T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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657.1 | | PMROAD::FLANAGAN | I feel therefore I am | Wed Jan 11 1995 15:26 | 8 |
| A half truth allows us to see the sin in ourselves.
Full truth allows us to see that there is sin in ourselves and that we
are also created in the image of God and thereby capable of much Good.
Grace is a free gift of God. It allows us to see the sin and the Good
in us and to know that in spite of the sin, God loves us and accepts us
and calls us to actualize the Good.
|
657.2 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Learning to lean | Wed Jan 11 1995 15:32 | 10 |
|
What is grace, Patricia?
Jim
|
657.4 | Interwoven | ODIXIE::HUNT | | Wed Jan 11 1995 16:11 | 34 |
| I guess I don't see Grace and Truth at opposite poles. So I don't
necessarily see balancing between grace and truth. It may be how
grace and truth is defined. When I think of grace, I think of God's
grace. When I think of truth, I think of God's truth. The opposite of
truth is deception or falsehood. What's the opposite of grace? Maybe
harshness? Maybe the opposite of grace is that we get what we deserve
based on what we do, not who we are.
I believe they're interwoven together. Truth, to me, is understanding
things from God's perspective. It's understanding that what God's says
is reality regardless of how I feel or how things look.
Understanding God's grace towards me is understanding the truth about
who I am in Christ. Its understanding that I am fully accepted because
of who I am in Christ and not because of what I do. I may not FEEL
accepted or loved, but God has said in His Word that I am. His grace
has set me free to fully be a recepticle and vehicle for His life and
love. God's in His grace has made me righteous, holy & blameless, etc.
He doesn't overlook my sin -- He has already dealt with it.
Truth isn't necessarily harsh. Its seeing things for the Father's
perspective. So when I see someone who doesn't know Christ, I see one
of God's creation who is of infinite worth - a person who God loved so
much that He sent His Son to die for Him. That person is spiritually
dead, but that person is loved.
Does this make sense?
Love in Him,
Bing
|
657.5 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Wed Jan 11 1995 21:54 | 22 |
| >Grace is gentle, Grace is kind. Grace is tolerant and loving, Grace accepts,
>overlooks, makes allowances. Grace sees the best behind all that is worst in
>us. Grace is lovely to be around. Grace draws us to it by its gentle,
>loving acceptance.
Paul, it really sounds here like you are describing human grace. The grace
of a gracious or talented person.
Divine grace is something entirely different, and it is too bad that English
uses the same word for both. Divine grace is _active_, not an attribute but
God working through the Holy Spirit to affect the world. And God's grace is
inexplicable, unfathomable. Divine grace is the way God expresses his love
for mankind, through his goodness and mercy towards us.
Divine grace is God's favour which he pours out on those with whom he is well
pleased. By grace, God elected Israel to be his chosen people to prepare the
world for the birth of Our Saviour. The prophets, sure of the grace of God,
would not be deterred from conveying his message.
God pours out his grace to those who come to him in faith.
/john
|
657.6 | Amazing Grace | N2DEEP::SHALLOW | Subtract L, invert W | Thu Jan 12 1995 11:13 | 18 |
| > Divine grace is God's favour which he pours out on those with whom he
> is well pleased.
I tend to disagree with this. From my understanding of grace, it is the
undeserved, unmerited favor of God. I cannot be pleasing to God enough
to deserve His grace.
The truth of my pitifully inadequate human condition moves God to
compassion. He extends His grace towards me, and I grow. For it is by
grace you are saved, not of works. My works (or righteousness) is as
filthy rags. Faith in His grace isn't even mine, as it is given to me,
as a gift. I can take no credit for anything. I can't even take credit
for recognizing, and acknowledging my deplorable condition. God, by His
grace, revealed this.
Feeling rather wretched,
Bob
|
657.7 | What about Abraham? | PMROAD::FLANAGAN | I feel therefore I am | Thu Jan 12 1995 12:38 | 8 |
| John,
What then do we say of Abraham? Did he come to God in Faith before or
after God poured out his Grace to him?
Patricia
|
657.8 | God Extends His Grace To All | YIELD::BARBIERI | | Thu Jan 12 1995 13:50 | 54 |
| I believe that God's grace is extended to all. He rains on the
just and the unjust. A word study on water would be insightful.
