paradox3
Peanuts Fan
- Pronouns
- She/Her/Her
I meant leaders & congregations in the United Church when I said "we".Who is this "we" paradox3? Do you mean your church? Your family?
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I meant leaders & congregations in the United Church when I said "we".Who is this "we" paradox3? Do you mean your church? Your family?
If God has chosen to limit himself as Trinity, should we not then be content with that?
Well I don't know about that, I now have a hard time separating the word Kleenex from tissue.Any image of God can only limit God if we insist on being stuck with that image. The Trinity is no more limiting than any other. Same with God as Father. It is only as limiting as we make it. If it is one image of God rather the only image of God, then other images/understandings are possible and the limitation is removed.
IOW, I don't think it's the term or image that limit God. It is how we use the term/image that is the limiter.
Bible reference for that please Jae. I don't recall any verses about that.
It depends for some of us on just why the change is being done.I'm not interested in encouraging male based language. This would be a difficult path to walk if I wanted to attend a Christian church, I think. Way too much history of using Father as a metaphor for God. Also way too many Christians who get upset by any change in 'how we do things at church'.
Of course some people don't want change, others do want change, some only want change on their terms.
KayTheCurler said:You said "If God has chosen to limit himself as Trinity, should we not then be content with that?" My question asked you to give some background to that statement. WHERE does God choose to limit itself to a Trinity? I assumed you were using your Biblical knowledge. If not, where do you get the conviction that your statement is true?
I heard a new language / phrase Friday --- God as Creator and Fashioner.. I liked it.
While I have no issue with the image it has a problematic piece. It is functional language (which has a place) whereas Parent God/Mother God/Father God is relational. I sense we need both (and other) types of metaphor to describe the Divine.
Same problem exists when one looks for alternate Trinitarian language and only uses Creator, Redeemer, Sustainer -- you lose the relationality of the more traditional language.
Father not only is one who gives , seeds beginnings of life life but also sustains it even to its ultimate , self sacrifice
Hi blackbelt,
I would like to explore this a little. Biologically considered the father contributes to the fertilization of a seed within the mother. This is the physical reality of procreation. It is also the mother who nurtures the developing embryo. And, for most of history, it is the mother who provides physical and spiritual nurture to the fledgling child. Following your suggestion above does it not seem that fixing the identity of God as father misses some important aspects of how it is that life in creation begins and is sustained to maturity?
I am also seeing Jesus, the child of God conceived in the womb of Mary, on the cross. He cries out concerning the abandonment of his father. This while his mother is standing in deep sorrow witnessing the murder of her son. A son she believed was going to bring redemption into the world by the will of God.
My basic question has to do with the eclipse of the maternal spirit by the paternal spirit. This in awareness that our human being is manifest as both male and female. That is, Genesis seems to suggest that God is present in human experience as male and female. Why then the emphasis on the male role when speaking about God?