Dangers of Feminism

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Angela53510

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Jan 24, 2011
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It seems like the feminists among us want to use the word 'Feminist' for various women's movements of the past that probably did not call themselves 'Feminists.' I'm using the term to refer to the movement that called itself 'feminist.'

I'm not as enthusiastic about women having the vote as some feminists. A just society could have the male head of household voting. There could be some advantages to that, including ease of counting. I don't see a Biblical mandate for men voting either. I think the Lord is more concerned with societies being just than democratic. I believe a righteous monarchy or even dictatorship is better than a wicked democracy. If the majority doing the voting are wicked and hate God, we can't expect righteousness to reign. I realize my views aren't all the popular in the west. One day we will have a righteous monarchy, when the one true righteous Monarch returns and rules the world in justice.

Absolutely unbelievable! You are a regressive person, aren't you???

Here's a thought, probably a Muslim country would serve you better. They don't allow women to do anything, but dress in blankets when they go out with appropriate male escort, and stay home. Talk to Drett, he is fair minded and I am sure he can introduce you to Islam and point out the countries that enforce Sharia Law and don't allow women to vote.

Really, I'm glad you said this, Presidente. It makes me realize where you are really coming from, and that your opinions are destructive to male-female relationships, and have absolutely no Biblical validity.

And have fun with that righteous dictatorship. I'm sure you would have enjoyed Germany in the 1930's!
 

Angela53510

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I'm apologizing right now to Drett, who has always been a friend and great contributor. I should not fall into the same pit of lumping extremists with those who follow their faith without condemning others. I know many Muslim people, and they are all kind, loving people, not Wahhabi extremists. (Sort of like saying everyone in this forum goes to Westboro Baptist!)

What I should have said is that a lot of women don't have a head of the household through no fault of their own. Deadbeat husbands, abusive husbands, men who would not work or care for their families. Instead, women who work full time and are full time mothers should have the right to have a say in the running of their countries. To say nothing of women who contribute to their household's income, either by working in or out of the home. (Try hiring a housekeeper, and see how much that costs you!)

But of course, Presidente wants to take us back to the dark ages, where all women are married, put up with all kinds of cruelties, and the man is boss. That's really what it comes down to, right, that the man is in control, and he is boss?

Sad a Christian man doesn't realize that only God is in control. I guess I need to pray about my attitude, and that God will show these men who thing women aren't people the error of their ways.

Besides, what if a husband and wife don't agree on politics, and want to vote for different parties? My husband and I cancel each other's votes all the time. We do it merrily, enjoying our privilege of being able to vote for those who govern us.
 

presidente

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May 29, 2013
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But of course, Presidente wants to take us back to the dark ages, where all women are married, put up with all kinds of cruelties, and the man is boss. That's really what it comes down to, right, that the man is in control, and he is boss?
I thought you didn't want to lump everyone in as extremists. I want to see Christians follow and respect what the Bible says about the issue, that wives should submit to their husbands and that husbands should love their wives as Christ loves the church. I don't like to see Christians labelling things as 'injustice' that God has endorsed in the past or that are not injustice according to God's word. The rhetoric above comes from your own imagination.
 

presidente

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May 29, 2013
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Here's a thought, probably a Muslim country would serve you better. They don't allow women to do anything, but dress in blankets when they go out with appropriate male escort, and stay home.
You are stereotyping. I have spent time in a majority Muslim country, not with an Islamic government, but majority Muslim. The women voted and could wear what they liked, but most people in the country dressed reasonably conservative by western standards. A small percentage of women wore head coverings, some of which were quite decorative and fashionable.

I don't have a problem with living in a society where women vote. But I don't have a problem living in a society where women do not vote. I don't see any reason to consider this an issue of 'injustice' according to the concepts of justice presented in scripture. That's my point.

Talk to Drett, he is fair minded and I am sure he can introduce you to Islam and point out the countries that enforce Sharia Law and don't allow women to vote.
I'm not sure what Drett has to do with Islam. But I am a believer in Jesus Christ, not secular feminism or the teachings of Muhammad. I am not loyal to Feminist philosophy, or to Muhammad's teachings.

And have fun with that righteous dictatorship. I'm sure you would have enjoyed Germany in the 1930's!
That's an example of an unrighteous dictatorship. Germany in the 1930's also provides plenty of examples of how professing Christians can err by following culturally accepted relatively new philosophies and concepts of justice that run contrary to what God has revealed in the Bible.
 

presidente

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May 29, 2013
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Angela, one of the problems with feminism is the rhetoric. I also notice that you like to make accusations towards me, but I don't see much attempt to discuss the content of what I say in light of scripture, in spite of your education.

There are a lot of things that are injustice. If a man comes home drunk and beats his loving wife, if a husband won't work to provide for his wife, or if he watches porn and 'takes care of himself' and defrauds his wife, sexually, I'd consider that injustice. But there are a lot of issues that I cannot call 'injustice' in light of scripture.

