2016-06-30
In a recent essay decrying the Reform rabbis' decision on intermarriage--a decision I applaud, by the way--Elliott Abrams comments that "the Reform movement unilaterally abrogated 5,000 years of Jewish law and practice by throwing matrilineal descent out the window. Now American Jews can't even agree on who is a Jew: someone born of a Jewish mother, as had always been the case, or someone born of a Jewish father and gentile mother as well?"

The basic complaint is heard frequently in Conservative and Orthodox circles, namely that the Reform movement has split the Jewish people, because neither the Conservative nor Orthodox branches of Judaism accept patrilineal descent--the idea that Judaism is passed through either parent, not just a mother. It is a fine polemic, but I think it ignores the underlying realities that, to their credit, Reform rabbis are trying to address. I wish that other parts of the Jewish world would also seriously address the issue instead of simply attacking Reform Judaism for facing up to facts.

It is true that matrilineal descent is the rabbinic norm. It's not 5,000 years old, however. The ruling really dates back to the time of the restoration of the Second Temple, to the Book of Ezra--which is more like 2,500 years ago. At that time, with the Jewish people facing the difficult task of rebuilding the Temple, Ezra annulled marriages between Israelites and "foreign wives." Subsequent rabbinic thought builds on this foundation, and that leads us to today.

But if we are talking about tradition, patrilineal descent in Judaism is actually much older than matrilineal descent. Consider for instance that on Friday night in Jewish homes, female children are blessed to be like the matriarchs, while the male children are blessed to be like "Manasseh and Ephraim." This recalls the extraordinary blessing (with crossed hands) that Jacob gives to Joseph's sons.

Joseph lived in Egypt, married an Egyptian woman, and had these two sons. They can only be Jewish through Joseph's side--hence they are Jewish by patrilineal descent, not matrilineal descent. (Perhaps there was a convocation of Reform Rabbis in Egypt at the time?) My point is that while certainly matrilineal descent has been the norm in rabbinic Judaism, it has not "always been the case," as some like to believe. Therefore, in a changing circumstance one can certainly find a biblical basis for patrilineal descent. It's in the very blessing repeated in Jewish homes every week, binding one generation to the next.

What changing circumstance might justify revisiting the issue? According to accounts I've read by Rabbi Alexander Schindler, the head of the Reform movement at the time the decision was made, the issue arose from the plight of Jewish fathers who felt strongly about their Judaism and who wished to pass it on to their children.

In general, Reform rabbis have encouraged conversion before the marriage ceremony. However, the reality was that for many couples, a commitment to Jewish practice arose after children came, not before marriage. The Reform movement recognized that if the children participated in Jewish activities and education, and the family unit as a whole was committed to Judaism, it made no sense to require a conversion ceremony for these children, on the occasion, for instance, of a bar or bat mitzvah. Why add a barrier to Jewish participation by the family members who sincerely wished to participate? In the context of Reform practice, it made no sense to stigmatize a child because the committed Jewish parent happened to be male rather than female.

But there is a deeper issue here, and that is our changing understanding of the meaning of biological descent. After all, our theories of biology are more nuanced and complex than tribal notions of blood. The intellectual basis for equating patrilineal and matrilineal descent rests on the findings of contemporary biology. In an age of the genome project, when we know for a fact that mother and father contribute equal shares of DNA, no one can argue that, biologically speaking, a child with a Jewish father and non-Jewish mother is any more or less genetically Jewish than a child with a Jewish mother and non-Jewish father. And in an age when parents are increasingly sharing child-rearing responsibilities, is it sensible to argue some mystique on behalf of mothers over fathers in terms of how a child's religious affiliation develops?

The insistence on mere biological descent leads to too many obvious absurdities. Yes, it's exciting that some scientists have found "Aaron the High Priest" markers on the Y chromosome of certain Jewish males, but does anyone really want to argue that the genome project is going to uncover a set of Jewish genes? Perhaps it was possible in some previous eras to believe that some mysterious Jewish component was passed on genetically, but can anyone seriously assert that today? No; when we come to assess whether a person is a Jew, we must talk about Jewish souls, not Jewish bodies.

Some like the idea of a fixed, immutable, unchanging standard--something that's "always been the case." I understand that appeal in an age of uncertainty, but that doesn't make it so. Judaism is an evolutionary religion. We used to sacrifice animals in a temple, now we pray in a synagogue. Even before we lost the Temple, that method of worship was losing its meaning. Only a very few people in the Jewish world would seriously argue that a return to animal sacrifice would be an improvement over prayer and study. The "always the case" argument just doesn't hold up to scrutiny.

In the same way, we used to have matrilineal descent, now we have patrilineal descent. And I think we are moving to recognizing both. Because it is certainly time, in light of an egalitarian social structure and our contemporary understanding of biology, to seriously revisit the issue of descent and come to new, more coherent conclusions.

This is a project not just for Reform Jews but for all Jews. The problem is not that the Reform movement addressed the issue of patrilineal descent (or that more recently it has addressed the issue of gay unions); the problem is that the rest of the Jewish world refuses to respond creatively to these issues. If I had two wishes, they would be these: that the Reform movement would work harder to more deeply root its decisions in Jewish text and tradition, and that elements of the Conservative and Orthodox rabbinic establishment would contribute to that project, and bring good will to it. This would do more to bring the Jewish people together than any polemic.

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