G
GKC
Guest
In a couple of places:Another reference is Deuteronomy 32:18:
But that is another example of the idea that God has motherly qualities, but nowhere in the Bible is God called “Mother” or are we told to call God “Mother.”
Also:
Doesn’t C.S. Lewis reflect somewhere on the idea that God is masculine, and in respect to God we are all feminine? That is, we receive what God gives us. This is one reason the Church is “the Bride of Christ” and “She.” I believe that Lewis’s idea was that human sexuality (and all creaturely sexuality) was but a pale, partial reflection of the truth of gender, which is why in most languages–Latin and the Romance languages, Greek, and Hebrew certainly–nouns that have nothing to do with sexuality (a table, a book) still have genders.
“What is above and beyond all things is so masculine that we are all feminine in relation to it”
THAT HIDEOUS STRENGTH, Chap 14, sec. V, p.374, 1st American ed.
and
“Everyone must sometimes have wondered why in nearly all tongues certain inanimate objects are masculine and others feminine. What is masculine about a mountain or feminine about certain trees? Ransom has cured me of believing that this is a purely morphological phenomenon, depending on the form of the word. Still less is gender an imaginative extension of sex. Our ancestors did not make mountains masculine because they projected male characteristics into them. The real process is the reverse. Gender is a reality, and a more fundamental reality than sex. Sex is, in fact, merely the adaptation to organic life of a fundamental polarity which divides all created beings. Female sex is simply one of the things that have feminine gender; there are many others, and Masculine and Feminine meet us on planes of reality where male and female would be simply meaningless. Masculine is not attenuated male, nor feminine attenuated female. On the contrary, the male and female of organic creatures are rather blurred reflections of masculine and feminine. Their reproductive functions, their differences in strength and size, party exhibit, but partly also confuse and misrepresent, the real polarity”.
PERELANDRA, chap. 16, p.214, 1st American ed.
And others.