If God had land passed through male heirs, leaving men responsible to care for wives, daughters, and mothers, how can we call nearly exclusively male land ownership unjust? (There were exceptions for daughters of men who had no sons inheriting land as long as they married in their father's clan.) If having a society with no female leadership is evil, then why did God set up a lineage of kings in Judah, with the kingdom to be passed to the son? Can we call that type of leadership evil if God instituted it? I am aware that there was Deborah, one out of how many national leaders in the Bible, and Barak led the battle. The honor of dispatching is enemy would be given to a woman because he would not go without Deborah. Also, consider that God put the Spirit that was on Moses upon elders, bearded ones, which became an important historical source for a system of male leadership in Israel.

My question is how can one hold to feminist concepts of 'injustice' without accusing God of injustice for systems of government, etc. He instituted in the past? You can make ad hominem attacks at me for making the point and asking the questions if you like. I suppose that is easier that addressing the issues I raise. But it is not an honorable way to approach the issue.
 
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Angela53510

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Presidente, you may be right about me not discussing Scripture. Last summer there were 3 or 4 threads going about women in ministry. I think I must have posted about 100 times, using Scripture and esp. referring to the Greek. So I am burned out, because I did not convince a single person that complementarian is BAD Bible exegesis and terrible theology. Not because what I believe is wrong, but because people are strongly entrenched in what they believe, and change does not come easily.

As for all this head of the household stuff, I will go briefly into the Greek. Basically, it comes out of one or two verses (three if you count Eph. 5, which is actually a Roman household code, and a treatise on how much Christ loves the church!)

"I do not permit a woman to teach or to exercise authority over a man; rather, she is to remain quiet." 1 Tim. 2:12

Sadly, the word for "authority" in the Greek is not the word "exousia." That is the word Christ uses in Matt 28:18.

"And Jesus came and said to them, “All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me."

Exousia (ἐξουσία) is the word which describes those who are over us in power, dominion and status. Jesus says here that belongs to him alone. ALL - πᾶσα, means ALL! That means Jesus has authority over each man, woman and child on this earth. He also has authority over the heavens and the earth, Satan and his demons and anything else I might have left out. This word is used 103 times in the New Testament, and I am sure if you have Strong's you can look at all the uses for this word.

But in 1 Tim 2:12, the word for "authority" is authentein. (αὐθεντεῖν). This is a very different sort of word, and it only appears once in the entire Bible, also known as a Hapax Legomena.

Hapax Legomena are extremely difficult to translate. Because you can't cross reference in the Bible and see how the word is used elsewhere in Scripture. In fact, the only way to discover the meaning of the word, is to go to contemporaneous sources. That would be the works written in the same era and place as the book of Timothy. Then try and figure out if the meaning is the same in all those extra Biblical works, or something different.

In fact authentein or αὐθεντεῖν has over 50 different meanings for it. But by far, the most common is "domineer". But other meanings include murder, and copulate. So a very tricky word, that is constantly quoted as the final reference for the entire complementarian movement.

If it had been translated as "domineer" I would have no difficulties with the word or the passage. But King James, who also believed in divine right of kings, had his translators make it "authority" thus confusing it with exousia.

"But I suffer not a woman to teach, nor to usurp authority over the man, but to be in silence." 1 Tim 2:12 KJV

The word "exercise" or "usurp" in the KJV does not appear in any manuscripts in the Greek. So right there you are having some major translational issues. Because the word is a present indicative infinitive, we can't even use it as a verb in English. So you have to put a spin on authentein to even translate it. (Infinitives cannot hold the place of an active verb in a sentence in English) So you can't "to authority." Although "to domineer" works well in English. For that matter, the word "over", does not appear in the Greek either, another word which places the man "over" the woman. Here is the Greek, with my own translation below. Feel free to take it and translate it, using Strong's or whatever. But be careful not to use an internet site that backward translates the KJV, or you will get exactly what you started out with in English!

"διδάσκειν δὲ γυναικὶ οὐκ ἐπιτρέπω, οὐδὲ αὐθεντεῖν ἀνδρός, ἀλλ’ εἶναι ἐν ἡσυχίᾳ."
To teach and a woman not I allow/permit, and not, to domineer a man, but to be in quietness. (Word for word translation)

In fact, a better interpretation, based on cultural norms, Jewish traditions, and in context with verse 11, might be the following.

