Source: (consider it)
|
Thread: Purgatory: Men and women? Merely different plumbing?
|
Father Gregory
Orthodoxy
# 310
|
Posted
As a follow on from Dyfrig's thread about women priests I want to raise the issue about male and female. I know I am going to get a lot of Jungian animus / anima stuff but I am not that impressed. Nor am I impressed by the argument that the only thing that separates men and women is the shape of their genitals or perhaps what mummy, daddy or my peers role modelled / taught me into.
I submit that there are real embedded differences between men and women deeper than the physical although conditioned by the physical.
I think this is going to be a long thread. (I hope so anyway).
PLEASE KEEP OF WOMEN'S ORDINATION! Save that for Dyfrig's thread. [ 10. March 2003, 02:12: Message edited by: Erin ]
-------------------- Yours in Christ Fr. Gregory Find Your Way Around the Plot TheOrthodoxPlot™
Posts: 15099 | From: Manchester, UK | Registered: May 2001
| IP: Logged
|
|
|
|
|
|
Nicolemr
Shipmate
# 28
|
Posted
yes, i agree with what astro and reason said. for example, women tend to be nurturing... but there are some women i wouldn't trust with a pet, much less a child. men tend to be agressive... unless they conform to that other stereotype and are completely henpecked.
-------------------- On pilgrimage in the endless realms of Cyberia, currently traveling by ship. Now with live journal!
Posts: 11803 | From: New York City "The City Carries On" | Registered: May 2001
| IP: Logged
|
|
|
|
Gill
Shipmate
# 102
|
Posted
AND using an electric floor polisher, no doubt! Hypocrite!
-------------------- Still hanging in there...
Posts: 1828 | From: not drowning but waving... | Registered: May 2001
| IP: Logged
|
|
|
Gill
Shipmate
# 102
|
Posted
(Thinks: Just shows why that ol' woodchuck thang never caught on in Rome...)
-------------------- Still hanging in there...
Posts: 1828 | From: not drowning but waving... | Registered: May 2001
| IP: Logged
|
|
|
|
Gill
Shipmate
# 102
|
Posted
Okay FG, what are these differences, please? Give me something to agree or disagree with, please do!!
-------------------- Still hanging in there...
Posts: 1828 | From: not drowning but waving... | Registered: May 2001
| IP: Logged
|
|
HoosierNan
Shipmate
# 91
|
Posted
Of course there are differences between people: anatomical, cultural, financial, blah, blah, blah.Here is the crux of the matter: Does different mean that it is OK for one of the types to be "normative" and "right," and all other manifestations of humanness to be "inferior"? Traditionally, male has been considered normal and right, and female has been considered inferior and wrong. Is difference itself a good thing to be celebrated and embraced, or a bad thing to be ridiculed, exiled, and silenced?
Posts: 795 | From: Indiana, USA | Registered: May 2001
| IP: Logged
|
|
Beenster
Shipmate
# 242
|
Posted
Nancy - I thought it was male who considered themselves right and female who knew they weren't but let the males go along with it?!
Posts: 1885 | Registered: May 2001
| IP: Logged
|
|
ptarmigan
Shipmate
# 138
|
Posted
quote: Originally posted by Nancy Winningham:
Here is the crux of the matter: Does different mean that it is OK for one of the types to be "normative" and "right," and all other manifestations of humanness to be "inferior"?
That's one crux. But another important one (straying dangerously close to an area which Fr G asked us to avoid) is unwarranted discrimination in important areas such as employment, on the basis not of suitability for the job but of sex alone.
There is a moral imperative (and in some countries a legal one) on employers to select on the basis of suitability of the individual candidates for the job. It is not fair to discriminate on the basis of membership of some group about whom you have a prejudice; i.e. a group who you have pre-judged en masse. We have women firefighters in Britain now, not because the average woman is as physically strong as the average man, but because the women accepted exceed the Fire Service's minimum requirements for physical strength. If there were an opportunity for paid employment as a sperm donor (!!!) or a role as a guinea pig in genetic research which required specifically male chromosomes, it would be quite reasonable and acceptable to discriminate against women. I believe that as an employer the church should be exemplary in this matter. If we wish to employ sperm donors we should not waste money and time interviewing women. If we seek firefighters we should judge applicants on their merits. If we need someone to say the mass ... oops, not allowed to discuss that. Human rights are based on the christian principles of decency, fairness and justice; they are not a 20th century heresy. Pt
-------------------- All shall be well. And all shall be well. And all manner of things shall be well. (Julian of Norwich)
Posts: 1080 | From: UK - Midlands | Registered: May 2001
| IP: Logged
|
|
|
|
|
dyfrig
Blue Scarfed Menace
# 15
|
Posted
Ok, Tubbs, some controversy - biology and theology prove that men and women are different.(a) biology - men are physically stronger, and are aggressive, which are necessities in God's createdly violent world; (b) theology - men have withihn them the image of God, which is Fatherhood. The Father-Son relationship is the primary one at the heart of the universe, therefore the only truly human representation of God is a man. (c) whereas men as perfect in themselves, the only part of them that requires saving being their moral decisions, women must be saved by becoming less like women. They must be docile, submissive and should not assume any right over a man.
