| Thisperson who calls God "daddy" is probably some Charasmatic/Pentecostal. This kind of thing would NOT be said by Confessional Protestants.( ie actual Protestants.) If you want to get an idea of what real Protestantism looks like, take a look at groups like the Orthodox Presbyterian Church(OPC), the Presbyterian Church in America (PCA), the Lutheran Church Missouri Synod ( LCMS) and the Reformed Episcopal Church. Read Luther, Calvin, and all the other great Reformers. Stay away from the Charasmatic movement. |
wait So Daddy is God? ew just ew |
| I get creeped and weirded out by God referenced as "He," but then again the inherent misogyny of those religions makes sense with such gendering (not just Christianity, but including it of course) |
And many of us get creeped out by bigots like you. Or like Trump. |
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What kind of off the wall celebration were you at?
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What exactly is bigoted about the above statement?? Religions that emphasize masculinity and god as male are factually misogynistic because they're built to construct divine as something masculine. A product of the patriarchal cultures the religions were made in no doubt, but this is just fact. |
Ditto |
| I don't like the emphasis on God as "Father". But I understand the Bible in the context of when and where it was written and whom the authors probobly were. I think many Christians are unwilling to do that. When I pray, I say "Loving Spirit", "God", "Mother Father God" or something similar depending on whom I am praying with. |
I belong to a faith whose most recent prayer book tries to eliminate all gendered references to God. The English language makes this somewhat awkward in many cases. |
It doesn't matter how you "update" an ancient text according to modern ethics. If it was written with an obvious, and only male spin, the religion was created in misogyny. |
We believe that our religion evolves, and was meant to. But the problems are not necessarily with misogynistic texts - its simply difficult to avoid the third person English pronoun. Substituting "you" or "God" where ever "He" might occur can be awkward. And substituting "she" calls even more attention to gender (maybe it shouldn't, but it does) You can try a religion that does not have references to God as a person, or you can have a religion with multiple gods, some male and some female (and maybe some you are comfortable calling "it") But that is not our religion. |
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Part of OP's message is a paraphrase of a wellknown scripture passage:
Ephesians 3:17ff 17 so that Christ may dwell in your hearts through faith. And I pray that you, being rooted and established in love, 18 may have power, together with all the Lord’s holy people, to grasp how wide and long and high and deep is the love of Christ, 19 and to know this love that surpasses knowledge—that you may be filled to the measure of all the fullness of God. |
| Abba is used in the Bible at one point. I have been told that it is akin to Daddy. Would I pray to "Daddy".....probably not. But, it is considered an "affectionate" term for God. |
Jesus preached to women (he told Martha to come out of the kitchen and join his students), he let a woman with unbound hair annoint his feet (scandalous at the time), there were women among the earliest church leaders, and more. |
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I'm not religious but even I know about all the raunchy stories in the old testament. Incest, rape and murder. This should not come as a surprise...
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