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zamyrabyrd
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Exactly!The beauty of Sola Scritura is you can pick and choose what you believe and interpret to fit you agenda.
Exactly!The beauty of Sola Scritura is you can pick and choose what you believe and interpret to fit you agenda.
Historical:
Also, a book titled “Junia: The First Woman Apostle” (amzn.to/1YcDCkf) by Eldon Jay Epp, is presumed to be an important work in showing that the early church endorsed female clergy.
Indeed!And to add to the above, God also gave women very prominent roles in his earthly ministry, from being Mary the first notified of Jesus coming, to the first witnesses of the Resurrection, to Mary Magdalene anointing of Jesus etc.
God has decided that the roles of men and women are complimentary in all ways, including our roles in religious matters. Why is that so hard to a)believe b)accept?
I haven’t read the book, but I’m kind of surprised that there would be an entire book about Junia, since all we know about her comes from one verse, Romans 16:17.Then, Junia is clearly female which is found in the Biblical data, and Eldon Jay Epp wrote the book “Junia: The first woman apostle” - something that I’d love to hear a catholic response on.
The “highly respected” (Greek: ἐπίσημοι ) varies greatly from translation to translation (see link) - some say “outstanding among the apostles”, others “of note among the apostles”, or “noteworthy in the eyes of the apostles”.Greet Andronicus and Junia, my fellow Jews, who were in prison with me. They are highly respected among the apostles and became followers of Christ before I did.
The point of sola scriptura is that we CANNOT pick and chooseThe beauty of Sola Scritura is you can pick and choose what you believe and interptret to fit you agenda.
it obviously does.The point of sola scriptura is that we CANNOT pick and choose
Deborah was an OT Jewish Prophet but not a Priest. There were certainly no Jewish priestesses.many are referred to as deaconesses, and the fact that one of Israel’s best judges was Deborah, a female, are some of the responses in terms of the Biblical data.
Then, Junia is clearly female which is found in the Biblical data, and Eldon Jay Epp wrote the book “Junia: The first woman apostle” - something that I’d love to hear a catholic response on.
it obviously does.
*]one protestant becomes a pre-mil, pre-trib rapturist, another becomes a preterist.
*]one becomes credo baptist, another becomes paedo-baptist.
*]one believes in eternal security, another believes one can apostatise.
*]one is a calvinist, another is arminian.
more examples can be given, but protestants have certainly torn the body of Christ apart through picking and choosing their doctrines, and subsequently ostracising others who disagree with them.
there is one lord, one baptism, one faith
What I’m pointing out is a necessary condition of disagreements - the necessary condition is a prior choosing of which theology one believes and disbelieves.What you mention is not intentional picking and choosing , but disagreements.
Oh sorry , thought you were saying we pick and choose what parts of scriptures to believe ( we don’t ) but I agree that one picks theologyWhat I’m pointing out is a necessary condition of disagreements - the necessary condition is a prior choosing of which theology one believes and disbelieves.
One can do as much research as one wants, one still makes a “choosing”.
=vexweb;13440346]Hi all,
I have friends, all Protestant theologians, who are part of a strong Protestant movement to enable women in clerical positions. They all argue from scripture and church history.
Question: I would like to know how Catholicism answers both the Biblical arguments and historical arguments like the one’s below:
Biblical:
A big leadership figure in this movement is Dr Philip B. Payne, author of “Man and Woman, One in Christ: An Exegetical and Theological Study of Paul’s Letters” (amzn.to/1YcDAZC). Other such books preceded his, but his seems to be the one that is most decisive in arguing in favor of female clergy particularly from St. Paul’s letters.
Historical:
Also, a book titled “Junia: The First Woman Apostle” (amzn.to/1YcDCkf) by Eldon Jay Epp, is presumed to be an important work in showing that the early church endorsed female clergy.
The Biblical arguments from Payne, combined with historical work such as that by Epp, makes for a pretty compelling argument and is having increasing wide and far reaching impact among Protestants.
Before getting into your two questions; permit me to offer you a warm welcome to CAFRegards
If the book is referring to Junias of Romans 16:7. My question is how do we know "she " is a woman. Because my bible RSV CA saysHistorical:
Also, a book titled “Junia: The First Woman Apostle” (amzn.to/1YcDCkf) by Eldon Jay Epp, is presumed to be an important work in showing that the early church endorsed female clergy.
The Biblical arguments from Payne, combined with historical work such as that by Epp, makes for a pretty compelling argument and is having increasing wide and far reaching impact among Protestants.
Regards
The oriental orthodox support Her Junia as a saint , the EO calls Junia a her as wellIf the book is referring to Junias of Romans 16:7. My question is how do we know "she " is a woman. Because my bible RSV CA says
“Greet Andronicus and Junias , my kinsmen and my fellow prisoners; they are men of note among the apostles…”
Did they mix female and male prisoners together?
I can’t read Greek so I do not know the grammatical rules for syngeneis whether it is in a masculine or feminine sense. Anyone?
Actually I just want to know whether syntactically speaking did Paul refer to them as males or females. I am looking at the Greek on Biblehub:The oriental orthodox support Her Junia as a saint , the EO calls Junia a her as well
Patrick, thank you so much for your response.Before getting into your two questions; permit me to offer you a warm welcome to CAF
…
I do hope this clarifies the issue for you
God Bless you, and welcome!
Patrick [PJM] here on CAF
that is easy to answer: do not impose assumptions and linguistic rules from your English language onto other languages. Unlike English, some modern languages and ancient languages do not have nouns that are gender-neutral. In French for instance, every noun and proper noun (names) is either masculine or feminine, depending on how the word ends.why do people assume that a name ending in ‘a’ is a female name, there are no rules about names.![]()
wiki says this;that is easy to answer: do not impose assumptions and linguistic rules from your English language onto other languages. Unlike English, some modern languages and ancient languages do not have nouns that are gender-neutral. In French for instance, every noun and proper noun (names) is either masculine or feminine, depending on how the word ends.
Greek is also like this. Just from observing how a noun or proper noun ends (assuming you can read greek), it is extremely easy to establish whether it is masculine or feminine. for instance Petros and Petra in the passages concerning St Peter as the rock on which the church is built. Petra is feminine, and Petros is masculine, in the greek text itself.
Likewise, Junias and Junia are masculine or feminine depending on the word ending.
When talking about an exclusively female group of people, the feminine would be used. When talking about a group of men or a group of men & women, the masculine would be used. So, “kinsmen” doesn’t imply “only men.” Moreover, the Greek here doesn’t say “men of note”, it says “my fellow prisoners who are of note.”If the book is referring to Junias of Romans 16:7. My question is how do we know "she " is a woman. Because my bible RSV CA says
“Greet Andronicus and Junias , my kinsmen and my fellow prisoners; they are men of note among the apostles…”
I think you’re making too many assumptions in the way you word this question.Did they mix female and male prisoners together?