God does all that He can to reveal Himself to everyone. What we
become, I believe, is a function of our willingness to receive, not
His willingness to give. He GAVE His Son to the world. That is
infinite grace being poured out.
I have found Isaiah 5 to be a very significant text. It refers to
God doing all that He can for the vineyard. It speaks of all that
God did including using the _choicest_ vine (clearly Christ) vs 2.
The whole thing God is looking for is good grapes.
Isaiah 5:3
So He expected it to bring forth good grapes, but it brought forth
wild grapes.
And look what else God says...
Isaiah 5:4
What more could have been done to My vineyard that I have not done
in it? Why then, when I expected it to bring forth good grapes, did
it bring forth wild grapes?
So if I see a mighty man of God and a godless man, I do not conclude
that God poured forth more grace on the mighty man of God. I
conclude that He poured out an infinite measure of grace on both
people and one person was willing to receive more than the other.
In terms of nations, Israel included, I believe the same thing.
Israel's success or failure was dependant on its willingness, not
on God's willingness (Matt. 23:37 "but you were not willing").
Whether a nation achieves greatness or an individual is saved is
dependant on their willingness and not God's. Many are called, but
few are chosen.
1 Peter 1:2
elect according to the foreknowledge of God...
Likewise, since the 2nd coming is related to a time where it is time
to cast the sickle for harvest is come, it is a time when the good
grapes (as well as the bad) are fully manifest. Thus, in conformance
to Isaiah 5, it is a time which God knows by foreknowledge, but which
is determined by the church. "What more could have been done to My
vineyard..." The good grapes come when we let them. God's grace has
already been supplied and He waits to bestow. Meanwhile, the full
maturation of the wild grapes simply awaits the manufacture of the
good for "light makes manifest."
The maturing of God's people to yield the good grapes will cause the
stiff response (reprisal) of the godless and the wild grapes will
be made manifest.
Tony
|
657.9 | | CSC32::KINSELLA | You are a treasure. | Thu Jan 12 1995 14:30 | 7 |
|
RE: .6 Hey Bob,
Are you by chance in Awana or have a kid in it? The verses you talked
about are together in the handbook.
Jill
|
657.10 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Thu Jan 12 1995 14:49 | 21 |
| > > Divine grace is God's favour which he pours out on those with whom he
> > is well pleased.
>
> I tend to disagree with this. From my understanding of grace, it is the
> undeserved, unmerited favor of God. I cannot be pleasing to God enough
> to deserve His grace.
I did not say "on those who have done something to please God".
I said "on those with whom he is well pleased".
I did not say anything about what one does (or if one must do anything)
to merit God's grace. God chooses on whom to pour out grace.
While God's grace is a free gift poured out upon all those with whom he
is well pleased, there may be means of obtaining _more_ of God's grace.
Remember, no matter what we do to please God, we are still unprofitable
servants; we can always do more to please him more and to obtain more
of his favour.
/john
|
657.11 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Thu Jan 12 1995 14:51 | 8 |
| > What then do we say of Abraham? Did he come to God in Faith before or
> after God poured out his Grace to him?
Can anyone have Faith until Grace has been poured out?
For that matter, can anyone have Life until Grace has been poured out?
/john
|
657.13 | The proper marriage model | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Thu Jan 12 1995 16:15 | 45 |
| me, me, me! I want to answer this:
> So John, you are agreeing with the predestination argument?
I agree with it, but not in the absence of the free grace argument.
This is a true paradox.
> We can do nothing to be pleasing to God.
We can do nothing that would cause God to be pleased except that which
He chooses to be pleased by our doing. It's pretty elementary that we
cannot influence someone else's pleasure. If we know what another person
like, then (if it is within our power) we can provide that.
The point is that God is god and we are not. As God, He has everything.
We can't bargain with God, because one needs something to bargain with.
We can't fool God, because He knows our hearts. We can't lavish God
with gifts with the expectation of reward, because that's not Love's
economy. Payback from giving love is a byproduct and not a result.
> God offers Grace to those whom he deems pleasing
God's offers us a relationship with Him. He knows (predestination) but
we don't (free will) who will accept and who won't. He doesn't offer
it only to those who will accept - God is just. No one will stand before
God with excuse.
