Meaning Making Under the Sacred Canopy: The Role of Orthodox Jewish Marriage Guidebooks

Nurit Novis-Deutsch, Ari Engelberg

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Marriage guidebooks for Orthodox Jews in Israel have become increasingly popular over the past few years. Previous research has shown that Jewish Orthodox Israelis are exposed to liberal Western ideals about romantic love and gender egalitarianism while continuing to uphold conservative family values. To gain insight into how leaders of Orthodox Jewish groups deal with these conflicting meaning systems, a representative sample of thirty guidebooks written for Religious Zionist and Ultra-Orthodox Jews in Israel was analyzed by using a qualitative grounded theory analysis. The books were found to reject romantic love and gender egalitarianism, emphasizing instead the notions of other-focused giving and an essentialist gender partnership. The authors of these books also offer religious meaning systems focused on the interface between God and couples that we term marriage theologies. We offer a typology of five marriage theologies, which endeavor to infuse even the most mundane aspects of marital life with sacred meaning. This re-enchantment of marriage plays a central role in recalibrating the religious meaning system in response to the secular Western culture surrounding it. The diversity of marriage theologies means that differential meaning systems can be offered to a wide range of Orthodox couples, from moderate to highly conservative and from idealistic newlyweds to disillusioned long-married couples.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1-31
Number of pages31
JournalInterdisciplinary Journal of Research on Religion
Volume8
Issue number6
StatePublished - 1 Jan 2012

Keywords

  • RELIGION & marriage
  • ORTHODOX Jews
  • ROMANTIC love
  • EQUALITY
  • GROUNDED theory
  • THEOLOGY
  • JUDAISM
  • RELIGIOUS aspects

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