C
Curious_Hobbit
Guest
Well I know that Judaism has a few different sects and there are exceptions to birth control in some forms or in some cases and so on. However, Judaism has always understood that Onan was killed for wasting his seed on the ground.You need to read more about the history of Jewish teachings on birth control and the morality of sex without reproductive potential. The Jewish tradition is more flexible AND more complicated than how you have put it here. And presently today, as is true of Christianity today (and ACTUAL practice among Catholics today), the response to modern sexual morality over birth control is quite varied.
Here’s from the Encyclopedia Judaica:
BIRTH CONTROL, Jewish tradition ascribed the practice of birth control to the depraved humanity before Noah (Gen. R. 23:2, 4; Rashi to Gen. 4:19, 23). The sole explicit reference in the Bible to what may be considered as some form of birth control occurs in Genesis 38:9–10: the Lord punished Onan by death because he had “spilled his seed on the ground” to prevent the birth of a child from the levirate marriage to his deceased brother’s wife Tamar.* On the strength of this passage, and as constituting a deliberate violation of the first commandment to “be fruitful and multiply” (Gen. 1:28), the Talmud sternly inveighs against “bringing forth the seed in vain,” considering it a cardinal sin (Nid. 13a).**
-The Encyclopedia Judaica (Vol.4,p.1054, article “Birth Control”)
ONANISM , term derived from the biblical narrative of Onan, son of Judah (Gen. 38, 7–10), who “spilled” his seed “on the ground.” Onanism refers to the thwarting of the sexual process in one of several ways. In Hebrew, it is called more fully ma’aseh Er ve-Onan (“the act of Er and Onan”) and is taken by the Midrash (Gen. R. 85:5; and by Rashi to the Pentateuch) to mean coitus interruptus and by the Talmud (Yev. 34b) to refer either to unnatural intercourse or (cf. Nid. 13a) to masturbation.
-The Encyclopedia Judaica (Vol. 12, p.1495, article “Onanism”)