In New Testament times, women were not taught to read, nor to study. As these women became Christians, the leaders of the church saw their hunger to know more about God. Like the rabbis used to take students, who sat in silence and absorbed the words of their teachers, the women were instructed to be like the rabbinical students. The were to sit in silence and be taught. (looking at the Greek, it seems like διδάσκειν or "to teach" might well be in the wrong verse. Sadly, so many verses are out of place in their numbering, and it really does slant some passages)

So women were to learn in quietness, and not domineer over the men who was teaching. This might have been a real necessary challenge, considering the background of some of these women. They may have been pagan priestesses, from the temple of Artemis, which was a pagan religion of women ruling over men (not something I think Christ had in mind either). Women like this were also probably disrupting the services in Corinth, which is why Paul cautions the women to be quiet there. We are so used to our western society, it seems hard to believe that anyone would interrupt a religious service. Yet last year I attended an Orthodox Jewish service, and the men were on one side of a barrier, and the women on another. They frequently got up and started talking to one another over the barrier, in fairly loud tones. But it was totally accepted in that setting.

So rather than not permitting a woman to speak or teach, or have authority over the men, a closer look in the Greek reveals it is probably instructing the women to learn quietly and not to dominate the men. As for the not teaching a man, the Greek does not have "not" modifying the word διδάσκειν. Hmm. I had never noticed that before. You learn something new every day, don't you?

So not sure if that is enough. I could go into Eph. 5 and 1 Cor. 14 and discuss those verses in Greek, if you want.

I agree that women are not to dominate men. Nor men to dominate women! In fact, Eph 5 is always a reassurance, because it actually tells us to submit one to another.

"submitting to one another out of reverence for Christ." Eph. 5:21

And everyone will learn more if they are silent when the teacher is speaking. That one I know, having been a teacher for 20 years!

These bad Bible translations are part of the reason I object so strongly to the entire complementarian movement. Because they use their theology as a starting point to translate, rather than the culture in which it was written, and the people to whom it was being written. Hermeneutics really needs to be taught to every Christian and I think half the doctrinal errors we see in the BDF would never have been started.

As far as your objections based on Old Covenant standards and practices, I prefer to be a New Covenant person. I prefer to follow the teachings of Jesus, who didn't even have a place to lay his head. This rant about male heirs, called primogeniture, is an archaic practice in ancient societies, including the Hebrew one. But even God was liberal on that effect, as you so rightly pointed out, God made exceptions, and where there are exceptions, is the rule universal, or is it based on culture? If it was universal, like "do not commit adultery" there would be no exceptions. And God only moved his people as far as they were willing to go. He tried to move the culture forward, but not to the point that it would defeat his salvic purposes of the Messiah coming to save the world.

As far as Deborah, do you really think she pulled that weakling into battle because she didn't feel qualified to go to war? On the contrary, she wanted him to see what God can do, through anyone who is obedient. Deborah was not the military leader, but the legislative judge of the country. She made and interpreted God's laws. She had absolute authority, given from God. But how many men failed to be good judges like Deborah? Enough bad men that Israel called for a king.

As far as injustice, the entire Bible is the story of God being a God of justice who condemns his own people who do not have justice even for their own poor and suffering. God's justice between men and women is one which Paul clearly articulates in Gal. 3:28:

"There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither slave nor free, there is no male and female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus."

A strong statement about Greeks, slaves and women. That God sees us all as equal in Christ, mutually submitting to one another out of reverence to Christ. After all, Christ is the only authority, and women are answerable to God, not their husbands on Judgment Day.
 

Angela53510

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Jan 24, 2011
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Another LONG post which no one will read above! Sorry! I keep forgetting I am not writing papers for school.

I did want to post an excellent if sarcastic comment on an article on marriage and divorce in Christianity today.

"Your spouse isn't your Savior, Jesus is." Uh yeah, but evangelicals, Reformed, and Baptists and fundies, with their belief in the false teaching of "biblical womanhood" and "gender complementarianism" teach the opposite. Women are told to think of their spouse as a Jesus-figure, who has last say, is the final authority in the relationship, etc. Gender complementarianism is codependency under a coating of Christian vocabulary - it tells women to get their meaning and worth from a spouse, not from Jesus. If you are over 40 and never married woman (like me) you get blamed and shamed in many sermons and Christian blogs for being single. Preachers today are still telling women that their only or greatest calling is to marry and crank out children - women are not being told that "Jesus (alone) is their savior," they are being told marriage is their savior, or a husband is, or having a kid is."

Probably a bit extreme, but your comment on the head of the household (ie man) only having the vote really hit a nerve with me today. Esp. coming from an American, where I thought liberty and democracy were basic shared values.
 
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Another LONG post which no one will read above! Sorry! I keep forgetting I am not writing papers for school.

I did want to post an excellent if sarcastic comment on an article on marriage and divorce in Christianity today.

