cellio: (star)
Monica ([personal profile] cellio) wrote2003-11-13 06:30 pm

learning experience

A post in a community for Jewish converts (and converts in training) raised this question: the poster has a disabled sibling and has in the past been the person who accompanies said sibling to church on Christmas. (The rest of the family is in the choir.) Is this behavior permitted, required, or forbidden of a Jew?

Much of the feedback so far weighs in on the side of "required -- family is family". Someone cited honoring one's parents (the source of the request), and a couple people mentioned protecting a life (the sibling is apparently in real danger of injury without someone there).

I, on the other hand, am leaning toward "forbidden", though "permitted" is a possibility. Definitely not "required", though.

The issue is complex. While the sibling needs a caregiver, that's a service that can be hired -- so there's no apparent need for the poster to do it personally. Of course it's important to honor one's parents (this comes up a lot in text), but the talmud also teaches that if a parent asks you to transgress the Torah, you must decline (Bava Metzia 32a). This raises the question of whether attending another religion's worship service -- on its second-holiest day, to boot -- is avodah zara, forbidden worship. Is it enough if you don't intend to worship? What if you don't participate? What if you don't listen? That is a complex question with varied answers depending on circumstances, ranging from exactly what will take place to the strength of your own Jewish education and commitment, and you really need to ask your rabbi for a personal ruling.

I think the experience of facing this issue is valuable for the conversion candidate, actually. As a member of a minority religion (that sometimes faces hostility from others), sometimes you are going to have to make choices between your religion and your family/friends/society -- things like this, or resolving Shabbat issues with your employer, or various other matters. Finding out how you will handle those choices before it's "too late" -- before you convert and acquire new obligations -- seems useful to me.

I assume that most conversion candidates face some sort of religion-vs-world-at-large test during the process, but I don't actually know.

[identity profile] sanpaku.livejournal.com 2003-11-13 05:18 pm (UTC)(link)
Many orthodox folks won't set foot in a church. Personally I think that's a major fault line between orthodoxy and Conservatism. There really are many excellent sources that declare in no uncertain terms that Christianity is not avodah zarah, enough to be normative, I think. Insisting on otherwise just flies in the face of too much other evidence, and I don't think one should act on the basis of what's essentially a superstition. I was at an old friend's wedding in a Catholic church this summer and didn't think twice about it.

Now my story is of going with my wife to Christmas eve services. I had just settled into the Chinese food when a passing harmful remark she made to her sister, as the latter was going out the door, prompted her to want to go to the church and make up with her sister. I've been to Christian services before, but the whole lighting the candle thing and all made me distinctly uncomfortable. But my wife found it valuable, because she felt so alienated being there, so much that it just was not her, that she left a stronger Jew than she had been before.

We talk about the Christmas thing (ie being at her house with the tree and all) every year, because I really hate Christmas, yet it is very important to her family, and I know she feels the tug back to them. The stakes are higher with the baby, too. And there's the fact that her family is pretty amazingly anti-Semitic. But I have decided that it's part of her and I know that she is not a complete person when she feels estranged from them. Darchei shalom is a Jewish value too, so we live with it for now. That's how I would advise the person you originally referred to, to think about it.

[identity profile] mishtaneh.livejournal.com 2003-11-13 05:44 pm (UTC)(link)
I'm getting the impression that Orthodox is increasingly moving toward the position that the Christian Trinity constitutes idolatry. (Which makes me wonder how they feel about Christian Orthodox movements, which "officially" accepted the doctrine of the Trinity ~1000 years ago to avoid a repeat of the Fourth Crusade, but in reality have never agreed with it.)

In a sense it seems kind of extremist to me... yet at the same time I can see their point. Although, to be honest, I think the specifically Catholic obsession with saints, and even more so with the "Virgin Mary", is far closer to idolatry.

[identity profile] sanpaku.livejournal.com 2003-11-13 06:16 pm (UTC)(link)
Right, well one point is that they do not distinguish between, say, Unitarians, Protestants, and Catholics. It would seem to me that the avodah zarah argument would have to have some reflection on the content of each of those beliefs.

But even more so, I'm not sure I do see their point. "Avodah zarah" originally meant offerings, human and otherwise, to false gods. Christians differ on the nature of God, but they are monotheistic. I also think that in a sense it's a disservice to not recognize a faith that, for all the bad history there, did spread the idea of monotheism around the world.

[identity profile] mishtaneh.livejournal.com 2003-11-13 06:24 pm (UTC)(link)
I hate to say it, but I think a lot of it is essentially sour grapes at having to deal with a mutant version of their own beliefs. (As to avodah zarah, by their argument Jesus is a false god. I won't try to discuss whether it should, as the Trinity never made much sense to me and any counter to that position must hinge on the Trinity.)

[identity profile] kmelion.livejournal.com 2003-11-13 09:13 pm (UTC)(link)
most forms of Christianity are concidered idolatry not JUST because of Jesus and the belief in the Trinity, but because of the symbolism of the icons, the wafer and wine, the genuflecting...

