No Icing on the Cake
| September 18, 2017M any readers are aware of the Masterpiece Cakeshop case involving a Christian baker who was punished by the state of Colorado for refusing on religious grounds to bake and design a wedding cake for a same-gender coupling celebration. The litigation which Agudath Israel of America calls “one of the… most closely watched religious liberty cases in recent years” is now before the Supreme Court and last week the Agudah filed an amicus brief written by Washington attorney (and my mechutan) Jeff Zuckerman.
I wasn’t privy to the strategy meetings on the matter but it seems to me that the brief accomplishes something very important. In straightforward legal terms it seems difficult to see how the Court could come down on the side of Colorado. The baker is asserting his First Amendment right to the free exercise of his genuinely held religious belief that it would be sinful to abet this ceremony. End of story.
But that simple logical rendition leaves out a major subplot of the story — the alternative lifestyle movement’s steamrolling of American society on behalf of first the normalization and now the celebration of its cause. It has won and society — and sanity — has lost. End of story.
That may be why the “Question Presented” at the outset of the brief was framed this way: “Will our society honor the guarantees of the Free Exercise Clause when a religious practice is based upon a moral judgment that is anathema to the contemporary zeitgeist?”
This case is not about conflicting legal claims; it is about whether it is still possible in today’s America to assert an uncontested constitutional right in the face of the righteous fury of the greatest single expression of the “contemporary zeitgeist.” And thus it is the zeitgeist the morally anarchic spirit of the times in which we live that must be shown to be a farce.
The brief sets out to so subtly undermine the legitimacy of that zeitgeist by noting the bottomless arrogance of believing that a brand-new moral insight into the character of marriage has transformed that which all of humanity believed throughout history into rank bigotry:
Not long ago this case would have been inconceivable even as a law school exam hypothetical. Until very recently the moral values of America were generally consistent with the moral values reflected in Jewish law. This is no longer true…. American society has also changed radically in a very short period of time its moral judgment concerning [same-gender] activities….
Nothing in the Constitution changed between the Bowers decision in 1986 [criminalizing immoral relationships] and the Obergefell decision in 2015 [holding that there is a constitutional right to same-gender marriage]. The contemporary zeitgeist however had made a 180-degree about-face. Among the intellectual and philosophical opinion-shapers of America a consensus formed that [same-gender] “marriage” is just a marriage.
While U.S. constitutional law may have this flexibility Jewish law based upon the divinely revealed Written Law and Oral Law is immutable. Thus under Jewish law [same-gender] activities remain an abomination and a marriage of two men remains inconceivable.
We recognize that our values in this area are out of sync with those of 2017 America. We believe that America has made a grievous mistake but that is beside the point now. All we seek here and all that we say the Free Exercise Clause requires is to be allowed to continue to live our lives in accordance with Jewish law.
In this the brief follows the lead of the late Justice Antonin Scalia who wrote this in his dissent in Obergefell the case that legalized same-gender couplings:
But what really astounds is the hubris reflected in today’s judicial Putsch…. They have discovered in the Fourteenth Amendment a “fundamental right” overlooked by every person alive at the time of ratification and almost everyone else in the time since…. These Justices know that limiting marriage to one man and one woman is contrary to reason; they know that an institution as old as government itself and accepted by every nation in history until 15 years ago cannot possibly be supported by anything other than ignorance or bigotry. And they are willing to say that any citizen who does not agree with that who adheres to what was until 15 years ago the unanimous judgment of all generations and all societies stands against the Constitution.
Both Scalia’s dissent and the Agudah brief are engaged in a subtle form of leitznusa d’avodah zarah. Each holds up for ridicule a newly hallowed societal belief that gives a veneer of legitimacy and moral seriousness to what is nothing more than licentiousness turning the normal into the immoral and vice versa.
But while Justice Scalia spoke against the enshrinement of this belief into law striving to hold back the pan-societal tide the Agudah’s submission to the Court isn’t trying to convince anyone of the folly of their ways. Its claim is simple: Whatever nonsense society may now have chosen to believe leave us alone.
NEVER OUT OF STYLE I was a bit surprised recently when a friend told me he gets a lot of chizuk from reading this column. I thanked him for his kind words but afterwards I wondered why he’d said that. There’s a little bit of a lot of things here including chizuk but I’ve never considered this to be a column of inspiration and encouragement.
But perhaps my friend perceives the integral premise: that it is good and wise to recover and reclaim what once was because there is untold goodness and wisdom in the way Jews once spoke and dressed and ate and celebrated and mourned and learned and interacted.
I’ve cited previously Rav Shlomo Wolbe’s observation that the Mirrer mashgiach Rav Yerucham Levovitz molded his yeshivah in what he called a fartzeitegen oyfen in the ways of times past cultivating within it an atmosphere that was purposefully out-of-date but as a result so very much in consonance with authentic Jewish values and understandings. But essentially all of Yiddishkeit is focused backward in time in a generational process of reclamation.
The Acharonim parse the Rishonim who authoritatively decipher the Gemara itself an unpacking of the Mishnah the teachings of which are embedded and discoverable in the Written Torah. And all of history is the story of Man having been ejected from Gan Eden trying to find his way back; we succeeded in this at Sinai for the briefest instant but now we await Mashiach to take us back to where we began.
To utilize the newest most cutting-edge tools and packaging strictly as a means to advance an old-time Torah vision? Sure the hipper the better provided it’s in keeping with the letter and spirit of halachah. But to turn means into ends to concede anything to modernity as an inherent value? Not an inch.
Change can be disorienting and angst-producing. And in a world — including in our own community — where so much has changed and the old is constantly being junked and displaced by the new a perspective that stands athwart all this and calls for assessing the new in light of the old can bring a Jew chizuk.
Much of contemporary Jewish media is focused for understandable reasons on the Here and Now on what’s hot or cool (or somehow both simultaneously) and how we live our lives in 2017. Here we try to preserve a little corner space to make a case for not only revering but also revisiting the There and Then in order to bring back pieces of wisdom that can enrich our lives and to ensure that the latest trends don’t dampen our passion for the permanent things — the ones that won’t suddenly turn uncool in a year or two.
We’re approaching Rosh Hashanah the beginning of an old-new cycle one in which we’re doing the same things as last year but hope and plan to do them better. “Shanah” contains connotations of both shoneh to review and redo and shinui change. On these days we commit to doing what Jews have always done and we ourselves have done many times but with greater investment of heart and mind.
Kesivah v’chasimah tovah or as Jews have long said a gut gebentsht yohr!
Originally featured in Mishpacha Issue 678. Eytan Kobre may be contacted directly at kobre@mishpacha.com
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