"Your spouse isn't your Savior, Jesus is." Uh yeah, but evangelicals, Reformed, and Baptists and fundies, with their belief in the false teaching of "biblical womanhood" and "gender complementarianism" teach the opposite. Women are told to think of their spouse as a Jesus-figure, who has last say, is the final authority in the relationship, etc. Gender complementarianism is codependency under a coating of Christian vocabulary - it tells women to get their meaning and worth from a spouse, not from Jesus. If you are over 40 and never married woman (like me) you get blamed and shamed in many sermons and Christian blogs for being single. Preachers today are still telling women that their only or greatest calling is to marry and crank out children - women are not being told that "Jesus (alone) is their savior," they are being told marriage is their savior, or a husband is, or having a kid is."

Probably a bit extreme, but your comment on the head of the household (ie man) only having the vote really hit a nerve with me today. Esp. coming from an American, where I thought liberty and democracy were basic shared values.
I'm not necessarily into popular sovereignty (I'm Canadian) but didn't women vote in New Jersey in the 18th century?
 

Angela53510

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Jan 24, 2011
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"In 1756, Lydia Taft became the first legal woman voter in colonial America. This occurred under British rule in the Massachusetts Colony. In a New England town meeting in Uxbridge, Massachusetts, she voted on at least three occasions. Unmarried women who owned property could vote in New Jersey from 1776 to 1807." Wikipedia.

The track record is that Norway granted the right in 1913, Denmark in 1915, then Canada, Poland, Russia and Germany near the end of WWI. Britain in 1918, Holland in 1919 and the US in 1920.

However, as for Germany in the 1930's, Hitler's appeal was to reestablish Christian morality and values, and an end to economic hardship. As he trained the people to be obedient to him, he eventually supplanted God. So by 1939, he was no longer righteous, although maybe many Germans thought he was. That is the problem with a "righteous" dictator. It is only in retrospect that we can look back and see that Hitler was a monster, not a man of high moral values who led his nation out of the Great Depression and brought prosperity for all!

"To deny the influence of Christianity on Hitler and its role in World War II, means that you must ignore history and forever bar yourself from understanding the source of German anti-Semitism and how the WWII atrocities occurred.[FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]By using historical evidence of Hitler's and his henchmen's own words, this section aims to show how mixing religion with politics can cause conflicts, not only against religion but against government and its people. This site, in no way, condones Nazism, Neo-Nazism, fascist governments, or anti-Semitism, but instead, warns against them."[/FONT]

Hitler's Christianity

I worry about you Presidente, you would have been a general in Hitler's army, and then had to turn around and try to assassinate him when you realized he wasn't a "righteous" Christian after all.
 
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In the face of Marxism, Hitlerism ostensibly had a certain initial appeal to traditionalist religious people; but some of the Nazi ideology was strongly pagan. But, then, Germany never elected Hitler in completely fair elections.

I've visited a concentration camp in Europe: a horrendous place, about which I do try to be careful not to make sweeping comparisons.

History seems to be a very complex subject, full of ironies and perplexities.

Seems like the discussion is leading somewhat in directions beyond where it was originally intended.

Blessings.
 

presidente

Senior Member
May 29, 2013
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I worry about you Presidente, you would have been a general in Hitler's army, and then had to turn around and try to assassinate him when you realized he wasn't a "righteous" Christian after all.
Again, there you go with the character assassination. That is not an honorable way to discuss the issue. I've raised a lot of Biblical issues, and you go off one some weird rhetorical approach to painting me a certain way.

As far as dictatorships go, I'd rather see a middle eastern dictatorship that protects Christians and other disadvantaged people in the middle east than a democracy that chops people's hands off for stealing chickens or shoots women for showing their hair.
 

presidente

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May 29, 2013
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Angela,

I'm not sure why you are focusing on exhousia and not 'usurping authority.' The topic I raised was marriage, not women in ministry or women speaking in church. Even so, Paul does tie that issue to marriage.

Ephesians tells believers to submit to one another and goes on to clarify-- wives to husbands, children to parents. Peter illustrates the wife's submission to her husband by pointing to the example of Sarah obeying Abraham.

Paul, in discussing being heirs according to the promise, says there is therefore Jew nor Greek, slave nor free, male nor female.

Yet, he also writes for wives to submit to their husbands, slaves to submit to their masters. He went into the temple in agreement with James' and the elders' request so that he could show that he wasn't teaching the Jews who lived among the Gentiles to refrain from circumcising their children or keeping the law, while the Gentiles were to abstain from things strangled and from blood, from fornication, and from meat offered to idols.

Even though we can all be heirs according to the promise, we have different responsibilities in this life based on how we are created and what role the Lord has put us in. 'Neither male nor female' doesn't jusify homosexuality or sex change operations. There are still gender distinctions, at least before the resurrection.

