Re: Women in church
Posted: Wed Mar 06, 2019 4:10 pm
K, all you have to do is address my direct questions - but you've not done so - certainly not about the essential instructions by Paul, or how he could have been mistaken. Or how he could have been merely placing his own ancient cultural sensibilities into the immensely important instructions concerning how to administer God's Church. So, it's not about Geisler, or what I, you or anyone else thinks. And I'm not offended in the least - nor wishing to have an extended argument. But you have the Scriptures that instruct concerning the requirements for certain key leadership positions within the Church. And so this was the model and standard being put forth for the churches going forward. It's also mirrored in the patriarchal line of Christ, the all male original disciples / Apostles, and even within the headship instructions for the family.
So, your disagreement isn't with me - it's that you have a position in direct opposition to what Scripture specifically says. And particularly with the Apostle Paul - as he's the guy who was unimaginably zealous for the freedom Christ brings ALL Christians. He was the one to challenge those, like Peter, who sinfully fell in with others who wanted to continue the oppressive yoke of the Judaisers' bondage upon those already set free in Christ. So it is absolutely inconceivable to think that Paul spoke only from his own personal desires or opinions, or desired to keep Christian women under the yoke of some now-antiquated, cultural bias, or sexist male oppression - well, that's the belief of people reading modern sensibilities into the text who don't want to accept his teachings. Again, if submission is a form of inequality in one's individual value, then Jesus' submission to the Father would show Him to be unequal to the Father - which we know is impossible. And yet their ROLES are different, and Jesus' submittance was totally in sync with the His and the collective will of the Father and Spirit!
So, your disagreement isn't with me - it's that you have a position in direct opposition to what Scripture specifically says. And particularly with the Apostle Paul - as he's the guy who was unimaginably zealous for the freedom Christ brings ALL Christians. He was the one to challenge those, like Peter, who sinfully fell in with others who wanted to continue the oppressive yoke of the Judaisers' bondage upon those already set free in Christ. So it is absolutely inconceivable to think that Paul spoke only from his own personal desires or opinions, or desired to keep Christian women under the yoke of some now-antiquated, cultural bias, or sexist male oppression - well, that's the belief of people reading modern sensibilities into the text who don't want to accept his teachings. Again, if submission is a form of inequality in one's individual value, then Jesus' submission to the Father would show Him to be unequal to the Father - which we know is impossible. And yet their ROLES are different, and Jesus' submittance was totally in sync with the His and the collective will of the Father and Spirit!