As I see it, there are at least 6 aspects of the God gender problem for worship
(1) The need to be faithful to the major elements of biblical tradition: The Bible's patriarchal language for God, especially Jesus' preference for "Abba" (a more intimate term for "Father")
(2) The need to honor the Personhood of God, the God who loves, can be pleased, and wants personal relationships
(3) The stilted and tedious substitution of "God" for all the masculine pronouns
(4) The perceived inappropriateness of varying masculine and feminine pronouns or using the neutral "They" when speaking of or to God
(5) Christian ignorance of the Bible's feminine imagery of God, an ignorance that makes allusions to this imagery seem too pagan or New Age
(6) For Catholics, the need to protect Mary's unique maternal, almost divine role as Mediatrix and object of prayer and veneration
Seeler, you remind me of a dentist who once told me, "I don't want to learn anything new in church." You don't seem to want to be challenged by new ideas here. Discussions only become lectures if people refuse to engage in the hard work of critical thinking. And actually, if by default, people prefer a dumbed down recycling of the old familiar answers and theories, that would bore me enough to discontinue the thread.
(1) The need to be faithful to the major elements of biblical tradition: The Bible's patriarchal language for God, especially Jesus' preference for "Abba" (a more intimate term for "Father")
(2) The need to honor the Personhood of God, the God who loves, can be pleased, and wants personal relationships
(3) The stilted and tedious substitution of "God" for all the masculine pronouns
(4) The perceived inappropriateness of varying masculine and feminine pronouns or using the neutral "They" when speaking of or to God
(5) Christian ignorance of the Bible's feminine imagery of God, an ignorance that makes allusions to this imagery seem too pagan or New Age
(6) For Catholics, the need to protect Mary's unique maternal, almost divine role as Mediatrix and object of prayer and veneration
Seeler, you remind me of a dentist who once told me, "I don't want to learn anything new in church." You don't seem to want to be challenged by new ideas here. Discussions only become lectures if people refuse to engage in the hard work of critical thinking. And actually, if by default, people prefer a dumbed down recycling of the old familiar answers and theories, that would bore me enough to discontinue the thread.
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