I forget which branch of Christianity (the one without the icons and most of the above), bt it's ok for a Jew to enter their church because their practice of Christianity doesn't fall under idol worship
geekosaur: orange tabby with head canted 90 degrees, giving impression of "maybe it'll make more sense if I look at it this way?" (Default)

[personal profile] geekosaur 2003-11-13 09:36 pm (UTC)(link)
That's likely to be the Orthodox Christian denominations I mentioned earlier in this thread; they disapprove of icons (one of the early dividing issues between Orthodoxy and Catholicism being the latter's insistence on having a cross on the altar), and their rejection of the Trinity makes "communion" meaningless to them.

However, I'd not point to genuflecting as a problem; we have our own version, after all. And, unfortunately, one can stretch a point (possibly too far) to claim that we've invested perhaps a bit more iconography in Torah scrolls than is justified by the need to show proper respect for them. (On the other hand, we're not perfect either; maybe we need to do some self-examination on that issue.)

I will agree that the whole business with the cross is unjustifiable iconography, as is the "fish" that is increasingly common, and other icons used by various denominations (many Protestant branches use an icon of flame with a cross motif worked in, and then there's the Catholic "sacred heart").

[identity profile] dvarin.livejournal.com 2003-11-13 10:05 pm (UTC)(link)
Just out of curiosity, which Orthodox branch are you thinking of? IIRC, icons are even more popular in the Eastern Christian churches than they are in the Roman Catholic one, and having been to the local Greek Orthodox church, I'll vouch for there being no shortage of icons and images.
geekosaur: orange tabby with head canted 90 degrees, giving impression of "maybe it'll make more sense if I look at it this way?" (Default)

[personal profile] geekosaur 2003-11-13 10:14 pm (UTC)(link)
Interesting. I'm mostly thinking back to the research I did involving the original Byzantine Orthodox church (from which the others broke off after the Byzantines were forced to accept Catholic doctrine), and the iconography issue was fairly key to that. I admit I don't have much experience with current Orthodox Christian practice so I probably shouldn't be surprised at creeping iconography; but Greek Orthodox I would expect to be thoroughly contaminated by Catholic influence as the price they paid to get support from Rome after the fall of Constantinople.

[identity profile] dvarin.livejournal.com 2003-11-14 07:22 am (UTC)(link)
I recall iconography being an issue, but I could have sworn that it was actually the other way around, that the Byzantines had to convince the Romans that all the icons were okay. Perhaps this is a period difference and it went both ways at points--one datapoint I recently acquired by going to an exhibit of the works of the artist El Greco, who started life in the Rennaissance as an Eastern Orthodox iconographer, was that his work in Spain (after he stopped painting icons but still painted religious figures) was fairly controversial because it invested too much realism at the expense of teaching utulity, which was the prime reason that icons were allowed at all in the Roman countries.

Also, afaik, Greek Orthodox is the Eastern church that ignores Rome, and Byzantine Catholic is the Eastern church that follows Rome. It would seem that the former should be the less influenced of the two, being, I'd guess, made up of those broken-off factions you mentioned, if they still exist. (It seems to make no sense that the Romans would just let half the Eastern church leave if they had managed to take them over when the Byzantine Empire fell.)

[identity profile] mishtaneh.livejournal.com 2003-11-13 10:17 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh, and sorry for switching userids on you; I need to decide which one I'm using when posting.... :/

[identity profile] dvarin.livejournal.com 2003-11-14 07:23 am (UTC)(link)
No problem--because the user-pictures are the same, it took me about ten minutes before I noticed that the userids were different. :)
goljerp: Photo of the moon Callisto (Io)

[personal profile] goljerp 2003-11-14 04:41 am (UTC)(link)
The shul that I grew up at (The Jewish Community of Amherst) has, as its building, a former Congregationalist church. Apparently it was very easy to turn into a synegogue: remove a cross at the front, and away you go. Sure, there are stained glass windows, but they're nonrepresentational. OK, most shuls don't have donor plates from the Dickinson family, but still...

As a consequence, whenever I go into a certain kind of church (for example, on the Freedom Trail in Boston), I think, "gee, this looks just like a shul!")
a picture of the JCA building from the outside - a white boxy building with a steeple. a picture of the stained glass windows - they're nonrepresentational.
siderea: (Default)

[personal profile] siderea 2003-11-13 10:15 pm (UTC)(link)
I think it all comes down to specifics: what type of Christianity and what type of service on the one side, but also how strong and self-assured and educated a Jew on the other.

Yes, it seems to me (and I am not Jewish, though I am Ashkenazi) the question is not whether it is permitted/forbidden/required for a Jew to do this, but whether it is permitted/forbidden/required for this Jew to do this.

Well, that's one question. But (being practical as is my wont) another, less theological one is: has anyone checked with the handicapped sister to inquire how she might feel to be saddled with a keeper who was pointedly not joining in with the service? Mightn't she feel uncomfortable with that situation?

At any rate, I feel the need to point out the ludicrousness of someone needing a Jew to accompany them to a Christmas service. We're talking about a gathering of a whole barn full of Christians. I can't believe there isn't a single one there who can be convinced to take a sister-in-faith under her wing for one night. What, does she think nobody else is going to show up? Her fellow congregationists, what are they, chopped liver?