This rant about male heirs, called primogeniture, is an archaic practice in ancient societies, including the Hebrew one. But even God was liberal on that effect, as you so rightly pointed out, God made exceptions, and where there are exceptions, is the rule universal, or is it based on culture?
My point is not that male inheritance is a universal rule for all mankind. My point is that it is wrong to call it injustice if God commanded it. I'm not saying women inheriting land in Gentile nations is unjust, or that it is wrong for women to vote. I do disagree with the idea that it is unjust for land to pass to male heirs, since God gave commands that land pass to male heirs. And the exception we both mentioned still puts the land back into the hands of male heirs. The women inherit their father's land if they marry into their father's clan, which puts the land back into the right clan and it continues to be inherited by sons.
 

Angela53510

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Jan 24, 2011
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If God commanded it, I would ALWAYS do it.

Ephesians tells believers to submit to one another and goes on to clarify-- wives to husbands, children to parents. Peter illustrates the wife's submission to her husband by pointing to the example of Sarah obeying Abraham.
Actually, the passage in Eph. 5 in Greek in the earliest manuscripts does NOT have the word "submit" in it with regards to women submitting to their husbands. Or having authority over them.

"submitting to one another out of reverence for Christ. Wives, submit to your own husbands, as to the Lord." Eph. 5:21-22 ESV

"ὑποτασσόμενοι ἀλλήλοις ἐν φόβῳ Χριστοῦ.
[SUP]22 [/SUP]Αἱ γυναῖκες τοῖς ἰδίοις ἀνδράσιν ὡς τῷ κυρίῳ," Eph. 5:21-22 Greek.

Notice that verse 21 has the word ὑποτασσόμενοι or hypottasomenoi. There is no word like this in verse 22.
Paul covered the behaviour of all Christians one to another in verses 21. Verse 22 merely says, "Wives, to own husband as to the Lord." I think the implication is that all wives need to keep Christ first and then treat our husbands as we would God. As for husbands, I guess they need to work on loving their wives.

Because verse 21 tells me to submit to others, I do this with my husband. He is answerable to God for his failure to obey this part of Scripture, if he does not submit to me. If you asked my husband if I was submissive to him, he would agree. I do not do it because he is the head of the household, but because God has commanded all Christians to submit to one another.

Verse 24 is much the same as verse 21;

"Now as the church submits to Christ, so also wives should submit in everything to their husbands." Eph. 5:24 ESV

"ἀλλὰ ὡς ἡ ἐκκλησία ὑποτάσσεται τῷ Χριστῷ, οὕτως καὶ αἱ γυναῖκες τοῖς ἀνδράσιν ἐν παντί." Eph. 5:24 ESV


Again, the word ὑποτάσσεται or hyptassetai (a variation on the word!) appears in the first part of the phrase, it does not really appear in the second half. It say, "But as the church submits to Christ, thus wives to husbands in everything."

Again, I try to submit to my husband, and all other Christians, even though I believe the church has failed in so many ways to submit to Christ.

So sad you did not address one thing I said in my long post. Just another cry of character assassination. I think you have to be important to be assassinated, like a president or governing official. So if I have offended you, then I apologize. I was just trying to illustrate how ridiculous it is to say there can ever be a righteous dictator, except God. For proof of that one, you can look at any dictator in modern times, but you can also go back in history, through wars fought by kings and queens which killed millions, to the Old Testament where neither judges nor kings were able to be righteous with the people, and God had to punish his own people after repeated warnings, by having Assyria carry away Israel in 722 BC, and Judah in 536 BC. Israel was destroyed forever, although God preserved a remnant of Judah, in order for the Messiah to be born.

Human nature is wicked. Even those serving God can fall astray. Just look at the kings in the Bible!

I reviewed a book last night called "What Paul Really Said About Women" by John Temple Bristow. His thesis is that this lie about women, and complementarians are victims of Greek philosophy about women. He documents from Plato, Socrates and Aristotle, how women were only allowed to be in the house, and when Alexander "hellenized" the known world (made it Greek), the Jews absorbed this philosophy. Augustine certainly followed Greek philosophers, one of the founding fathers of the early church. Aquinas then picked it up, and it became doctrine in the Catholic church.

While Protestants may have gone back to the Bible in many doctrines, the doctrine of women's "place" was never even looked at let alone altered.

"There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither slave nor free, there is no male and female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus." Gal. 3:28

This verses does not merely apply to salvation, but the way all people treat one another. Paul said this, because his message was contrary to the Greek and Roman message that women MUST be tucked away in their homes, totally subservient to their fathers and then their husbands. Christianity radicalized ancient society with regards to relationships between men and women, husbands and wives.

The call in Eph.5:24 "Husbands, love your wives, as Christ loved the church and gave himself up for her," was a radical rejection of Greek philosophy, for men did not love their wives, and in fact, usually loved another man, or a high level prostitute, called a hetaira, who were courtesans that were highly educated, and sophisticated companions. To love your wife was a foreign concept in that culture, but Paul here says that God's way is not to have a prostitute, but instead to love your wife.