> Those who don't have Faith are those whom God did not pour out Grace.
Grace is a gift that must be received and is never forced on anyone.
Those who reject God (unfaith), reject his grace.
> Some are Saved/Some are Damned.
Yes. Period.
Using marriage again as a picture of the God-man relationship, a husband
who forces himself on his can hardly be called a loving husband. Yet
a husband who is received by his wife unites with her in a holy
(intimate; set apart) relationship. Without agreement, the two remain
two and unbonded. Forcing the issue is NOT love, is it? When the two
agree - grace offered, and grace received - union can happen, and the
oneness that occurs transcends the two separate and lonely singles.
Mark
|
657.14 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Thu Jan 12 1995 16:36 | 3 |
| >me, me, me! I want to answer this:
thanks, mark
|
657.17 | Awana? | N2DEEP::SHALLOW | Subtract L, invert W | Thu Jan 12 1995 18:32 | 15 |
| re: .9
Hi Jill,
Where's Awana? What handbook? Please pardon my ignorance. I was born
with it. 8-)
re: 12
>We can do nothing to be pleasing to God.
Faith from us, towards God and His mercy, grace & lovingkindness, is
pleasing to God.
Bob
|
657.18 | a paradox | CUJO::SAMPSON | | Thu Jan 12 1995 22:56 | 10 |
| Patricia,
As stated before, it is a *paradox*; a pair of *seemingly*
contradictory statements, both of which are true. God exists independently
of the time dimension, thus He *knows* the outcome before it happens. When
God gives us the means to make a decision, He does not decide it *for* us.
We fail to understand this because our perspective is much more limited
than God's. I hope this helps.
Bob Sampson
|
657.19 | Truth is the way: Grace the power | VNABRW::WILLIAMS | | Fri Jan 13 1995 06:44 | 26 |
| People everyday from the days of Pilot when judging Jesus ask "and What
is truth?"
Scientists today are asking the same question: Truth on the creation of
the world. Truth on the origination of Man. Truth on the dangers of
using and further developing the Gene technology. Truth on the
responsibility to prolong life against a patience will. Truth on
abortion in special circumstances. Truth on limiting the size of a
family (Gods family). Truth on how the world will end etc,etc.
Jesus replied to Pilot "I am the truth" He didn't say I am a truth He
said "I am THE truth" He is therefore the true way to God, peace on
earth, loving your neighbour. Every thing we do should reflect the way
Jesus would have done it.
Grace comes from God when we need it it comes in abundance. I like to
think of it as the breath of God Himself. It enables us to accept our
burdens and to lead a christian life despite the problems. It enables
to and enhances the communication between God and man. It gives us the
power for God to act within us and through us to others.
Truth therefore is The Way, Grace the fuel to get there.
......We need lots of Grace
Praise God
"I am THE truth"
|
657.20 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Fri Jan 13 1995 07:54 | 6 |
| > Jesus replied to Pilot "I am the truth"
Actually Jesus did not reply to Pilate. Jesus said "I am the way, and the
truth, and the life" to his disciples while in the Cenacle.
/john
|
657.21 | | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Fri Jan 13 1995 08:51 | 49 |
| > I have a real problem with the husband/wife analogy.
I thought you might.
> A man offers his body to his wife.
Yes. God is the husband and head. You have a problem with the
husband being the head. You either forget that we are all female
to God, or cannot reconcile that the wife is [supposed to be]
submissive to the husband because you have no good model for how
this should work. (IMHO)
> The wife has only the option to accept or not accept.
This is true of any offer by anyone.
The converse of offering ourseves to God is the other half of the
relationship, isn't it?
> If she is a good faithful wife she accepts.
If she accepts, she does so of her own accord.
> If she is a damned unfaithful wife she rejects.
If she rejects, she does so of her own accord.
> If she rejects, then does she experience weeping and gnashing of teeth
If she rejects, there is no union, no bliss, no relationship. The human
analogy pales, because it is only a reflection or shadow anyway. It cannot
compare to the divine in that physical union is temporary and feelting
("as grass" for the best of them! - my wife and I have been married for
nearly 16 years and it has been like thge blink of an eye).
