D
dennisknapp
Guest
Steve Andersen:
If it is wrong now, it was wrong then. Period.
Christ could have avoided this whole issue by including them as His Apostles. He would not have us catch up to him by overturning the decision He made in the first place. How is this “catching up?”
The Catholic Churches argument is that Christ didn’t do it, so neither should we. He could have, couldn’t he? It was within the scope of his ministry.
Peace
It is wrong now not to have women priests?You’re saying Christ can’t be pragmatic?
Interesting.
You would think that, since He actually became human, He would more than aware of what our limits were and what was possible.
He would be profoundly pragmatic when it came to humans.
He didn’t say “free all your slaves!” or “Don’t have hereditary ruling classes.” In fact, despite frequent baiting by the Pharisees, He made little if any contemporary social/political commentary.
He surely would have known that pushing too far all at once would have distracted from the important, transcendent and eternal essence of his message.
Did He violate some cultural norms? Sure…sometimes. But even the biggies like whether to keep the old law or convert gentiles He left for the Apostles to come to on their own.
As for Dignity…you’re the one who keeps using that term.
Talking about the dignity of a group is a silly as talking about any group property
Individuals have dignity
In the ancient world nothing Christ did lowered the dignity of any individual woman. The fact that women were regularly part of His group, that Martha and Mary were close friends, and that He appeared to women as well as men after the Resurrection clearly meant that in a culture where women were barred from many religious functions He had really pushed the envelope.
Since women were barred from many functions back then, not choosing one didn’t hurt anything.
As for Christ being “wrong” obviously He can’t be
He’s just been waiting for us to catch up a little.![]()
If it is wrong now, it was wrong then. Period.
Christ could have avoided this whole issue by including them as His Apostles. He would not have us catch up to him by overturning the decision He made in the first place. How is this “catching up?”
The Catholic Churches argument is that Christ didn’t do it, so neither should we. He could have, couldn’t he? It was within the scope of his ministry.
Peace