The Bible is a radical document, from start to finish. When you accept pat answers and don't fully understand the culture and the language, the result is actually throwing the truth away and exchanging it for an ancient Greek lie.

I'm not speaking of you specifically, Presidente, it sounds like you and your wife have a relationship that works. But the attitude is still not a Biblical one, in which men are head of a household, as in Greek and Roman household codes, rather than men and women both being equal in the sight of God as Galatians 3:28 so plainly states.

Personally, I don't care one bit about primogeniture laws in Hebrew society or any other. Christ came to fulfill the law, and he has done that with regards to inheritance, and loving one another. And speaking of primogeniture laws, I think Paul covered that one quite clearly in Gal. 3:29 "And if you are Christ's, then you are Abraham's offspring, heirs according to promise."

We all inherit God's promise, not just the oldest male in the family!
 

presidente

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Actually, the passage in Eph. 5 in Greek in the earliest manuscripts does NOT have the word "submit" in it with regards to women submitting to their husbands. Or having authority over them.

"submitting to one another out of reverence for Christ. Wives, submit to your own husbands, as to the Lord." Eph. 5:21-22 ESV

"ὑποτασσόμενοι ἀλλήλοις ἐν φόβῳ Χριστοῦ.
[SUP]22 [/SUP]Αἱ γυναῖκες τοῖς ἰδίοις ἀνδράσιν ὡς τῷ κυρίῳ," Eph. 5:21-22 Greek.

Notice that verse 21 has the word ὑποτασσόμενοι or hypottasomenoi. There is no word like this in verse 22.
Paul covered the behaviour of all Christians one to another in verses 21. Verse 22 merely says, "Wives, to own husband as to the Lord." I think the implication is that all wives need to keep Christ first and then treat our husbands as we would God. As for husbands, I guess they need to work on loving their wives.
The fact that some manuscripts of verse 22 do not contain hupotassonemoi/hypotasso further supports the 'complementarian' type approach to the passage.

Egalitarians read verse 22 and conclude that we need to submit to one another equally, in exactly the same way. (Eisegeting egalitarianism into the verse.) Complementarians look at the whole context of the passage and say that Paul says to submit to one another and then tells who specifically is supposed to submit to whom.

* Submit to one another out of reverence to Christ (5:21)
----wives to your own husbands, as to the Lord (5:22)
----Children, obey your parents in the Lord: for this is right.(6:1)
----Servants, be obedient to them that are your masters according to the flesh, with fear and trembling, in singleness of your heart, as unto Christ(6:5)

The fact that the 'submit' carries over from verse 21 to verse 22 in some manuscripts underscores the idea that delineation is going on here. Paul is telling who to submit to whom.

The egalitarian approach that 'submit to one another' means each to all others equally doesn't really take into account the whole context. Also, in the book of Revelation,men kill each other. If there are 10,000 men in a battle who kill each other, does that mean that each individual soldier has 10,000 wounds, each would equally responsible for his death as another wound? Or does 'kill each other' mean one kills one, and another kills another?

Even if you do take 'submit to one another' to mean everyone submits to everyone else, the Bible clearly emphasizes wives submitting to husbands more. It never says, 'husbands submit to your wives.' In addition to this passage in Ephesians 5, Colossians 3 tells wives to submit to their husbands. I've never heard of any debate about the word 'submit' in that verse not being there.

I Peter 3 tells wives to submit to their own husbands. He even exhorts wives to follow the example of Sarah's submission to her husband when she obeyed him, calling him Lord. The Bible never tells husbands to obey their wives.

By the way, if you have or had small children, do you submit to them to the same extent you expect them to submit to you? Do you obey your kids? Wouldn't an egalitarian interpretation of Ephesians 5-6 require that you do so?

If you wee a hired servant, an employee at a company, and your boss is a believer, would it be appropriate for you to be sitting at his desk in his office when he shows up to work, with your feet propped up on his desk. He's a believer, so you can explain to him, as you smack gum between sentences, "You see Mr. Grant, we are both Christians and the Bible tells us to submit to one another. So far, I've been following all your orders. But since you have to submit to me, we are going to drop that practice of filling out for B-11 for rush orders since it's just so time consuming, and you are going to give me the 15th off so I can go to my cousins wedding."

Why would the idea of 'submit to one another' implying equal submission to all parties only apply to marriage, and why is there no specific verse telling husbands to submit to wives but three passages telling wives to submit to their husbands, with one of them illustrating it with an example of a wife being obedient to her husband?

So sad you did not address one thing I said in my long post.
I did. I was reading posts backwards though, and used a few posts to respond. I said I didn't see how your commentary on not 'usurping authority' was that relevant to the conversation.

Just another cry of character assassination. I think you have to be important to be assassinated, like a president or governing official.
I'm pretty sure 'unimportant' people can be assassinated to. It depends on how the killing is done. People tend to think of heads of state as more important, but God is not a respecter of persons.