-------------------- "He was wrong in the long run, but then, who isn't?" - Tony Judt
Posts: 6917 | From: pob dydd Iau, am hanner dydd | Registered: Apr 2001
| IP: Logged
|
|
|
|
|
dyfrig
Blue Scarfed Menace
# 15
|
Posted
My God, Tubbs! Are you suggesting -...no, you can't be! Are you saying that women are equally the image of God as well??? Or, God forbid, that the God's image is seen in men and women together? You're gonna BUURRRNNNN If women are also in the image of God, what possible ontological difference can there be between them? Away with such heresy.
-------------------- "He was wrong in the long run, but then, who isn't?" - Tony Judt
Posts: 6917 | From: pob dydd Iau, am hanner dydd | Registered: Apr 2001
| IP: Logged
|
|
|
dyfrig
Blue Scarfed Menace
# 15
|
Posted
But Tubbs, don't you see what you're doing? By saying that it's ultimately inappropriate to apply any "gender" to God you're having to force us to rethink whether the words "Father and Son" as 'biological' terms are appropriate to the ontological relationship (as opposed to say, a quasi-legal paradigm of authority and inheritance). And that would make you a member of the congregation of naughty men, as clearly it implies that maleness per se was not essential to Jesus' representation/iconisation of God, and thus we are forced into the totally unacceptable conclusion that the "Christ-representative" at the eucharist has to human, but nothing more specific.You bad, bad person. As for you Stowaway, how dare you suggest that those who canonised women preachers and teachers were going against the apostolic tradition? Bottom line - God likes men, and puts up with women because he has to. Women are inferior. Women cannot be priests. Women are inherently evil. Women are the gateway of the devil! Women? HAH! What are they good for? Absolutely [I]nothing[/]! Believe me, all the problems in the world are either caused by a woman or by someone who knows a woman.
-------------------- "He was wrong in the long run, but then, who isn't?" - Tony Judt
Posts: 6917 | From: pob dydd Iau, am hanner dydd | Registered: Apr 2001
| IP: Logged
|
|
|
Tubbs
Miss Congeniality
# 440
|
Posted
Dryfig,You'll never make it to Swansea at this rate Is it you who's getting married soon?! Does your wife to be know about these views .... quote: But Tubbs, don't you see what you're doing? By saying that it's ultimately inappropriate to apply any "gender" to God you're having to force us to rethink whether the words "Father and Son" as 'biological' terms are appropriate to the ontological relationship (as opposed to say, a quasi-legal paradigm of authority and inheritance). And that would make you a member of the congregation of naughty men, as clearly it implies that maleness per se was not essential to Jesus' representation/iconisation of God, and thus we are forced into the totally unacceptable conclusion that the "Christ-representative" at the eucharist has to human, but nothing more specific.
You may have to explain the word ontological as it sounds medical to me! But what I'm basically saying this that - God is our Father and Mother. He loves and nutures us in both ways as both are equally important.
- God gives equal value and love to men and women. He gave us different abilities so we could work together to serve him and each other
- Historically, it would have been difficult for Jesus to have been a woman. So he came to earth as a man. This doesn't justify sexism within the Church. However it does explain why certain sections of the Church believe that only men can carry out certain roles within the Church. [But I won't go there as I've gone there elsewhere]
So how toasted am I?! Tubbs
-------------------- "It's better to keep your mouth shut and be thought a fool than open it up and remove all doubt" - Dennis Thatcher. My blog. Decide for yourself which I am
Posts: 12701 | From: Someplace strange | Registered: Jun 2001
| IP: Logged
|
|
BarbaraG
Shipmate
# 399
|
Posted
quote: Originally posted by ylm: As a broad sweeping generalisation Men are pretty obsessed by sex and Women realise this and use it to hold power over men. By being able to control the distribution of this "thing" that men want and women are able to give, women can make men do what ever they want to. It is, basically, attitudes towards the "sexual act" (as the Anglicans call it) that differentiate men and women in this day and age.
