We meet and have an excellent conversation. After an hour or
so of careful questions and answers, and if it becomes clear to me that this is
a relationship that will support a Jewish future, one I can say a blessing
over, I will agree to do the wedding. Just as we're finishing up, that anxious
tone reappears in one of their voices: "Do you mind if I ask you one more
question?"
"Not at all."
"We've been turned down by a dozen rabbis all over the
state. How come you're willing to do interfaith marriages and they're
not?"
It's a fair question, one I've been asked repeatedly over 28
years as a rabbi. Why do I officiate when so many of my colleagues do not? The
answer comes in two parts. The first question is, Can I officiate at such a
marriage? Only if that question is answered in the positive, does the second
question arise, should I?
Rabbi's Relationship to Jewish Law Is Determinative
Whether a rabbi feels that he or she can officiate has to do
with halakhah (traditional Jewish
law) and the rabbi's relationship to it. Halakhah simply does not recognize the
possibility of marriage between a Jew and a non-Jew; there is no such category
in Jewish law. You could line up 70 rabbis, perform all the required actions,
and pronounce all the required words, and it would still not be a marriage,
within the rules of this system. The couple are simply not eligible to marry
each other.
Obviously, if one accepts the halakhic definitions, the
conversation stops right there. Orthodox and Conservative rabbis, who hold
halakhah to be binding, can't officiate. Reform and Reconstructionist rabbis
have a more liberal approach to Jewish law, but that does not automatically
mean that they believe they can officiate, either. Some would say that a
rabbi's authority to officiate at a marriage assumes a Jewish marriage and,
following the traditional definition, a Jewish marriage requires two Jews. If
so, again, the conversation is over.
Others of us, however, would say that our mandate as rabbis
in the contemporary world involves serving the needs of Jews and Jewish life in
some ways that the tradition never envisaged. If so, then officiation at a
marriage where only one partner is a Jew can become possible.
It Can Be a Mitzvah to Officiate
But even if one can, should one officiate? I believe--and
this language will drive some of my more traditional colleagues crazy--that it
is a mitzvah, a religiously mandated
act, to do so under the proper circumstances. I base this position on several
premises. The first is that a deeply rooted, mutually nurturing love
relationship is a gift of God, deserving of acknowledgment and blessing. The
second is that all marriages are mixed marriages.
Any two human beings who pair up will have some areas in
which they are a perfect fit and others where, having grown up in different
circumstances--whether economic, political, cultural, interpersonal,
geographical, or religious--their assumptions and internal maps will differ in
ways that challenge them to find common approaches with which both partners can
live.
Any viable relationship must look these differences in the
face and figure out how to deal constructively with them. I see this as a major
agenda in premarital counseling. Religion, you will have noted, is simply one
of these areas, and one which, like the others, can usually be addressed in
ways that will strengthen the relationship. When a couple approaches a rabbi to
officiate at their marriage, they are already making a statement about where
they think viable common ground can be found. (I exclude here the "we
don't care, and it will keep my mother from having a heart attack"
argument, which is not very frequent and which does not, in my view, justify
rabbinic officiation.)
Very often in my experience, non-Jewish partners who, for
any of a number of very good reasons, do not see themselves converting to
Judaism, at least in the foreseeable future, can be very comfortable about
supporting the Jewish partner's religious identity, living in a home that
identifies with a welcoming Jewish community, and bringing up Jewish children.
Such a couple, in my opinion, represents a positive contribution to the Jewish
future, and I am glad to assist them with a ceremony that carries the
resonances of Jewish tradition while making those changes in wording that
permit it to reflect the couple's situation with integrity.
Thus, I would not use the traditional formula
"according to the laws of Moses and Israel" for such a couple, as
traditional Jewish law does not accord with this ceremony. On the other hand,
to affirm, as I do, that the commitment is "according to Divine and human
law" spreads a more universal and, I believe, accurate umbrella over the
proceedings. Nearly three decades of experience have taught me to rejoice in
the opportunity to offer blessings over such a relationship and the future it
promises.
Rabbi Neil Kominsky is
Rabbi of Temple Emanuel of the Merrimack Valley, Lowell, MA, and Jewish
Chaplain at Phillips Academy, Andover, Mass. He was educated at Harvard College
and the Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion in Cincinnati, where
he was ordained in 1970.
This article
originally appeared in and is reprinted with permission of
InterfaithFamily.com. Visit www.InterfaithFamily.com
for articles, resources, discussions and more.
Read Rabbi Lieberman's article against
officiation at intermarriages.