B
BornInMarch
Guest
Whenever the topic of Ordained Women comes up, a common response is that the church can’t have female priests because God doesn’t want it that way. The people who say this often cite the fact that God gave almost all of the important religious roles to Men (Prophets, Priests, Savior Of Humanity, Apostles, First Pope, etc) and that if we believe in God’s will we should continue the patterns he laid out when choosing church leaders.
But this leads to another question. Why did God choose only men for these roles? In the Gospels there are examples of women who would be very competent as Priests (The Virgin Mary being an obvious choice), and yet when Jesus chooses his disciples he chooses twelve painfully incompetent men (Judas betrays Jesus, Peter cuts a man’s ear off and then renounces Jesus, James and John ask Jesus for worldly power, etc). Why is this?
This is a genuine theological question. Please actually read this post before replying; if you just skip it and jump right to replies then I’ll be able to tell and will not take you seriously.
As a clarifier (because apparently it’s necessary), this question has nothing to do with my own beliefs on the topic. I am not saying that the church should ordain women, nor am I saying that it should not. I am simply asking the follow-up question of “why then?” to people who argue that the current policy is God’s will.
But this leads to another question. Why did God choose only men for these roles? In the Gospels there are examples of women who would be very competent as Priests (The Virgin Mary being an obvious choice), and yet when Jesus chooses his disciples he chooses twelve painfully incompetent men (Judas betrays Jesus, Peter cuts a man’s ear off and then renounces Jesus, James and John ask Jesus for worldly power, etc). Why is this?
This is a genuine theological question. Please actually read this post before replying; if you just skip it and jump right to replies then I’ll be able to tell and will not take you seriously.
As a clarifier (because apparently it’s necessary), this question has nothing to do with my own beliefs on the topic. I am not saying that the church should ordain women, nor am I saying that it should not. I am simply asking the follow-up question of “why then?” to people who argue that the current policy is God’s will.
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