Errmmm..... most women want sex too... I see this as the extreme example of using the general differences between men and women as a prescription of what a man or a woman should be. In general, it is thought, men have a higher sex drive than women. But take any specific woman, and you may find that she has a higher sex drive than the average man. Or than her partner. So what do we do to her? We call her a nyphomaniac, because we consider her behaviour inappropriate for a woman. We make her feel like an unwoman. We do this also to women who don't want to be mothers, or who are career-orientated, or who aren't classically beautiful and willowy slim, and IT'S NOT FAIR!!! And we do it to men who are physically slight, quiet, arty and empathetic. And that's not fair either. There are lots of difference, on average, between men and women. But we are all individuals, and should be accepted as such, irrespective of how closely we conform to the stereotype of our gender BarbaraG
-------------------- still trying to make sense of the world
Posts: 143 | From: Nottinghamshire | Registered: Jun 2001
| IP: Logged
|
|
dyfrig
Blue Scarfed Menace
# 15
|
Posted
I've never heard such wickedness. The pair of you should be ashamed of yourselves.ylm - isn't that the Dutch national airline? No matter - as is taught clearly in the gospel*, Mary is accepted as an Apostle by being made an honorary man. *of Thomas. Tubbs - you are a fool.. Clearly I am superior to 'frin. That's why she's Host and I'm ....er.....not one. ....yee--eesss. Hmmmm.... (Humour Alert: some of the contents of this thread may be ironic.)
-------------------- "He was wrong in the long run, but then, who isn't?" - Tony Judt
Posts: 6917 | From: pob dydd Iau, am hanner dydd | Registered: Apr 2001
| IP: Logged
|
|
ylm
Apprentice
# 873
|
Posted
quote: So what do we do to her? We call her a nyphomaniac, because we consider her behaviour inappropriate for a woman. We make her feel like an unwoman. We do this also to women who don't want to be mothers, or who are career-orientated, or who aren't classically beautiful and willowy slim, and IT'S NOT FAIR!!!And we do it to men who are physically slight, quiet, arty and empathetic. And that's not fair either.
I'm one of the two above, BarbaraG - I agree with you entirely. I just figured that Dyfrig needed some help being controversial. IMHO, a lot of the time it is only a combination of 'plumbing' (Horrible choice of word, I imagine a man in a boiler suit looking at me and saying "By 'eck, who put *that* in for you!") and social response. Men - every been caught buying skincare products? Women - ever ordered a pint and a bag of dry-rosted? There is no reason for men and women not to do these (and similar) things. But the looks are there; the sly comments and raised eybrows... and it does stink and I do hate it. But anyway - sexuality - explain Female masturbation: media presents this as sexy, wicked and glamourous. Male masturbation: media presents this as pathetic, lonely and sad. Why? ylm
-------------------- || || | || || || || | | | | | |||| | | | | | || | | | | || |||||| | |
Posts: 15 | From: In transit | Registered: Jul 2001
| IP: Logged
|
|
|
|
|
Astro
Shipmate
# 84
|
Posted
Since women between certain ages shed blood regularly this should make them more suitable than men to be priets in a religion based on the shedding of blood by its god.
