C
Chaldean_Rite
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Who taught you that?I don’t view my husband as the head of the family and he would be appalled if I did.
Who taught you that?I don’t view my husband as the head of the family and he would be appalled if I did.
scripturecatholic.com/husband_headship.htmlWomen have no need for men who are good providers. Women are in this day and age equal providers and most men appreciate it greatly that that burden is shared.
I don’t view my husband as the head of the family and he would be appalled if I did.We are a partnership of equality. We both contribute in the ways that we agree upon. this is not pride, but simple common sense. You may read the bible any way you wish, but it sounds a good deal more protestant than Catholic to me. I’ve never heard such claims from the pulpit on sunday to be sure, and never have been taught such misogynistic values either by the church.
When you use the term “fairer” sex you automatically set women as “different” and less. Why should women be denied any opportunity pursued by men btw? Just wondering.
**There are plenty of feminists I would assume who are not in favor of abortion, in fact I would hazard a guess that most are not in favor of it. Being in favor of the right to choice is not the same. And as to ABC, well, you are going to have a hard row to hoe convincing even men that this is a bad thing if you arent’ Catholic. 85% of catholics use it, and 98% of the pop. at large believes it is a good thing./**QUOTE]
Spirit, you have said a mouthful…keyboard full![]()
One thing I’d like to know is who and why was God assigned a gender???![]()
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And the Children? Who is rearing them? Is it babysitters, daycare, nannies and schools? Feminism promoted the idea of “quality not quantity” and our children have suffered. The children being shuffled off to spend hours with those whose only interest in them was the dollar.Women have no need for men who are good providers. Women are in this day and age equal providers and most men appreciate it greatly that that burden is shared.
You’re right. I didn’t state the truth in that post.God, in his essence, is not gendered. “The Father” and “The Son” are the roles expressed in human terms. God is a spirit and spirits do not have sexes. Only the 2nd Person has a gender in the Flesh, which now, is forever.
How do you know this? Have you had a private revelation or something?I can’t imagine why God would be offended at all. I presume he is may find it quite amusing that we continue to speculate about issues we actually know nothing about. I could conclude he might wish we spent our time on something of importance such as doing as his Son taught us to others instead of arguing about his “gender” LOL.
It’s true that he doesn’t need it, but why do we have to go to Mass, obey the moral precepts, etc., if God doesn’t want our obedience?You are getting way out of line and totally confused. Please read more carefully. Please rethink before speaking. God is undoubtedly entitled to my worship and my obedience. That he seeks it from me is clearly beyond our knowing. God needs absolutely nothing!
The Magisterium of the Church is the determiner of the status of particular scriptures, and for some crazy reason she has maintained the words of the Savior.There is little point in getting into an old argument about literalism vs literalistic. We are not literalistic and haven’t been. That is fundamentalism plain and simple. The Church is not fundamentalist in orientation to defining scripture. Genesis is not taken to be literally true in most contexts, that is why there are more than one story about the same event. Furthermore i certainly didn’t say that nothing in the bible was to be taken as literally true. YOu are correct and make my point by stating that some parts are allegorical, and other literary forms. So try to be careful in reading. I said we were not literalistic and that is true.
This is probably a good example of why we, as Catholics, are not Sola Scripture. If one continues to read 1 Cor. 11, one would find it self evident that women’s heads should be covered in Mass, and so on. However, being blessed with a living Magesterium, we have proper guidance. The Church understands that 1 Cor 11 must be taken in context, both historical and theological.scripturecatholic.com/husband_headship.html
1 Cor. 11:3 – “But I want you to understand that the head of every man is Christ, the head of a woman is her husband, and the head of Christ is God.”
“For the man is the head of the woman in perfect order when Christ who is the Wisdom of God is the head of the man.”* Augustine, Against the Manichaeans 2, 12, 16 (A.D. 391).*
Abuse should never be tolerated. In times pass, it was hidden. My aunt would say she ran into a door. I was an adult before I knew the truth. Her husband didn’t support her. They rarely lived together. She raised three children on her own. This was in the 30’s - 60’s. She retired in the 70’sWas it better for women who were trapped in the reality of abusive marriages - when they couldn’t leave due to an inability to support themselves?