Going back to male and female and the picture of God and man(kind); you
think (I think you think) that this is some patriarchal conspiracy to
subject women (as wives) under husbandly authority. I contend that you
(and many Christians for that matter) have not understood the marriage
relationship in its proper context, and can therefore not understand
the reference to God as husband in its proper context. It is a poor
summary, but suffice it to say that God is the archetypical husband
to whom we ALL must be submissive, and as lovers, we are brought into
union (communion) with the Almighty.
Let me find my triangles (more shapes) in regards to marriage and continue
later.
Mark
|
657.22 | | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Fri Jan 13 1995 08:55 | 21 |
| > If God knows ahead of time who will accept and who will not accept then
> there is no such thing as a human decision. There is no free will.
>
> Either, humans can decide and God is affected by that decision or
> humans cannot decide and God again is unaffected by the decision.
In addition to what Bob said (.18, thanks), a relationship requires
(at least) two persons in agreement. God extends the offer outside of
time (for all people). We do not exist outside of time - we plod along
minute by minute. Do we accept the offer?
You see, our part in the "agreement" seals the deal. Without choice, there
is no love. Without free will, there can be no agreement because there can
be no corresponding disagreement. In order for us to love God back of
our own accord, we have to have the capacity to reject God. Since we do
not know the outcome, we are free moral agents to determine it. God knowing
what we will choose does not make him responsible for us choosing.
Either side of the paradox taken in isolation of the other negates both.
Mark
|
657.23 | Scriptural clarification for both | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Fri Jan 13 1995 08:59 | 16 |
| >> Jesus replied to Pilot "I am the truth"
>
>Actually Jesus did not reply to Pilate. Jesus said "I am the way, and the
>truth, and the life" to his disciples while in the Cenacle.
>
>/john
John 18
37 Pilate therefore said unto him, Art thou a king then? Jesus answered,
Thou sayest that I am a king. To this end was I born, and for this cause
came I into the world, that I should bear witness unto the truth. Every
one that is of the truth heareth my voice.
38 Pilate saith unto him, What is truth? And when he had said this, he went
out again unto the Jews, and saith unto them, I find in him no fault at
all.
|
657.25 | Love your wives as Christ loved the church | ODIXIE::HUNT | Remember your chains are gone | Fri Jan 13 1995 10:54 | 30 |
| > The implication is Submit, sexually and otherwise, or destroy your
> marriage. That is not how any good marriage I know of is ordered.
Patricia,
I am not a woman (obviously), but I sure didn't get this out of what
Mark said. The bible not only addresses woman's role in marriage, but
it also addresses the man's. The man is to love his wife as Christ
loved the church. How did Christ love the church? He loved through
sacrificially giving Himself. He loved through serving. He loved by
giving His very life for the church.
If your experience with men tells you that men are "takers" or
"domineering" than you've not been exposed to men following the
biblical role of what a husband should be.
The same passage also refers to men and women submitting to each other.
We are to consider each other as more important than ourselves,
regardless of whether we are male or female.
In regard to your quote from above, I didn't read anywhere that Mark
was referring to a woman submitting herself sexually. He talked about
willfully giving of herself. That implies to me that would be her
desire (not submitting out of some obligation). The bible does talk
about not witholding ourselves from each other, but that is addressed
to both the husband and wife.
Love in Christ,
Bing
|
657.26 | | PAULKM::WEISS | Trade freedom for His security-GAIN both | Fri Jan 13 1995 11:15 | 1 |
| Sigh.
|
657.27 | Overview | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Fri Jan 13 1995 12:14 | 81 |
| I can certainly understand where Patricia is coming from. It is quite
true that "man" has distorted the Biblical truths of marriage at one
time in our history that led to oppression of women. It created an
environment where accountability was practically nil for the man who
abused his wife.
However, I agree with Bing, there is nothing in Mark's note that
indicates this perversion of God's relationship with humankind. As a
matter of fact, I know firsthand that this model to which Patricia is
referring is nothing close to Mark's relationship with his own wife.
Having spent several days in Mark's home, I can only comment that their
family is an example of Christianity.
Having said all of this leads me to these thoughts.
