Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm Christian so a lot of what I read is male-centric because men have mostly run society over the past 20 centuries or so. The words reflect the social context with which they were written. No big deal.
you'd think God could do better than that.
Anonymous wrote:So a lot of people from my home town are very Christian in a strange sort of way. They talked a lot about saving, and their father, and it just rubs me the wrong way. Like a good friend from high school got married and a attendee wrote this:
Congrats to the most beautiful bride of Christ! You are a perfect picture of Christ's redemptive power. How much joy I've had watching you run into your Daddy's arms. The beauty I see on the outside pales to your beautiful heart, mind and soul. You literally jump for joy!!! May your birthday be a time when your Daddy whispers to you how deep and how long and how wide His love is for you.
This makes no sense to me because she married her husband and he is no ones daddy? It just grosses me out. I strive to be tolerant of all religion and all lifestyles but something about this sec of religion is hard for me to understand.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm Christian so a lot of what I read is male-centric because men have mostly run society over the past 20 centuries or so. The words reflect the social context with which they were written. No big deal.
you'd think God could do better than that.
Anonymous wrote:I'm Christian so a lot of what I read is male-centric because men have mostly run society over the past 20 centuries or so. The words reflect the social context with which they were written. No big deal.
Anonymous wrote:
That same God also wrote the Old Testament. The deep misogyny in the OT is often conveniently left out in Christianity.
Read the passage in the New Testament about Moses and the vail. The Old Testament is read "literally", but the true scripture is read with spirit. There is a difference. It is in II Corinthians 3
That same God also wrote the Old Testament. The deep misogyny in the OT is often conveniently left out in Christianity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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)
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.
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.
Anonymous wrote: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...