The Conservative Movement has a variety of
t’shuvot / responsa on the question of the halakhic status homosexuality. These include papers by Rabbis Bradley Shavit Artson, Elliot Dorff, Joel Roth and Gordon Tucker. I would also recommend the book,
Wrestling With God And Men by Rabbi Steven Greenberg, a gay, modern Orthodox rabbi. My position is based on the writings of Rabbi Dorff, a synopsis of whose views can be found in his book,
Matters of Life and Death: A Jewish Approach to Modern Medical Ethics, pp. 139 – 151.
Rabbi Dorff writes as follows (p. 141f): “There is no evidence that children growing up with gay or lesbian parents are, as a group, any less well adjusted than children growing up with heterosexual parents… the percentage of children who themselves become homosexual adults does not seem to differ whether the households are headed by homosexual or heterosexual adults… in general two parents, whatever their gender, are better than one.”
In other words, there are no psycho-social reasons to prohibit a homosexual/ lesbian couple from adopting. Nor should there be any Jewish reasons. The question posits that the couple is halakhically observant in their home and wish to give their child(ren) a Torah education. Neither Rabbi Dorff nor I see any objection to such an adoption. Indeed, it should be celebrated for providing a stable and loving home, rooted in Jewish values, to a child.
The second question, about a Jewish school refusing admission to a child of a gay couple makes me shudder! Even should the lay or professional leadership consider homosexuality sinful – and the question as it’s presented, with its mentioning of families that are not shomrei Shabbat, suggests that this is indeed the case – why deprive the children of a Torah education because of the perceived “sins” of the parents?
The prophet Ezekiel asks the rhetorical question, (18:2): “Parents eat sour grapes and their children’s teeth are blunted?” Speaking to the Israelite exiles who were living in Babylonia after the destruction of the First Temple, Ezekiel is saying that children are not punished for the sins of their parents. In his case, the prophet was saying that children are punished for their own sins, not those of their parents. In our case, we can extend the thought of the prophet, as the rabbis surely did, and say that each person and each generation should bear responsibility for his or her own decisions. Even if the leadership of the school considers the behavior of the parents wrong, it is equally wrong to hold the children responsible for the actions of their parents. If the family lives in a community where there is only one Jewish day school, as is often the case, then the leadership of that school would be depriving a child access to a quality Jewish education. That is unconscionable!