Nov 13, 2003 18:30
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.
conversion,
family,
christmas,
halacha