1. There is NOTHING discriminatory in the Biblical model for a
family.
2. Womankind since the Garden of Eden has been rebellious.
Childbirth was the result of Eve's rebellion which passed
on to all women.
Today women are rebelling again by aborting their unborn.
The consequences for this is being seen in our society today.
When a woman no longers values the life inside, it becomes
toxic to the society that allows such behavior. For when one's
value system at this level changes, it changes the value system
subtly in every day living, imo, until you see the anarchy
that we are experiencing today.
3. Struggle for Equality changed to Supremacy Wars
First, let me state that I believe that rebellion in women to
some degree was needed. God's model was never for woman to
be subject to man for all forms of abuse and inequalities.
What once was a rebellion for "equality" has now become a struggle
for supremacy. We have gone from one extreme to the other. This
of course is no different, imo, than the extremes that the majority
of males went to in controlling women.
5. Human Actions Create Spiritual Consequences
As is evidenced in the Bible, our "choices" are important.
We choose to reject or accept Christ as Savior. This *is* the
single most important decision we ever make.
The second most important choice is how we treat others. This
oftimes impacts the "attitudes" and "behaviors" for those over
whom you have influence for the rest of their lives.
This is why God's GREATEST commandment to His followers is,
To Love God First, and then to Love others as you would like
to be loved or as He has loved you.
These TWO choices are non-discriminatory. Each gender, male
and female are accountable to God for these choices first
and foremost, according to the Word of God.
In response to the second-choice, one may ask, "How do I treat
Others?" What is my role as a Christian in living out the
second commandment?
Then the Bible begins to give instruction to Pastors, Deacons,
Husbands, Wives, Children, Workers, Bosses, etc.,
If we concentrated more on the equality of our spirituality, which
if following the "greatest commandment", this struggle for
supremacy would cease. We'd all realize our values and our roles
[though they do interchange quite frequently] are God ordained and
and true peace and happiness lies solely in obedience.
Nancy
|
657.30 | | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Fri Jan 13 1995 12:26 | 11 |
| > How about some of the women in here.
See .27 Patricia.
> That is if it is no wrong to contradict a Male member of the community.
That is a rather terse statement. I wonder it's intent? To provoke or
to prod? Perhaps both, but it borderlines being rather insulting.
Nancy
|
657.32 | | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Fri Jan 13 1995 12:41 | 3 |
| .31
Did you read .27?
|
657.33 | It's a kid's club | CSC32::KINSELLA | You are a treasure. | Fri Jan 13 1995 13:14 | 30 |
|
RE: .17
Well I guess that answers my question Bob.
Awana is a club for boys and girls started by the Baptists I believe
in the late 60s, but not only Baptists churches use it. The club
is divided into 3 sections. We have handbook time which provides the
students any opportunity to say their verses from their handbook.
They are geared to their age group and clearly present the gospel.
We also have game time. We have four teams and the games are
specially designed. Then we have counsel time where the kids hear
a story that has a real life application for them. That's also when
they get awards and find out what team won that night. The kids
earn points during game time and handbook time. They get some snacks,
they earn Awana shares for memorization and other things. Once a
month the Awana store is open and they can buy anything for a piece
of candy, an eraser, a squirt gun, sunglasses, a glider, a hat, and
tons of other stuff. Some kids spend their shares every month on
little things and others save up for big items. Each share is
basically worth about a dime. There are also service opportunities
for the kids. There's the Awana Grand Prix where they kids make their
own cars and race them. There are the Olympics where many churches
compete in games and there is bible quizzing between churches.
I grew up in Awana and it's a great program. I guess that's why
I'm a leader now. I love the kids and we really build a close bond.
Awana means Approved workman are not ashamed based on II Tim. 2:15.
Jill
|
657.35 | | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Fri Jan 13 1995 16:17 | 48 |
| I am sorry that you see my anaology as domineering. I am also sorry you
see the position of submission as:
>Unquestionable obedience and trust?
(a) I do not ignore Paul's "submit to one another"; do you ignore his
submission to one another, meaning do you submit to your husband
(I thinkI read that you'll be getting married; congratulations).
(b) I think you have a problem with the understanding of what it means
to submit. There are two kinds of submission: forced and yielded.
