A
AngryAtheist8
Guest
Since coming to this forum I have come across Catholics who say that firm patriarchy is the good and natural norm for the Church and society as a whole.
That men are naturally dominant and women are naturally submissive, and that that is the way it ought to be.
I do not share this view.
For one thing, in practice giving men all the power and women virtually no power and independence always leads to women being viciously exploited and abused by men (I think the best modern day example of this is how women are treated in the Arab world). But the idea of patriarchy being divinely ordained also seems very counter-intuitive to me.
Christianity and the other Abrahamic religions are firmly against a great many things. Such as the worship of other/multiple gods, homosexuality, human sacrifice, communing wiht the dead, and trying to manipulate supernatural forces through your own will (e.g. magic). Yet all of these things have been tolerated (and even celebrated) at different times and places throughout history.
In fact, it seems like virtually anything the God of Abraham dislikes (and that is a long list) has flourished at some point in human history.
The fact that things God dislikes frequently flourish is usually justified by the explanation that humans are fallen people in a fallen world, and because of that Satan has great influence in the world. Influence the fallen angel uses to corrupt and distort God’s Creation and plan.
However, this influence has apparently never been used to seriously disrupt male rule of the human species (at least until the last century or so).
To a humanist like myself this seems very suspicious.
Apparently Satan and those under his influence can create societies where things like human sacrifice, male homosexuality, and even the unnecessary and cruel mutilation of baby girls sexual organs are celebrated, but they can’t challenge the Good Ol’ Boy system(s)
So I ask you Catholic defenders of patriarchy (in the home and in society) do you have any rational explanation for this, or this one of those ‘He works in mysterious ways’ type of things (which I don’t consider a real argument at all)?
That men are naturally dominant and women are naturally submissive, and that that is the way it ought to be.
I do not share this view.
For one thing, in practice giving men all the power and women virtually no power and independence always leads to women being viciously exploited and abused by men (I think the best modern day example of this is how women are treated in the Arab world). But the idea of patriarchy being divinely ordained also seems very counter-intuitive to me.
Christianity and the other Abrahamic religions are firmly against a great many things. Such as the worship of other/multiple gods, homosexuality, human sacrifice, communing wiht the dead, and trying to manipulate supernatural forces through your own will (e.g. magic). Yet all of these things have been tolerated (and even celebrated) at different times and places throughout history.
In fact, it seems like virtually anything the God of Abraham dislikes (and that is a long list) has flourished at some point in human history.
The fact that things God dislikes frequently flourish is usually justified by the explanation that humans are fallen people in a fallen world, and because of that Satan has great influence in the world. Influence the fallen angel uses to corrupt and distort God’s Creation and plan.
However, this influence has apparently never been used to seriously disrupt male rule of the human species (at least until the last century or so).
To a humanist like myself this seems very suspicious.
Apparently Satan and those under his influence can create societies where things like human sacrifice, male homosexuality, and even the unnecessary and cruel mutilation of baby girls sexual organs are celebrated, but they can’t challenge the Good Ol’ Boy system(s)
So I ask you Catholic defenders of patriarchy (in the home and in society) do you have any rational explanation for this, or this one of those ‘He works in mysterious ways’ type of things (which I don’t consider a real argument at all)?