-------------------- if you look around the world today – whether you're an atheist or a believer – and think that the greatest problem facing us is other people's theologies, you are yourself part of the problem. - Andrew Brown (The Guardian)
Posts: 2723 | From: Chiltern Hills | Registered: May 2001
| IP: Logged
|
|
dyfrig
Blue Scarfed Menace
# 15
|
Posted
"Ontological" refers the very "is-ness" of something (its "inscape" as G. M. Hopkins) would say; its very essence; what amounts to its "being". I'm not clear how we determine something's ontological nature - I go for ontology derived from seeing what a thing does in action (e.g. we know what sort of God our God is because we believe Jesus is fully representative of God - a loving and saving and sacrificial God.) Now the way I see it - and this is where my views on this and the priests thread must come together, so please take this as read on the other thread too, and apologies for repetition, but I'm taking the opportunity to clarify my thinking - is this.... if the Catholic (I use this in the broad sense of the agreed, pre-East/West split) Church teaches that - the Second Person of the Trinity became fully human, then just as their is the "ontological" basic Godness about Jesus Christ, then there must be a basic "ontological" basic "human"-ness about him too. The early church, from the Johannine Epistles and Hebrews all the way to the 4th and 5th centuries made the point that he was fully human - because if wasn't fully human, he could save human beings. "What he did not assume he did not save" (Greg Nazianzen? Nyssa? I forget.) So far so splendid. By this reasoning there is a basic human-ness which Jesus shares with us all - men, women, children, black, white, purple, green, abled and disabled, sexually active or not - which I shall designate for reference only as "H". If this were not so he could only save those (unspecified) limited sub-sets of humanity who shared his nature. "H" is that thing which is common to all. Although qualified in actual life by various biological and sociological effects, there is an "H"-ness about all of us. Now, Gregory (Hallam, that is, Gregory Nazianzen being dead and unable to participate in this thread) asked the question whether there are any real differences between men and women. Now, we can think of examples between a particular man and a particular woman - e.g. 'frin is much brighter than me and much more tolerant. We can think of social differences - women do communicate more freely and deeply than men, it seems, though whether this is ontological or cultural I do not know. Consider for a moment the depth of friendship between David and Jonathan, "Greater than the love of women", suggesting that it was very different from the usual male inter-relationship. And we can physically see differences - different bumps, different ways of peeing. (Tho' I'm well aware that early in pregnancy there is one piece of anatomy that then become either a penis or a clitoris). But are these differences, whether we acknowledge them or not, ontolgocial? Do they effect our basic "H"-ness? If they do, then orthodoxy (with a little and a bit O) has a problem: what he did not assume he did not save. If there is an element of "H"-ness which is different between male and female, then could Incarnation as one of these sub-sets be truly fully human? You create two types of "H" - HM and HW. If there are parts of "H" which Jesus Christ did not have - e.g. he didn't have an ontological HW-ness - then surely he did not, could have saved HW-ness. Making male/female differences leads to the unacceptable conclusion that those who did not have the HM of Jesus Christ had (rahter than just H) were not saved. Equally, if one were to argue that a priest is Christ's representative, then anyone with H can represent him - and I mean, anyone. Anyone having "H". But to say that a woman cannot be the icon of Christ is again to run up against "what he did not assume he cannot save", because if there is such an ontological difference between the H of a man and the H of a woman that a woman cannot represent someone who is purportedly fully H, then the person being represented is, ipso facto, not fully H. He is only HM - and that is not fully human. So - yes, there probably are differences BUT they are not so fundamental to the universe as to require the creation of institutional differences.
-------------------- "He was wrong in the long run, but then, who isn't?" - Tony Judt
Posts: 6917 | From: pob dydd Iau, am hanner dydd | Registered: Apr 2001
| IP: Logged
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
ptarmigan
Shipmate
# 138
|
Posted
quote: Originally posted by Fr. Gregory:
Why do transgendered individuals frequently justify their desires to "be" the opposite sex in terms such as "I have always been a woman. I want to be a woman, Help me be a woman, (& vice versa).
I don't know any personally, but I get the impression they want to change gender, not sex. (Gender being the cultural milieu associated by a particular socioety with a particular sex). Surgery to the sex organs doesn't alter chromosomes. It will affect hormonal balance but it won't change from a typical male mix of hormones to a typical female one, (a eunuch's voice is quite different to a woman's) and it certainly won't introduce monthly cycles. I think they want to feel feminine, and be perceived as a woman. But - as always - I may be wrong.
-------------------- All shall be well. And all shall be well. And all manner of things shall be well. (Julian of Norwich)
Posts: 1080 | From: UK - Midlands | Registered: May 2001
| IP: Logged
|
|
Martin60
Shipmate
# 368
|
Posted
The plumbing goes deep ...Castrate a man and he becomes virtually harmless. Literally soft. It's the greatest cure for baldness and aggressive sexuality. Testosterone is as powerful in it's own way, more so perhaps, than oestrogen and progesterone - the latter being the cause of PMS/T and much, much, more besides ... all sorts of funny behaviour. The amount of skin a woman exposes is directly correlated with her implantability, the call of the wild ovum is awesome. Testosterone's power is such that it shrivels the corpus collosum between the cerebral hemispheres and men are incapable, absolutely incapable, of multitasking as the result of it. The best man isn't as good as the worst woman, intellect being equal. The focus that testosterone brings is complemented by men's narrower visual field and allows the risk taking that benefits otherwise intellectually equal men and women in exam situations, which is why more men get firsts than women. And more thirds. Multitasking in a primary child carer has survival benefits. It is a myth that boys are more immature than girls. Boys mature psychologically just as fast but their bodies don't catch up so that they will not have to be physically put down in competition with older males, who therefore tolerate their otherwise competitive personalities. In girls the opposite is true, they become superficially 'little women' that their minds can expand in to the role of woman by being treated like one - hopefully at a crucial distance. All of this is genetic. We are biologically imperative - haunted - machines.
