M
MarcoPolo
Guest
Well then we needn’t rehash, because I think we all know what some of us think of the cultural argument by now.It doesn’t, and I never claimed it did. I’m speaking of the cultural context of the 1st Century here.
You could go into whatever physical attribute you want if you want to really play devil’s advocate. It has to be a person named Jesus with skin tone X, height and weight of Y and Z, etc… But there is sacramental theology behind his masculinity that just isn’t there with his Jewish nationality. If you want to give it a go, and make an argument how one’s nationality is part of the sacramental, natural sign go ahead. But I don’t think you can. The masculine theology is way deeper than just the “Jesus picked men” argument you seem to be opposing. Anyway, the Jewish nationality angle would not fit with the bridegroom argument I’ve made here anyway. Can a Jewish man be a bridegroom? Yes. Can an Italian man? Yes. Can an Australian man? Yes. Can a woman? No.In any event if you really want to make the argument that women can’t be ordained because the Twelve were all men, then you better have a rule saying all who are ordained must also be Jewish! After all, Christ never appointed a gentile as one of the Twelve.
That’s mostly true. But if Protestants are wrong, then their error is irrelevant to the theology.Your point about the Eucharist is better but it only works if you believe in the RC doctrines about transubstantiation, with it being an actual sacrifice and how the NT Priesthood is of the same nature as the OT Levitical Priesthood etc. Protestants don’t.