Rabbi Benny Lau, I’m Glad I Never Met You

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JERUSALEM (VINnews) — In recent weeks Rabbi Benny Lau raised an uproar in the national-religious community when he wrote an article stressing that people with LGBTQ leanings should not be rejected by the orthodox world even if they choose to live with their spouse and do not try to change their sexual orientation. Lau claimed that if they are totally put off by normal marital status, they should not attempt to enter a regular marriage and added that he does not see a halachic issue in LGBTQ couples raising childen together.

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A woman on the Srugim site chose to answer Rabbi Lau anonymously:

“Today I thank G-d that I never met you, Rabbi Lau. You would definitely have told me that I can be orthodox and still flow with my feelings and leanings which “I was created with.” If I had taken your bad advice, all the wonderful things in my life would never have occurred.

“I read your letter with disgust and a feeling of frustration. I go back in time about 25 years and I see myself as a young, idealistic soldier growing up in Bnei Akiva and believing that she could change the world and contribute to the Jewish world with meaningful army service.

“The beginning of my service was good and meaningful, with maximum motivation and will power I succeeded but unfortunately in time the social atmosphere influenced me more and more. Slowly the religious symbols began to wither away. At the beginning the prayers were shorter, the skirt was exchanged with trousers, keeping kosher became a burden and Shabboses became regular days to have fun…

“Within a few years I was sucked into the central Tel Aviv LGBTQ scene. I became one of them. I got to know famous singers, spent nights at LGBTQ clubs and organized events and parties. I was sure I had found my way and that nothing in the world could change my life.

“All the way along my parents didn’t give up on me and didn’t accept my path. They did continue to love me and accept me in their home but stressed clearly that this is not our way and would not have a good conclusion. My mother read Tehillim with burning tears for years.

“One day, in order to prove that I am open-minded, I agreed to go to a seminar of “Arachim”. The seminar was full of young people thirsting for answers to their questions. After a number of days of lessons, proofs and amazing answers to every question, I slowly began to understand that this is the truth. There is a Creator in the world and the Jewish people is eternal. At the end of the seminar when all hearts were opened, I stood up and admitted that everything I had heard in the last few days was true and I would do Teshuva.

“My mother referred me to a well-known rebbetzin who advised me. I explained to her that I had found the truth and wanted to live religious life but she needed to understand that I am LGBTQ and I had lived with my girlfriend for a number of years. She looked at me with a loving smile but with the force of thousands of years of tradition, she said that this is impossible. I need to establish a “Jewish home”. I went outside and looked up to the heavens and realized that I need to choose, like Avraham Avinu, who went on a new and uncharted path. I decided to live my life according to the Torah, despite the huge gap between that knowledge and my present way of life.

“I separated with pain from my girlfriend and began learning in a Baal Teshuva seminary. An amazing thing happened: Slowly the faith and the Torah started peeling away my tendencies, feelings and desires. I married a G-dfearing Talmid Chacham who brought me to a life full of joy and happiness which I could not have imagined possible. I merited bringing sweet children to the world and serving as an emissary of an organization which disseminates Judaism and I influenced tens and maybe hundreds of women.

Now I am thankful that I did not meet you, Rabbi Lau and did not take your advice that I should flow with my “tendencies that I was created with.” I would never have met my husband, had children who have a loving mother and father. I would have been desolate like my former friends, most of who are single without families or have a child dividing its time between two divorced mothers. Thank G-d I did not take your bad advice, for all that is dear to me would not have come to fruition.

“Only now I realize that your approach is far from Judaism and contradicts its basic principles. How could you claim that Hashem created someone with an orientation they cannot overcome if Hashem detests it so much? Only a cruel entity would do this. Your logic is wrong.

“Judaism believes in overcoming desires, especially in the sexual realm. This caused the first sins in Bereishis and Bilaam knew that there was nothing G-d despised more than promiscuity, so he tried to cause Israel to stumble in this.”

You, Rabbi Lau, are legitimizing the impure, changing the principles of Judaism and allowing a person to simply claim that these are his tendencies. There is no good or bad in the Torah, everything is according to modern-day considerations.

“I am the proof that you are wrong and you are misguiding the public. I call on you and all those who advise LGBTQ. It is clear  that they must be loved and accepted but heaven forbid that we accept their way. One can still love without changing the principles of Judaism. As long as they are willing to hear, tell them that G-d is not restricted and can “change nature.” We must realize like Avraham Avinu that all the Torah is for our good.”

 


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15 Comments
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Anon
Anon
3 years ago

Many lives have been destroyed by gay people being forced to marry, usually without the spouse being told about the issue. Rabbi Lau is right. A gay person should never marry a straight person and condemn both to a life of unhappiness. Far better to not marry and remain celibate.

Anonymous
Anonymous
3 years ago

Read the Wikipedia page on this man.
Quote from the end of that page: “Lau lectures widely on halakha and social justice”
So you have the “Modern Orthodox” halakha and the Reform’s “Social Justice”.
In other words, lots of heresy and, lihavdil, some Torah as well.

That should answer many questions here.

Anon
Anon
3 years ago

This woman’s story is so inspiring (and I’m a man with a family B”H). It should have been an Op-ed itself. Would have been nice to not see that apikores Lau’s name mentioned (all though people like him definitely need to be addressed).

An Avreich
An Avreich
3 years ago

So if Rav Lau’s opinions are spread then some people won’t end up meeting their spouses and building families.
And if the ‘conversion therapy’ implicitly condoned in this article is promoted, then young people will continue to undergo an illegal, cruel and lifelong trauma inducing practice that has a good chance of triggering mental illness and CV suicide (I know frum people who were pressured into undergoing this ‘therapy’ and were pushed to the bring of suicide).
I know which one of those I would choose (although there may be a third way).

Last edited 3 years ago by An Avreich
Chayim
Chayim
3 years ago

So according to this Benny guy you can eat pork and violate shabbos and still be orthodox. How so.