A stronger force can force a person to submit.
A person can willingly place their trust in another.
(c) I think you have a further problem with how you are looking at the
analogy. Perhaps all you have ever had were poor models of marriages
and in the best of marriages, people are people and have short-comings.
Therefore, it is difficult for you to imagine a divine husband and
wife relationship.
Instead of applying human reference to divine order, seek to understand
what the divine model is, recognise the lack in the human model by
contrast, and endeavor to adjust the human to the divine.
> That is if it is no wrong to contradict a Male member of the community.
I see this as divisive and pulling men and women apart. What I have
written seeks to bring them together in unity. You don't think it is
unity (do you?) because of the "submissive" role of the wife to the
husband. Yet, you correctly point out that the human model is to have
each in submission to each other. Mutual submission is not an egalitarian
marriage. Divine submission is not oppresive, domineering, threatening,
or denegrating.
I think what Nancy said is correct: "Struggle for Equality changed to
Supremacy Wars". It doesn't seem to be a matter of correcting wrongs
by making them right, but by getting even... even against those who never
committed a wrong. But it seems that oppression is seen in every male,
especially a male who voices his viewpoints.
You think my view of the marriage analogy suits me because I'm male and
it gives me a superior role, keeping women in subjection (different than
submission, by the way). Perhaps I'm a patriarchal luddite, in your
estimation. I submit that the filter has served you poorly.
Mark
|
657.36 | | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Fri Jan 13 1995 16:28 | 31 |
| By the way, Bing (and others), I used the word "union."
While this does not specify the sexual union of husband and wife,
it does not exclude it from my analogy. But one will have to
understand that the union between a one-flesh husband and wife
transcends mere (!) sex; much more than the physical act or proximity.
Reconcilliation and relationship with God happens on an intimate level.
The Bride and Groom enter a wonderful relationship, but anyone whose
marriage has deepened (and not cooled) knows that intimacy increases
with a deeper relationship. As brides, we do not know our Beloved
as well as we might as our relationship grows.
If we view the husband as Invader, as Dominator, love cannot flow
between the lovers. It isn't love! (That point seems to have been
missed.)
If we view the husband as all-important, we happily give ourselves to Him.
(Gender Balance ahead)
If we view the wife as partner, equal in all things, we have a 50-50 marriage
that demands that he do his part and she'll do her part. It is a *conditional*
marriage, doomed to failure because we cannot live up to our responsibilities.
If we view the wife as all-important, we happily give ourselves to her.
The marriage is 100-100. It cannot fail because even when one does not
live up to their responsibilities, the other still loves. It is an
unconditional marriage.
Mark
|
657.37 | One Flesh is MORE than SEX | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Fri Jan 13 1995 16:28 | 3 |
| .36
Amen!!
|
657.39 | | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Fri Jan 13 1995 17:05 | 17 |
| .38
There is a BIG difference in your analogy. Mark said we are all female
to God.
This blows your theory of man-strong/woman-weak. That is not implied
in the analogy. If anything the Bible speaks contrary to this way of
thinking. Woman is to submit to man because of how God created
humankind. The SUBMISSION is distorted. What is submission?
What is obedience? What is a master's responsibility to the slave?
What is God's responsibility to his Bride? What is a Husband's
responsibility to His wife?
If my Husband treated me as God treats His bride, I'd not only submit,
to my husband, I'd adore him. :-)
|
657.40 | Consider me prodded... | CSC32::KINSELLA | You are a treasure. | Fri Jan 13 1995 18:46 | 39 |
|
Hmmm...Mark's analogy. Here's what I read:
Grace is a gift. It's not forced on anybody. If we reject God, we
reject his grace.
Marriage is a picture of the God-man relatonship. And just as God does
not force himself on us, a husband should not force himself on his
wife.
A husband and wife have the choice of union or separateness. The
choice can't be forced - that's not love. Grace is offered, grace is
received. A husband offers himself to his wife. A wife offers herself
to her husband. Grace offered. A husband receives the grace his wife
gives. A wife receives the grace her husband gives. Grace received.
Both have a choice of whether or not to offer grace. When both offer
it, there is union resulting in joy. When both or one doesn't offer
it, there is separateness resulting in pain.
