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10-31-2005, 11:36 AM | #11 | ||||||
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The New Testament itself has some rather obnoxious sexism, like 1 Corinthians 11:3-10, 14:34-35, Ephesians 5:22-24, 5:33, Colossians 3:18, 1 Timothy 2:9-15, Titus 2:4-5, 1 Peter 3:1-7. Richard Carrier has touched on the question of Jesus Christ as a feminist here and here. He notes that several pagan philosophers were more explicit about good treatment of women than anyone in the Bible; starting with Epicurus, some philosophers let women join their schools. Some of the literate class, as it may be called, praised education for women; Plutarch claimed that it is a good way of keeping women from becoming superstitious. Such men often practiced what they preached; many women became educated, and many rich men's parties were considered as dull as dishwater unless they had some female professional entertainers who could debate the fine points of poetry and philosophy as well as any man. As to religion, women could serve as priests, and Hellenic/Roman religion featured important female as well as male deities. By comparison, the Three Persons of the Xian Trinity are all male, and the Virgin Mary has all the personality of a doormat. By contract, the Xian churches had never allowed women to become priests for most of its history, and only in recent decades have Xian clergywomen become common, and that only in some denominations. The Catholic Church is still adamant about not allowing women to become priests. Quote:
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This seems like a common caricature of a feminist as someone who deserts her family for the sake of her career. Why should a woman's dignity be dependent on her rejecting her family and her sexuality? And Bede might enjoy my thread on nuns becoming "none"; Catholic nuns are dwindling and aging, with very few American and European women becoming nuns. American nuns' average age is now around 70, and only 3% or so are younger than 50; their numbers have declined from 181,421 in 1966 to 106,912 in 1988 and 71,486 in 2004. Quote:
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10-31-2005, 11:43 AM | #12 | |
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10-31-2005, 12:01 PM | #13 | |
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I personally think it is a mistake to read sexual politics from the 20th century back into the first. The idea of social equality was a long ways away from ancient hierarchical societies. Paul and the gospel Jesus endorsed slavery, explicity or implicitly. Rodney Stark makes a fairly good case that early (pre-empire) Christianity grew because it was relatively good to women - whatever superior legal rights upper class women might have had in pagan society, the actual experience of women was better in Christian communities because of their pro-natalist positions. What Stark doesn't discuss IIRC is the relative position of women in Jewish society at the time. I suspect that Christian societies merely copied what was common among Jews. And once Christianity became part of the ruling apparatus of the Roman Empire, it adopted Roman practices, and devolved into a bastion of anti-women patriarchal attitudes. Uta Ranke-Heinemann in Eunuchs for the Kingdom of Heaven: Women, Sexuality, and the Catholic Church claims that the earliest Christianity would have been pro-marriage and pro-women, but was corrupted by pagan and gnostic ideas, which denigrated sex, motherhood, and women in general. She traces the worst of these attitudes to the gnostics. |
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10-31-2005, 12:14 PM | #14 | |
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10-31-2005, 12:45 PM | #15 | |
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10-31-2005, 01:11 PM | #16 | ||
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10-31-2005, 01:48 PM | #17 | |
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MacMullen is plainly wrong and I begin to see why he is so popular with CJ. I agree with Toto and CJD on the inadvisability of reflecting our own ideas back in ancient history. What is interesting about Stark is that he shows how the improved status of women helped Christianity grow. If it was anything like as bad as CJ implies, it would never have got off the ground - reasons to be extremely sceptical about what he says. Best wishes Bede Bede's Library - faith and reason |
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10-31-2005, 03:49 PM | #18 | |
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And as for it getting off the ground, MacMullen has a perfectly good explanation, backed up by Fox: miracles. The Christians, with their pickled heads, preserved bones, martyrs, angels, appearances of Jesus etc. were able to out-miracle the competition, and with the loss of literacy and education in late antiquity, it gave them an edge no one could beat. Combined with a warlike conception of one true god, backed by hordes of armed monks and other Christian partisans, Christianity was without equal until the rise of another equally ferocious religion: Islam. |
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10-31-2005, 04:35 PM | #19 | ||||
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10-31-2005, 05:29 PM | #20 | ||||
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