protesters holding Anti-LGBT Protest signs during the Gay Pride parade in
Haifa,
Israel (2010) While a variety of views regarding homosexuality exist within the
Orthodox Jewish community, Orthodox Judaism generally prohibits homosexual conduct. While there is some disagreement about which male homosexual acts violate core prohibitions, the majority of Orthodox Judaism puts male–male
anal sex in the category of (lit. "die rather than transgress"). This is a small category of biblically-prohibited acts which an Orthodox Jew is obligated to die rather than do. While almost any Jewish law may be broken to save a life under the principle of
pikuach nefesh, the sages determined that Jews must observe these laws, even at the cost of their own lives. According to the Talmud, homosexual acts are not necessarily forbidden between non-Jews, though
same-sex marriage is forbidden. There are numerous references in the Torah to non-Jews engaging in homosexuality, including the Egyptians and the Canaanites. Traditionally, Judaism only accepts heterosexual intercourse within marriage; some scholars have described adultery, celibacy, homosexuality, incest and bestiality as existing on a spectrum of wrongdoing. In a speech given in 1986, the
Lubavitcher Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, discussed "individuals who express an inclination towards a particular form of physical relationship in which the libidinal gratification is sought with members of one's own gender." He wrote that homosexuality should not be accepted as immutable, but rather
treated medically. In a 2008 open letter distributed to Orthodox community leaders, the
Hod organization appealed to the Orthodox community to recognize them as part of the religious society. Up to 2013, 163 Orthodox rabbis from Israel and abroad signed this statement, including
Yuval Cherlow,
Binyamin Lau, Haim Navon,
Daniel Sperber,
Eliezer Melamed,
Shai Piron, and
Yehuda Gilad. In 2010, TorahWeb.org published a brief position statement entitled "Torah View on Homosexuality", co-authored by Ravs
Hershel Schachter,
Mordechai Willig,
Michael Rosensweig, and
Mayer Twersky, which reaffirmed their view of homosexuality as an abomination. On July 22, 2010, a "Statement of Principles on the Place of Jews with a Homosexual Orientation in Our Community" was released. It was written primarily by
Nathaniel Helfgot,
Aryeh Klapper, and
Yitzchak Blau. Signatories include more than a hundred rabbis and laypeople. This statement again reaffirms that homosexual activity is forbidden under halacha, but is sympathetic to "Jews with a homosexual orientation." It does not promote conversion therapy or opposite-sex marriage for gay Jews, urges communities not to ostracize gay Jews and their families, and in regard to gay marriage, states that "each synagogue together with its rabbi must establish its own standard with regard to membership for open violators of halakha." An edict signed by dozens of Israeli Orthodox rabbis and published in 2016 by the Israeli Modern Orthodox rabbinic group Beit Hillel, a group which promotes inclusiveness in Orthodox Judaism, stated, in part, "According to the Torah and halacha, the [same-sex sexual] acts are forbidden, but not the proclivities, and therefore, people with same-sex tendencies, men and women, have no invalidation in halacha or tradition. They are obligated by the commandments of the Torah, they can fulfill a [ritual] obligation on behalf of the public, and carry out all of the community functions just like any member." It also stated, in part, "Just as it [is] inconceivable to mock someone for being physically, behaviorally, or mentally different, so too those with same-sex tendencies should not be mocked. On the contrary, those around them—family and community—should show special feeling for them, and apply to them the Torah commandment of 'Love thy neighbor as thyself' and to be diligent in avoiding the prohibition of insulting another." Rabbi
Norman Lamm argued that some (although not all) homosexuals should be viewed as diseased and in need of compassion and treatment, rather than willful rebels who should be ostracized. He distinguishes between six varieties of homosexuals, including "genuine homosexuals" who have "strong preferential erotic feelings for members of the same sex", "transitory" and "situational" homosexuals who would prefer heterosexual intercourse but are denied it or seek gain in homosexuality, and heterosexuals who are merely curious. In January 2026, dozens of Orthodox rabbis issued a ban on gay conversion therapy, calling it harmful, ineffective, and based on the false premise that same-sex attraction is a psychological disorder.
Prominent Gay Orthodox Jews American Orthodox rabbi
Steven Greenberg came out as gay in 1999 to a significant response from rabbis of all denominations. Rabbi
Moshe Tendler, a leading rabbi at
Yeshiva University, stated, "It is very sad that an individual who attended our yeshiva sunk to the depths of what we consider a depraved society." As Greenberg has a
rabbinic ordination from the Orthodox rabbinical seminary of Yeshiva University (
RIETS), he is often described as the first openly gay Orthodox Jewish rabbi. Yosef remains in his position as a pulpit Rabbi. Yosef testified that his Yemenite congregation did not accept him being a homosexual very easily and it took them a while to accept it. Yosef received death threats in the year leading up to the
2009 Tel Aviv gay centre shooting. In 2013, he stated he was in a relationship with a man. Yosef has stated his approach to the issue of homosexuality in Judaism as follows: "It is clear to me that lying with another man is forbidden, and our starting point is commitment to
halacha and Torah. The goal is not to seek permission. But you need to give us a shoulder and support." In October 2023,
The Forward reported about Shua Brick, "experts say that Brick is the first openly gay rabbi to serve on the clergy of an Orthodox synagogue in the U.S.", explaining that Brick "runs the youth program, leads Torah study for adults, and fills in when the senior rabbi is out of town" at Beth Jacob Congregation in Oakland, California, where he started coming out as gay to members of the congregation over a year prior to October 2023. He was ordained by
Yeshiva University.