Btw, insinuating that someone isn't important isn't a kind thing to do, and we don't have the level of relationship to tease. If that's what your doing, it's not going to come across well through this medium.

I apologize. I was just trying to illustrate how ridiculous it is to say there can ever be a righteous dictator, except God.
I didn't say that. Whether men, or women, are righteous and in what since (imputed v. other ways) would be a whole 'nother discussion.

For proof of that one, you can look at any dictator in modern times, but you can also go back in history, through wars fought by kings and queens which killed millions, to the Old Testament where neither judges nor kings were able to be righteous with the people, and God had to punish his own people after repeated warnings, by having Assyria carry away Israel in 722 BC, and Judah in 536 BC. Israel was destroyed forever, although God preserved a remnant of Judah, in order for the Messiah to be born.
There were a few kings who seem to be commended in historical books (in 'the prophets'). Israel followed the Lord in the time of Joshua. Israel was a theocracy, but if we wanted to categorize Israel during the time of Moses, Joshua, and some of the judges with modern labels for their government, we might call it a dictatorship. Moses and Joshua were following directives of the LORD, but each of them served as leader of the nation and did not create a monarchy to pass their leadership down to their own children. Ultimately, God was King, the one they reported to.

I reviewed a book last night called "What Paul Really Said About Women" by John Temple Bristow. His thesis is that this lie about women, and complementarians are victims of Greek philosophy about women. He documents from Plato, Socrates and Aristotle, how women were only allowed to be in the house, and when Alexander "hellenized" the known world (made it Greek), the Jews absorbed this philosophy. Augustine certainly followed Greek philosophers, one of the founding fathers of the early church. Aquinas then picked it up, and it became doctrine in the Catholic church.
That's all interesting, but I think of us are more interested in what the Bible has to say on the issue. The Bible doesn't say women aren't allowed to leave the home. It does say that women are supposed to submit to their husbands. They are also to be diligent in the home. It doesn't say they can't do work outside of the home, like the woman in Proverbs 31 did.

"There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither slave nor free, there is no male and female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus." Gal. 3:28

This verses does not merely apply to salvation, but the way all people treat one another. Paul said this, because his message was contrary to the Greek and Roman message that women MUST be tucked away in their homes, totally subservient to their fathers and then their husbands. Christianity radicalized ancient society with regards to relationships between men and women, husbands and wives.
In the context, Paul talks about being heirs according to the promise. The idea of everyone acting and being treated exactly alike, and not having different roles to play in this life isn't consistent with the rest of Paul or the other apostles' teaching when it comes to Jews and Gentiles, slaves and masters, and males and females. He gives different specific instructions to each group. Galatians 3 and 4 don't talk about whether wives should leave their homes. Paul does tell wives to submit to their husbands and children to obey their parents, which is loosely in line with what Greeks would have expected of daughters and wives. But there is no command that wives must be tucked away in their homes. I suspect Greek culture wasn't always completely strict about this. if you red the opinions of men from a certain class, literate men who had time to write their opinions about such things, that doesn't mean every woman in the empire followed these ideas. It was a very multi-cultural empire. Lydia was able to have a business selling purple die, for example.

The call in Eph.5:24 "Husbands, love your wives, as Christ loved the church and gave himself up for her," was a radical rejection of Greek philosophy, for men did not love their wives, and in fact, usually loved another man, or a high level prostitute, called a hetaira, who were courtesans that were highly educated, and sophisticated companions.
I'm sure there were plenty of perverts back then. But they all weren't that way. I'm not an expert on all the Greek opinions about homosexuality, but I vaguely recall reading of Greeks who didn't care for it. And if every Greek man had a homosexual partner and a prostitute, Philo might have gotten lynched for writing to his apparently philosophical audience that transvestites and men who practiced homosexuality all deserved to die. The Jews were against this stuff, but probably there were some Greeks and Romans who cared nothing for homosexuality and thought prostitution was bad. Lots if not most Greeks and Romans were probably poor and couldn't afford an educated, class prostitute.

Stereotyping the whole culture as you do seems kind of almost like racist or something like that to me. Maybe racist isn't the right word. It reminds me of that song that says 'if the Russians love their children, too'-- written during a time when some of the propaganda may have led people to think the Communist Russians didn't love their children.

As widespread as these perversions were, I suspect there were monogamous men, too, who loved their wives, among the Jews and even among the pagans. Even some the Greek myths, which the Romans also studied (e.g. Cupid/Eros myths), had accounts of men who loved women. They had two false deities associated with the concept, Eros and Aphrodite. The love may have been primarily erotic in nature, but the concept would not have been totally antithetical to their thoughts or culture.

To love your wife was a foreign concept in that culture, but Paul here says that God's way is not to have a prostitute, but instead to love your wife.

