Rabbi Yoel Schoenfeld, Rabbi of the Young Israel of Kew
Garden Hills in Queens, New York, told Arutz Sheva that the decision Wednesday
by the U.S. Supreme Court striking down key parts of the Defense of Marriage
Act (DOMA), paving the way for greater acceptance of gay marriage, was a major
step backwards for humanity that goes all the back to the Biblical Bila'am,
whose donkey spoke to him.
“This is a generation as foolish and as silly as Bila'am
was,” Rabbi Schoenfeld told Arutz Sheva. “When a donkey speaks to you, you
don't get into a conversation with it. You are supposed to take note that
something extraordinary is happening.” Often, people see “wondrous” things, but
just go about their business without taking note.
That was the attitude that Jews needed to take on the
Supreme Court decision. “To live in a world of fantasy where two people of the
same gender can be wed ignores the thousands of years that man has lived with a
traditional marriage.
The Supreme Court decided that anyone who believes that
is bigoted,” Rabbi Schoenfeld said. The decision, he said, was a “wake-up call”
for Jews and others who had faith in the traditional definition of marriage,
that something was seriously askew today.
With the striking down of DOMA, a 1996 law that prevented
gay couples from receiving nearly 1,000 benefits even if the state they lived
in recognized their marriage, shows that “the world is upside down,” Rabbi
Schoenfeld said. “It's hard to understand how intelligent people people like
judges could make such a decision. In a way, however, the decision was a
reassuring one for Jews. “Our sages say that before the coming of the Messiah
the world will see many strange things happening.
Let us hope that this will be
the final 'detour' off the path before the Messiah arrives."
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