--------------------
Now for some comments on your analysis:
It's amazing that when it comes to abortion or other issues, you're all
for choice. But give a wife the choice of being one with her
husband and she's been given a raw deal and should be in counselling.
I'm not sure I fully understand where you're coming from, but I
find myself resenting your attitude.
Also, to say that Mark's analogy would give justification to some
man to violate a woman in any way is totally irresponsible and
irrationale.
I have no idea where all this (what I see as) bitterness you have is
coming from, but I for one wish it would go away. Far away. The
bitterness that is, not you.
Jill
|
657.42 | | PAULKM::WEISS | Trade freedom for His security-GAIN both | Mon Jan 16 1995 11:14 | 26 |
| > The demand placed on you as a woman Nancy, is that you submit to your
> husband regardless of how he treats or treated you.
>
> The demand stated in the Bible for your obedience is not conditional.
The demand stated in the Bible for husbands to give their lives for their
wives is also unconditional, regardless of how she treats him. It's even
stronger, we are told to model our love after Christ, who very specifically
died for us while we were yet sinners (against Him.)
If anything, this conscious and deliberate giving up of self is more
difficult than the submission that wives are called do.
I'm not at all passing off the difficulty of EITHER call. But I find it
noticable that you are all up in arms over women's call for submission, yet
make no mention of men's call to give up themselves. I'm forced to wonder
what you might say if it were women who were called to give up themselves.
And, by the way, wives are never called to obedience. Slaves are, and
children are, in the same passages where wives are called to "submit." The
word used for wives is a greek military term meaning "to arrange [troop
divisions] in a military fashion under the command of a leader." In
non-military use, it was "a voluntary attitude of giving in, cooperating,
assuming responsibility, and carrying a burden."
Paul
|
657.47 | | PAULKM::WEISS | Trade freedom for His security-GAIN both | Mon Jan 16 1995 12:02 | 28 |
| > I'm discussing what the Bible says.
Patricia, I really can't let that stand as you claim it.
What you may be trying to do is discuss what the Bible says, but that is not
at all what you are in fact doing. You are discussing what YOU say, you are
discussing your feminist platform, and you keep trying to back it up with
such portions of the Bible as you deem apply. When someone, anyone, brings
up any other portion of the Bible as counterpoint to discuss what the BIBLE
actually says, you ignore it. Take .43 as an example. I pointed out in .42
that *The BIBLE's* call to both MEN and WOMEN, though different, *BOTH*
require a renunciation of self for the other. In .43, you mention some
agreement, then immediately revert to your feminist platform, focusing in on
women's call to self-renunciation and how that has been abused, while utterly
ignoring the equal call for men to renounce themselves.
The sticking point, all over this file, is that you keep trying to say, as
you just did here, that you are discussing the Bible, when that is not true
at all. If you could just stick to saying what *YOU* think, and stop trying
to show, by an unbalanced selectiveness, that the Bible supports you, we
could eliminate a lot of wrangling. Because we will not let stand
unchallenged your claim that the Bible supports your views.
Despite your claims, the Bible does not support universal salvation.
Despite your claims, the Bible does not support abuse of women.
Despite your claims, the Bible does not support God as Goddess/God.
Paul
|
657.48 | | CSC32::J_OPPELT | Whatever happened to ADDATA? | Mon Jan 16 1995 14:04 | 14 |
| Patricia, I can only think of one word to describe your selective
vision of biblical teaching -- sad. It really makes me sad to
see the pain that you experience based on your narrow decisions
on what you will accept and not accept from the bible. It is as
if you have chosen specifically that which will cause you the
most pain -- and excluded that which tempers or compliments your
selections.
Of course you are talking about Ephesians 5:22.
Might I suggest that you start you quote nest time with 5:21
instead. You need to understand that Paul is saying that
husbands and wives should submit to each other. He then goes
on to give some examples of how to do that.
|
657.50 | | PAULKM::WEISS | Trade freedom for His security-GAIN both | Mon Jan 16 1995 15:10 | 10 |
| > The authenticate sayings of Jesus
I've asked repeatedly why you discount Jesus' clear teaching on judgement.
You have had no response.