The Bible is a radical document, from start to finish. When you accept pat answers and don't fully understand the culture and the language, the result is actually throwing the truth away and exchanging it for an ancient Greek lie.
I think we both have some familiarity with the Grecco-Roman culture. I just don't see how this takes away from the teaching of scripture that wives are supposed to submit to their husbands.

I'm not speaking of you specifically, Presidente, it sounds like you and your wife have a relationship that works. But the attitude is still not a Biblical one, in which men are head of a household, as in Greek and Roman household codes, rather than men and women both being equal in the sight of God as Galatians 3:28 so plainly states.
The Bible teaches that the husband is the head of the wife. There are ancient Greek manuscripts you could look at that show you the contexts the word kephale is used in. It was used of a general's relationship with an army. The egalitarians would have us believe that when kephale (head) is used in close proximity to hypotasso (submit) that it is stripped of its' hierarchical meaning and only means 'source.'
 

adsd

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Isaiah 4:1 and in that day 7 woman shall take hold of one man, saying we will eat our own bread, and wear our own apparel; only let us be called by thy name, to take away our reproach
loss of definition of male female roles, marriage of convenience not of God
 
A

AgeofKnowledge

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Broken - Two men after divorce

[video=youtube_share;zxNRtObt8no]http://youtu.be/zxNRtObt8no[/video]
 

TheAristocat

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Oct 4, 2011
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If you are over 40 and never married woman (like me) you get blamed and shamed in many sermons and Christian blogs for being single.
Because verse 21 tells me to submit to others, I do this with my husband.
I did read your "very long" post and several other posts of yours as well as other people's. But the above highlighted confuses me. Perhaps you meant that you were not married at 41? But reading what has been said thus far, I think there are far too many examples in the Bible to say that God does not support the general notion of a man being in a position of leadership over a woman. At least in regard to marriage.

I think one day there's bound to be someone who'll show up who argues that the mother should submit to the children and the children should submit to the mother, because we're all equal in Christ. Eventually there come disagreements in any dealing with humans. And at that time you have to have someone who steps in and has the final say. If no one had a position of leadership then nothing would be accomplished and whatever type of group it was would remain divided - even if that entailed being divided because they were mutually submitting to the others' wishes that were in opposition to their own. An elementary example of this would be on a decision regarding relocation of one's home. If the man wanted to move and the woman wanted to stay, then using this logic the woman would leave and the man would stay. Neither one would get what they wanted, and they'd probably be worse off than had only one person got what they wanted. At some point in time someone's going to have to step in to make a decision to save the marriage, and I believe God has given that role to a man. That's not to say he decides they move to a new home and he gets what he wants. But if they're going to stay in their current home as the woman wishes, the man should have the authority to make that so.
 
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Misty77

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I did read your "very long" post and several other posts of yours as well as other people's. But the above highlighted confuses me. Perhaps you meant that you were not married at 41? But reading what has been said thus far, I think there are far too many examples in the Bible to say that God does not support the general notion of a man being in a position of leadership over a woman. At least in regard to marriage.

I think one day there's bound to be someone who'll show up who argues that the mother should submit to the children and the children should submit to the mother, because we're all equal in Christ. Eventually there come disagreements in any dealing with humans. And at that time you have to have someone who steps in and has the final say. If no one had a position of leadership then nothing would be accomplished and whatever type of group it was would remain divided - even if that entailed being divided because they were mutually submitting to the others' wishes that were in opposition to their own. An elementary example of this would be on a decision regarding relocation of one's home. If the man wanted to move and the woman wanted to stay, then using this logic the woman would leave and the man would stay. Neither one would get what they wanted, and they'd probably be worse off than had only one person got what they wanted. At some point in time someone's going to have to step in to make a decision to save the marriage, and I believe God has given that role to a man. That's not to say he decides they move to a new home and he gets what he wants. But if they're going to stay in their current home as the woman wishes, the man should have the authority to make that so.
So now you are comparing women with children? Sounds exactly like your predecessors from earlier centuries. I worked for a lexicographer who collected really old books; one of them was a parser created for women because the author believed that they, like children, are incapable of handling the same GRAMMAR as the men. Male/female relationships are NOT equal to adult/child relationships.
 

presidente

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May 29, 2013
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So now you are comparing women with children?
His point is a valid one because the context of the passage we are discussing, says to submit to one another: wives submit to your own husbands. Then it tells children to obey their parents and servants to obey their masters.

If submit to one another means everyone submits to each other equally, then parents should have to submit to their parents in an equal way that children submit to their parents.

Sounds exactly like your predecessors from earlier centuries. I worked for a lexicographer who collected really old books; one of them was a parser created for women because the author believed that they, like children, are incapable of handling the same GRAMMAR as the men. Male/female relationships are NOT equal to adult/child relationships.
Try not to reinforce that stereotype as it applies to the logic of an argument. ;)