E
ethereality
Guest
When God institutes the Passover (Exodus 12.1-28), he instructs a male lamb a year old to be sacrificed; Jesus is likewise the perfect sacrifice as a male (and elected only male apostles), and God reveals himself to us as masculine and feminine, but male in image – thus the God-Man Jesus instructs us to pray the “Our Father”. The priesthood has always been male. Angels are depicted as masculine (such that [ angelsfemale (http://forums.catholic-questions.org/showthread.php?t=286400)). Man is head of the family as Christ is head of the Church. In Genesis, God creates Adam and Eve, and while Adam also represents humanity, God specifically made man first, from whom woman was formed (as St. Paul writes).
Yet all of these facts are lost on me; they appear meaningless or insignificant: I struggle daily with the godless, modernist, feminist agenda gaining ground since the 1960’s sexual rebellion. I have felt bad for a few years now about my maleness, wishing I were female, feeling inferior. Any additional strength or muscles are superfluous and useless in our Western machine-driven world: the female body appears utterly superior with the ability to hold and sustain life. I understand that the man serves as the instigator and first cause, imaging God the Father, but this instance (typically lasting fifteen minutes) seems insignificant since the man appears to only “tag along” keeping the woman company while she “does all the work” for nine months – this has led some to scorn the idea of men saying “We’re pregnant” (as in “We’re expecting…”): “no, I am pregnant; you don’t have the back pain or the morning sickness or the …”
Men seem as superfluous as their supposed “strength”, with women holding in society every job a man can do – including the military, police, fire-fighting, etc. (I would have thought that at least these roles belonged to men – as I was taught in kindergarten – but I have not seen a single outcry from anyone within the Church.) Finally, the Catholic priesthood, appearing to me as “the last bastion of masculinity”, is being contested by this same feminist agenda and is actively undermined in Western culture by the “priestess” in certain sects of Protestantism. In essence, every male stereotype or masculine “feature” appears contradicted by women in the workplace doing precisely the same things (or at least appearing to do them with equal efficiency). To summarize at the mundane level: Women may wear pants, but men cannot wear skirts.
I identify more with feminine characteristics, and I am pained by our society, for example, as Michelle Arnold writes:
I have been asking God for a long time now, “God, why did you make me male?” (“And why didn’t you make me female?”)
I have read the following works searching for this answer:
Yet all of these facts are lost on me; they appear meaningless or insignificant: I struggle daily with the godless, modernist, feminist agenda gaining ground since the 1960’s sexual rebellion. I have felt bad for a few years now about my maleness, wishing I were female, feeling inferior. Any additional strength or muscles are superfluous and useless in our Western machine-driven world: the female body appears utterly superior with the ability to hold and sustain life. I understand that the man serves as the instigator and first cause, imaging God the Father, but this instance (typically lasting fifteen minutes) seems insignificant since the man appears to only “tag along” keeping the woman company while she “does all the work” for nine months – this has led some to scorn the idea of men saying “We’re pregnant” (as in “We’re expecting…”): “no, I am pregnant; you don’t have the back pain or the morning sickness or the …”
Men seem as superfluous as their supposed “strength”, with women holding in society every job a man can do – including the military, police, fire-fighting, etc. (I would have thought that at least these roles belonged to men – as I was taught in kindergarten – but I have not seen a single outcry from anyone within the Church.) Finally, the Catholic priesthood, appearing to me as “the last bastion of masculinity”, is being contested by this same feminist agenda and is actively undermined in Western culture by the “priestess” in certain sects of Protestantism. In essence, every male stereotype or masculine “feature” appears contradicted by women in the workplace doing precisely the same things (or at least appearing to do them with equal efficiency). To summarize at the mundane level: Women may wear pants, but men cannot wear skirts.
I identify more with feminine characteristics, and I am pained by our society, for example, as Michelle Arnold writes:
I do not see the corresponding “special gift of men” that women would lack – which must presumably exist, if men and women are equal in God-given dignity and complementary in sexual difference. Rather, it seems another example of “women are better than men”: with this statement Arnold says, “In this situation, the woman makes the better parent”, seemingly implying that nurturing is a female gift which is preemptively better than any male gift when it comes to parenting.In [the case of preferring a single woman over a single man for adoption], a single woman is preferable to a single father because a child – particularly one who has been rescued from an abusive or otherwise unsuitable home – has critical need of the nurturing that is the special gift of women. Such a child, especially a boy, does also need strong male role models and a single woman adopting a child would need to make finding such a male role model a priority.
I have been asking God for a long time now, “God, why did you make me male?” (“And why didn’t you make me female?”)
I have read the following works searching for this answer:
- Theology of the Body for Beginners by Christopher West
- Good News about Sex and Marriage: Answers to Your Honest Questions About Catholic Teaching by Christopher West
- The Catholic Youth Bible Revised
- “Humanae Vitae” by Pope Paul VI
- Boys To Men: The Transforming Power Of Virtue by Tim Gray & Curtis Martin
- The Church Impotent: The Feminization of Christianity by Leon J. Podles
- Man and Woman He Created Them: A Theology of the Body by Pope John Paul II
- Beyond Gay by David Morrison, Rene Voillaume
- Every Young Man’s Battle by Stephen Arterburn and Fred Stoeker
- Pure Manhood by Jason Evert
- Wild at Heart by John Eldredge