HOME ABOUT US ASK THE RABBI CONTACT US
Chabad of Beverlywood


Share thisPost a CommentPrintSend this page to a friendSubscribe
55 Comments Posted


Does Intermarriage Work?



Question:

I am Baptist and my boyfriend is Jewish. Can we still make it work? I am trying to learn about Judaism.

Answer:

I've had a lot of experience with these kinds of relationships. Real short, I'll try to describe what's involved:

There are two stages in a long term relationship between a man and a woman. First, they fall in love. That's a kind of insanity that befalls most of humanity at some point. Without it, no one would ever get married.

But--and this is the crucial point--that insanity almost never lasts too long. One day, you wake up and here's this guy that you've hitched up with forever and ever--and you can't for the life of you remember why. What got into you? This is nuts!

That's when real love has to enter. Real love is when you find you have common goals, a common vision in life, way of looking at things....and you put all that together to make a marriage.

What we find, over and over, is that when a couple marries that has a vastly different background, the first stage can go great--but that second stage is a disaster.

You have to keep in mind that being Jewish isn't just a religion or a faith, like being a Baptist. A person is Jewish because he shares a huge heritage of thousands of years, a big long story, with all the other Jews. Wherever he goes, he carries that story with him. There's no way, as hard as he may try, that he can escape it.

Right now, that story he's carrying is not getting in the way of your relationship. But inevitably it will. We've seen that over and over.

My advice? if you want what's best for yourself and what's best for him, make it a nice friendship. And then look for someone that you can build a home together with. A home that will last.


Share thisPost a CommentPrintSend this page to a friendSubscribe
55 Comments Posted

By Tzvi Freeman   More articles...  |   RSS Listing of Newest Articles by this Author

Rabbi Tzvi Freeman heads Chabad.org's Ask The Rabbi team, and is a senior member of the Chabad.org editorial team. He is the author of a number of highly original renditions of Kabbalah and Chassidic teaching, including the universally acclaimed "Bringing Heaven Down to Earth." To order Tzvi's books click here.


The content on this page is copyrighted by the author, publisher and/or Chabad.org, and is produced by Chabad.org. If you enjoyed this article, we encourage you to distribute it further, provided that you comply with the copyright policy.
 

55 Comments Posted  |  Post A Comment
Reader Comments
Latest Comments:
Posted: Dec 16, 2008
Being Jewish
Being Jewish is not just your faith of choice, its is a permaNent identity that you are born with if you are born of a Jewish mother. If you are not born of a ewish mother you are not Jewish unless you convert. Now, even when you convert, you don't just accept the faith, you BECOME a Jew just lke the born Jew. Non-Jews who simply accept the Jewish faith but don't convert are called Noahides. Point of saying all this is that everyone is just focusing on whether people with two different beliefs can get married and the answer is YES. Now, as to whether a Jew and non-Jew should be married, the Torah says NO.
Posted By Kalev Zalman, North Miami Beach, FL

Posted: Dec 16, 2008
Intermarry
I met my husband when he was 17 and I was 14. His father was Jewish and his mother was Christian. My husband's family was not "religious" though. Mine was not either though we considered ourselves Christian. Well, we married and had two children before we decided what to do about how we feel about God. I had read the bible stories and taught my daughter about Jesus because my husband did not practice Judiasm or anything. Later he did become a Christian and we raised both daughters in a Christian home. When my youngest was 24 she claimed her heritage and is now Jewish. We respect her choice and encourage her. We will help her celebrate her first Hanukkah this year. As for me and my husband we have been married for 31 years. As with any marriage it takes a lot of love, patience, and kindness to make a marriage work that long as well as letting God be the major player in our lives. It works we are living proof.
Posted By Vicci Baumgarten, Louisville, KY

Posted: Dec 15, 2008
All well and good, but what about adults?
I agree with the previous comment, and commented earlier that the essay to which we are all responding appears to address only young people or those in a dating phase of life. Tzvi Freeman: how would you approach established older couples with families, who have presumably completed Relationships 101 with a more-or-less passing grade? How do you and Chabad reach out to those families "after the fact"?
Posted By Anonymous



Post a Comment
Subject:
Comment:
  1000 Characters Remaining
Name*:
Email*:
City:   State/Country:
* indicates a required field
 


Jewish Identity
How Does One Convert to Judaism?
Why is Jewishness matrilineal?
What is the Meaning of the Name "Jew"?
Are Jews a "Race"?
Isn't It Racist To Believe That Jews Are Special?
Why Do Jews Exclude Other People?
Why are my Non-Religious Parents Against my Marrying a Non-Jew?
Does Intermarriage Work?
Why Not Make it Easier to Convert?
Why Do Rabbis Discourage Conversions?
Couldn't the Jews and Greeks Get Along?
Unorthodox Judaism
What's the difference between Orthodox, Conservative and Reform?
What's this "Jewish soul" Thing? Aren't We All One?
Can a Jew believe in Jesus?
Showing 8 to 22 of 29

Related
  More articles on
Intermarriage (27 articles)

Chabad of Beverlywood 1952 South Robertson Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90034 310-836-6770

Powered by Chabad.org © 2001-2009 Chabad-Lubavitch Media Center. All rights reserved.
In everlasting memory of Rabbi Yosef Y. Kazen, pioneer of Torah, Judaism and Jewish information on the web