-------------------- Love wins
Posts: 17586 | From: Never Dobunni after all. Corieltauvi after all. Just moved to the capital. | Registered: Jun 2001
| IP: Logged
|
|
|
Father Gregory
Orthodoxy
# 310
|
Posted
The plumbing does indeed go deep and whether it's gender or sex the sense of being a woman or feminine or a man or masculine is not an inconsequential matter. They are not interchangeable in the sense of being congruent. The incongruence of the sexes exists notwithstanding their absolute human equality.
-------------------- Yours in Christ Fr. Gregory Find Your Way Around the Plot TheOrthodoxPlot™
Posts: 15099 | From: Manchester, UK | Registered: May 2001
| IP: Logged
|
|
|
|
Father Gregory
Orthodoxy
# 310
|
Posted
Dear GillI assume that this is the phrase (particularly) that you can't understanD- "They (sic, the sexes) are not interchangeable in the sense of being congruent." "Congruent" is a term from mathematics. It refers to the absolute identicality of 2 shapes such that one superimposed over the other will not lead to overlap. I am saying that male / maleness and female / femaleness are equal in dignity and status but not congruent in their respective human profiles .... and I don't mean just the "plumbing" (Dyfrig)! I started the other thread on "plumbing" i order to expose this to debate, (where he it would just get lost in equal opportunities). This raises another interesting issue. (It may start as another thread if I think it useful). I submit that there are two types of Christian feminists (or feminist Christians). The Elaine Storkey variety (Protestant) where gender is incidental to be human human and where equal opportunities largely conditions the ordination debate, and the Rosemary Radford Ruether variety (Catholic) where gender / sexuality imparts vital differences which lead to new conceptions of God. Although the Storkey version is less radical, I actually prefer the Ruether approach, NOT because I agree with her theology (goddess etc ... I am closer to Storkey on that one) but because at least the Ruether heresies are sacramental. She isn't blind to gender. She argues womens' case from their distinctive aspects. These then get fed into ministry, worship and how we speak of and relate to God.
-------------------- Yours in Christ Fr. Gregory Find Your Way Around the Plot TheOrthodoxPlot™
Posts: 15099 | From: Manchester, UK | Registered: May 2001
| IP: Logged
|
|
splodge
Shipmate
# 156
|
Posted
Okay, so if gender differences are all down to cultural traits, this begs the question - why did such a gender-culture develop in the first place? Answer - because in human prehistory when ecological and biological realities were paramount and made all the difference to society, then the biological diffences between males and females necessarily resulted in different and very clearly demarcated social roles for each gender Okay, heres my theory of men and women: The "averge" men are has been primarily been shaped oven aeon by the needs of mammoth hunting and tribal warfare. Traits of physical strengh, aggression and emotional rigidity and the ability to pee standing up were all important and naturally selected and promoted by evolution for their role in the mammoth hunt etc. By their very nature these traits tend to lead to domination of the whole human group: later of course the domination became institutionalised; but domination need not be bad for the dominated pe se, but it allows a lot of bad things to happen. What were the women doing when men were chasing mammoths and fighting other tribes? Everything else, like today when their men go out playing sport (the modern equivalent of chasing mammoths etc)Women managed the family make most of the groups goods, and probably located most of it food needs (shopping is the modern equivalent of gathering berries in the forest) and they also crucially transmitted culture and language. The latter happened as they sat around in the cave in collective huddles constantly discussing their personal and relationship problems without those nasty men being present (as they still do today) Come on girls, even if you won't admit it, it is what you really want isn't it? Instinctively you want men who still have the traits of hunky, strong, confident, slightly sweaty, mammoth hunters and warriors. (hands up you heterosexual ladies who didn't half fancy Russel Crowe in the film Gladiator?) You just ask that your warrior male is also (slightly paradoxically) very caring and loving too. .The modern world needs different traits and arguably has had enough of hunters and warriors, so that is why feminism is absolutely right now, but would have been damn silly in ancient times.
-------------------- Splodge
Posts: 145 | From: Newport | Registered: May 2001
| IP: Logged
|
|
|