Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Next step: Drop God
Yes because obviously if God can't be masculine then he's not really God and not worth having.
Well, the Bible actually says God is our Father.
I can't speak to Greek, but Hebrew does not have a gender neutral word for "parent" . Its either av, or im. When discussing parents or ancestors generally, we use the masculine ("avot") may be used. Similarly for gendering of plural pronouns, children ("Bnei Israel" which is translated children of Israel, really means "sons of Israel" but the female "bnot" is used when females only are referred to, when its a mixed group of children or descendants, its "bnei")
But I suppose to Episcopalians the bible is really an English document
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Next step: Drop God
Yep.
That is wher e the Episcopalian "church" is leading.
They are working towards making the Bible a general suggestion and not the Word of God.
Episcopalians haven't taken the Bible literally for centuries -- because they study the human origins of the Bible
This is the essence of unbelief. If you don't accept Scripture as divinely inspired, you do not believe, and you are not a Christian. I'm not sure why some people insist that they are followers of a faith they don't have.
Divinely inspired, yes. The literal word of god, no. If you take every word in the Bible literally, then I assume you’re following everything in Leviticus about what to wear, etc?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Wow, that's huge. And I didn't know the Church of Sweden had already done this as well.
Glad to hear it, but how will it play out semantically? "They"? "It"?
Anyway, I approve.
When we pray with non-masculine language in my synagogue, we usually just say “God” or “The One” instead of “He,” and “ruler” instead of “king” or “lord.” It’s an easy substitution.
The Lord's prayer might have some issues.
Lord, father, son come up a few times. Quite a few hymns used male gendered words etc.
NP. We (Jews) just changed the translation. In some cases, we changed the Hebrew, adding matriarchs, for example, where only patriarchs had been listed. In other cases the "original" stays the same, and there's no getting away from the patriarchal language if you read Hebrew, but otherwise ... These texts are all in translation. If you're not saying the actual text anyway, you can change it.
Also, most religious authorities will tell you that "God" is not consistently gendered, at least not in the original scriptures. God in the Hebrew scriptures has male and female names and attributes. I'm not sure what happened with the New Testament, Did God suddenly acquire fixed gender?
Yes
Jesus explicitly and exclusively refers to God as the Father.
Christian religion and Christian baptism is based on the trinity, which is specifically God the Father, God the Son and God the Holy Spirit.
You cannot get away from God as being the Father in Christian religion. It is right up there with the Christian (and Jewish) belief that there is only one God.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Wow, that's huge. And I didn't know the Church of Sweden had already done this as well.
Glad to hear it, but how will it play out semantically? "They"? "It"?
Anyway, I approve.
When we pray with non-masculine language in my synagogue, we usually just say “God” or “The One” instead of “He,” and “ruler” instead of “king” or “lord.” It’s an easy substitution.
The Lord's prayer might have some issues.
Lord, father, son come up a few times. Quite a few hymns used male gendered words etc.
NP. We (Jews) just changed the translation. In some cases, we changed the Hebrew, adding matriarchs, for example, where only patriarchs had been listed. In other cases the "original" stays the same, and there's no getting away from the patriarchal language if you read Hebrew, but otherwise ... These texts are all in translation. If you're not saying the actual text anyway, you can change it.
Also, most religious authorities will tell you that "God" is not consistently gendered, at least not in the original scriptures. God in the Hebrew scriptures has male and female names and attributes. I'm not sure what happened with the New Testament, Did God suddenly acquire fixed gender?
Anonymous wrote:The Catholic Church did this years ago.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Wow, that's huge. And I didn't know the Church of Sweden had already done this as well.
Glad to hear it, but how will it play out semantically? "They"? "It"?
Anyway, I approve.
When we pray with non-masculine language in my synagogue, we usually just say “God” or “The One” instead of “He,” and “ruler” instead of “king” or “lord.” It’s an easy substitution.
The Lord's prayer might have some issues.
Lord, father, son come up a few times. Quite a few hymns used male gendered words etc.
NP. We (Jews) just changed the translation. In some cases, we changed the Hebrew, adding matriarchs, for example, where only patriarchs had been listed. In other cases the "original" stays the same, and there's no getting away from the patriarchal language if you read Hebrew, but otherwise ... These texts are all in translation. If you're not saying the actual text anyway, you can change it.
Also, most religious authorities will tell you that "God" is not consistently gendered, at least not in the original scriptures. God in the Hebrew scriptures has male and female names and attributes. I'm not sure what happened with the New Testament, Did God suddenly acquire fixed gender?
Yes
Jesus explicitly and exclusively refers to God as the Father.
Christian religion and Christian baptism is based on the trinity, which is specifically God the Father, God the Son and God the Holy Spirit.
You cannot get away from God as being the Father in Christian religion. It is right up there with the Christian (and Jewish) belief that there is only one God.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Wow, that's huge. And I didn't know the Church of Sweden had already done this as well.
Glad to hear it, but how will it play out semantically? "They"? "It"?
Anyway, I approve.
When we pray with non-masculine language in my synagogue, we usually just say “God” or “The One” instead of “He,” and “ruler” instead of “king” or “lord.” It’s an easy substitution.
The Lord's prayer might have some issues.
Lord, father, son come up a few times. Quite a few hymns used male gendered words etc.
NP. We (Jews) just changed the translation. In some cases, we changed the Hebrew, adding matriarchs, for example, where only patriarchs had been listed. In other cases the "original" stays the same, and there's no getting away from the patriarchal language if you read Hebrew, but otherwise ... These texts are all in translation. If you're not saying the actual text anyway, you can change it.
Also, most religious authorities will tell you that "God" is not consistently gendered, at least not in the original scriptures. God in the Hebrew scriptures has male and female names and attributes. I'm not sure what happened with the New Testament, Did God suddenly acquire fixed gender?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Next step: Drop God
Yep.
That is wher e the Episcopalian "church" is leading.
They are working towards making the Bible a general suggestion and not the Word of God.
Episcopalians haven't taken the Bible literally for centuries -- because they study the human origins of the Bible
This is the essence of unbelief. If you don't accept Scripture as divinely inspired, you do not believe, and you are not a Christian. I'm not sure why some people insist that they are followers of a faith they don't have.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Wow, that's huge. And I didn't know the Church of Sweden had already done this as well.
Glad to hear it, but how will it play out semantically? "They"? "It"?
Anyway, I approve.
When we pray with non-masculine language in my synagogue, we usually just say “God” or “The One” instead of “He,” and “ruler” instead of “king” or “lord.” It’s an easy substitution.
The Lord's prayer might have some issues.
Lord, father, son come up a few times. Quite a few hymns used male gendered words etc.