We have many wonderful examples of the vocation of the single life such as Kateri Tekawitha. Another aunt of mine never married she was born in 1898. She had opportunities to marry but no desire. Women have had choices. That is not to say that it was easy. It wasn’t. The choices now are not easy. I know women who would like to stay home but can’t. They really don’t have a choice.Some women have a contribution to make outside of the home and thus single life can be a vocation too. Today’s women have a choice.
To someone with faith, even a historian with faith, the resurrection of Christ is certainly “historic.”Jesus life is historic, his resurrection is a matter of faith. His words are historic to the degree that they have been faithfully recorded. Don’t confuse what you believe (and incidently what I believe as well) as historically true.
Please refrain from giving me advice. The considered opinion of Catholic ans well as protestant theologians and church leaders is that God is spirit and ungendered. Your “traditionalism” blinds you to the truth of that. Reject it if you wish, but please do not state it as Catholic teaching. It is not so.
And human beings are not beyond gender. The masculine and the feminine are,as the Church teachers, distinct but complementary. Males and females are different kinds of human beings. That males are generally stronger and more agressive than females explains the relative dominance of males over females. Where the woman does not submit, the males may use physical force to compel her to obey. One cannot simply by passing laws avoid violence between men and women, usually with thr woman getting the short end. Just as one cannot by law make all males equal in a society, or all females, or at least no more than relatively so, can equality between men and women be imposed.You’re right. I didn’t state the truth in that post.
It’s true that God would be beyond gender. The Divine nature of Christ would be beyond gender, as would the Holy Spirit (or Ghost, if you prefer), but it still stands, as you stated above, that the fleshly nature of God the Son is entirely and eternally male.
Also he taught us to think and speak of God as a father. Why contradict the words and teachings of Christ? When we baptize a child “In Nomine Patri, et Filii, et Spiritus Sancti,” or in a faithful vernacular rendering of that formula, we have a valid baptism. Insert ungendered language, and the baptism is invalid.
Why change the words of the Savior? Was he not God?
Yes, that is why the Church has a more adult and nuanced understanding of proper male female relationships than literalist interpretations of once sided topical correspondance from St. Paul.The Magisterium of the Church is the determiner of the status of particular scriptures, and for some crazy reason she has maintained the words of the Savior.
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I’m not suggesting that men and women aren’t absolutely equal in every sense when it comes to worth, intelligence, talent, etc. I’m not saying that a woman can’t be president. As a matter of fact, one of the greatest Catholic rulers of all time, Queen Isabella, was obviously a woman.Yes, that is why the Church has a more adult and nuanced understanding of proper male female relationships than literalist interpretations of once sided topical correspondance from St. Paul.
Remember, our Lord became man at a time and in a culture which was a lot more akin to extreme Islam in relionships between the sexes than anything remotely in our experence today. Men did not talk to women other than their wives and immediate family, and even then only in controlled circumstances - yet the Gospels give us many examples of Jesus not only talking to strange women, but to those at the fringes of society in the most inappropriate circumstances. He even allowed himself to be touched by women of ill repute in public situations.
Likewise, at a time when women had virtually no proper role in Church, Jesus not only engaged a women in discussion, but insisted on referring to her as Daughter of Abraham, a phrase one will find in no other ancient Jewish text. In other passages, Jesus rebuked a women for placing her normal societal duties as a female in the house ahead of her duty to understanding and following God.
Does this make our Lord a feminist? I would say no. Just as Church teaching is a poor fit for ‘conservative’ and ‘liberal’ labels in US politics, Jesus actions and the Church’s understanding of male/female duties and relationships is a poor fit for either extreme feminism or subservant sexism. The difference is that the Church’s position is based on natural law and the inalienable rights of every human person, spelled out so eloquently by the Second Vatican Council. The alternatives, although seemingly opposites, are really just both examples of a foundation of personal insecurity instead of the foundation of respect we find in Church teaching and scripture.
Would you clarfiy what you mean by “may” - as my response depends on whether you mean “is allowed to” or “is likely to”.Where the woman does not submit, the males may use physical force to compel her to obey.
Q1. What do you mean?Never mind the 2nd question…how did you come up with the title of this thread???
What gender to you think God is, if any, thomfra???