Ex-gay organizations JONAH was a Jewish
ex-gay organization that focused on "prevention, intervention, and healing of the underlying issues causing same-sex attractions". In 2012, four former clients of JONAH sued the organization for fraud, claiming that it sold them therapies that were ineffective and counterproductive. Soon after in that same year, the
Rabbinical Council of America (RCA), a professional association of more than 1,000 Orthodox rabbis around the world, sent an open email to its members that it no longer supported
conversion therapy generally, or JONAH specifically. As part of the sentence, JONAH was required to cease all operations, but continued to operate under the name JIFGA until 2019, when it was found in violation of the previous order and shut down permanently. This final ruling also barred the executives of JIFGA from serving on the board of any nonprofit organization in the future.
Other viewpoints Jiří Mordechai Langer, who studied in the Hasidic community of
Belz, arrived in Palestine in 1940. "His reconciliation of homosexuality and Judaism involved[...] a homosexual Jewish theology;[...] a sociology of Jewish homosexuality in Hasidism".
Haredi Rabbi
Avigdor Miller defended the
assassination of Harvey Milk, saying, "A decent gentile got up and shot him because of his spreading homosexuality". The late UK Chief Rabbi
Jonathan Sacks wrote the foreword to Rabbi
Chaim Rapoport's book
Judaism and Homosexuality: An Authentic Orthodox View. In the foreword, Rabbi Sacks has written: "Compassion, sympathy, empathy, understanding—these are essential elements of Judaism. They are what homosexual Jews who care about Judaism need from us today."
Modern Orthodox leader Rabbi
Aharon Lichtenstein is reported to have said that the intensity of the Orthodox community's condemnation of homosexuality goes beyond what its status as a religious transgression warrants, and that he feels toward homosexual people "criticism, disapproval, but tempered with an element of sympathy". Rabbi Steven Greenberg, for example, argues that there are many sins considered to be
abominations in the Torah, homosexual men are disproportionately censured. While some Modern Orthodox congregations may still invite a person up for an
aliyah who is known not to keep kosher, the same is not always true of a man known to engage in same-sex sexual activity. In both the United States and in Israel, several groups have sprung up in the last few years that seek to support those who identify as both Orthodox and homosexual; support Orthodox parents of LGBTQ children; and promote understanding of homosexuality within Orthodox communities and among Orthodox rabbis. These include an umbrella organization called
Eshel, the Gay and Lesbian Yeshiva Day School Alumni Association, the women's group OrthoDykes, the youth group
JQYouth, the American-Israeli group headquartered in Jerusalem
Bat Kol and the Israeli group
Hod ("Majesty"). In 2012, Hod held an advertising campaign against conversion therapies and for self-acceptance of the religious homosexual community in Israel. Online blogs and support groups have enabled many to find other Orthodox LGBTQ people with whom to share the conflict between Orthodox religious and social norms and LGBT self-identification. Orthodox Rabbis
Shmuley Boteach and Zev Farber have questioned the opposition of Orthodox groups to government recognition of same-sex civil marriages (or in Boteach's case, to state-sanctioned civil unions), arguing that although Judaism does not condone homosexuality, governments should not enforce any particular religion's view of marriage, and that conferring civil benefits to committed homosexual couples should be viewed as promoting family values. In October 2010, Boteach wrote an op-ed column in
The Wall Street Journal on homosexuality, arguing that he does not deny that there is a biblical prohibition on male same-sex relationships and a commandment for men and women to marry and have children. Still, he understands those in context. He believes that the biggest threat to marriage does not come from gay marriage, but heterosexual divorce, which he says afflicts half of marriages. In November 2016, dozens of LGBT activists protested in Jerusalem against comments reportedly made by the city's chief rabbi Rabbi Shlomo Amar, who reportedly told an Israeli newspaper that gay people were an "abomination", and homosexuality a "cult". In 2017, the Senior Rabbi of the Spanish & Portuguese Sephardi Community
Joseph Dweck gave a class describing "the entire revolution of feminism and even homosexuality in our society[...] is a fantastic development for humanity". These words were condemned by Rabbi Aaron Bassous as "false and misguided[...] corrupt from beginning to end". This affair caused Dweck to step down from the Sephardic Beth Din but not as a communal leader. In 2019, Rabbi
Daniel Landes wrote, "Leviticus 18:22[...] has not been erased from the Torah. But that biblical commandment does not give us license to ignore or abuse the significant number of carefully observant Jews who are LGBTQ." Film documentaries made about Orthodox homosexuals in recent years include
Trembling Before G-d,
Keep Not Silent, and
Say Amen. ==Conservative Judaism==