A
axolotl
Guest
St. Augustine, De genesi ad litteram, 9, 5-9
“I don’t see what sort of help woman was created to provide man with, if
one excludes the purpose of procreation. If woman was not given to man
for help in bearing children, for what help could she be? To till the
earth together? If help were needed for that, man would have been a
better help for man. The same goes for comfort in solitude. How much
more pleasure is it for life and conversation when two friends live
together than when a man and a woman cohabitate?”
Woman, together with her own husband, is the image of God, so that the
whole substance may be one image, but when she is referred to separately
in her quality as a helpmeet, which regards the woman alone, then she is
not the image of God, but as regards the male alone, he is the image of
God as fully and completely as when the woman too is joined with him in
one. (St. Augustine, De Trinitate 7.7.10 qtd. in Ruether 95)
“I don’t see what sort of help woman was created to provide man with, if
one excludes the purpose of procreation. If woman was not given to man
for help in bearing children, for what help could she be? To till the
earth together? If help were needed for that, man would have been a
better help for man. The same goes for comfort in solitude. How much
more pleasure is it for life and conversation when two friends live
together than when a man and a woman cohabitate?”
Woman, together with her own husband, is the image of God, so that the
whole substance may be one image, but when she is referred to separately
in her quality as a helpmeet, which regards the woman alone, then she is
not the image of God, but as regards the male alone, he is the image of
God as fully and completely as when the woman too is joined with him in
one. (St. Augustine, De Trinitate 7.7.10 qtd. in Ruether 95)