If you are still reluctant based on not wanting to question the authority of
the Bible in this conference, could you mail me a response as to what basis
you use to declare this teaching of Jesus to not be authentic?
Paul
|
657.51 | Excuse me?? | CSC32::KINSELLA | You are a treasure. | Mon Jan 16 1995 16:06 | 21 |
| RE: .45
Oh please Patricia, you asked us how the other christian women saw
Mark's analogy. So I gave you that. Then I commented on 2 points
YOU brought up; the lack of choice of a wife and that Mark's
analogy supports violence against women neither of which were
biblically based. So please don't tell me that you're sticking to the
bible and I'm not. I don't have a problem with biblical submission. I
have had problems with the way *a few* men have translated it and I'm
not exactly shy about stated my views to them. Lastly, I stated my
displeasure with what appears to me to be an extremely negative
attitude toward men. I do not understand it Patricia and I will not
let it go unnoticed. It's unacceptable behavior and I believe you
should be called on it. I realize that you probably don't think you
trash men, but it seems like you do little else. Just because you
hold some feminist men in high regard doesn't mean you treat the
rest of them well. If you can comment on Mark's position ad nauseam,
then why doesn't the same hold true for others commenting on your
position.
Jill
|
657.52 | | BIGQ::SILVA | Squirrels R Me | Mon Jan 16 1995 17:16 | 14 |
|
Jill, what do you mean by feminist men? Is it men who understand
varying degrees of what women have gone/go through?
I don't think too many people will just throw others into the high
regard catagory, whether they are Christians or not. If someone is put into
that catagory, it is because they have shown that persons many things. It would
be done on an individual basis, and so much more than understanding some of
what women gone/go through will be needed.
I think you're way off base here...
Glen
|
657.53 | | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Mon Jan 16 1995 17:23 | 3 |
| Jill,
GREAT NOTE! :-)
|
657.55 | How about some balance? | CSC32::KINSELLA | You are a treasure. | Mon Jan 16 1995 19:04 | 12 |
|
Hi Glen! My comment about feminist men was a holdover from a
discussion ages ago in CP when asked about her resentment towards
men Patricia responded that she didn't resent all men but that she
appreciated men who were feminists at heart. I'm not saying that
anyone needs to hold all men in high regard Glen, but certainly
one should be able to talk about the rest of them with some sense
that they have not committed all the wrongs ever committed against
women. And certainly men don't need to be feminist to understand
what *some* women have gone through.
Jill
|
657.56 | Not a chance! | CSC32::KINSELLA | You are a treasure. | Mon Jan 16 1995 19:07 | 82 |
|
Hi Patricia,
* A husband and wife have the choice of union or separateness.
I think Mark does say this in many ways, in many notes.
MARK-.21 If she accepts, she does so of her own accord.
MARK-.21 If she rejects, there is no union, no bliss, no
relationship.
MARK-.22 a relationship requires (at least) two persons in agreement
MARK-.22 Without choice, there is no love.
MARK-.35 A person can willingly place their trust in another.
MARK-.35 Mutual submission is not an egalitarian marriage.
MARK-.35 Divine submission is not oppresive, domineering,
threatening, or denegrating.
MARK-.36 But one will have to understand that the union between a
one-flesh husband and wife transcends mere (!) sex
MARK-.36 If we view the wife as all-important, we happily give
ourselves to her. The marriage is 100-100.
>The analogy...places not accepting sex from one's husband on the same
>wavelenghth as not accepting Grace from God.
Huh? I don't get this out of Mark's analogy at all. I believe this
analogy was meant way above the level of sex.
>The analogy is really pretty simple. Filters are very strong.
Patricia I think that you need to use all of Mark's comments. As you
said his initial analogy was simple. He did not include every possible
point that someone may have a nit with. He chose to enter a premise
and go from there. I think he has given enough info to alleviate your
anxieties over what you think he said if you'd put aside the conclusion
you jumped to at the start.
>You don't even know what my views are on abortion. You are making
assumptions.
Patricia, I noted with you for 2 years prior to this and despite the
fact that I still disagree with you and often don't understand you, I
have a some idea that women having a choice on abortion is something
you believe in to some degree. To quote you from CP:
"all powerful human decisions have a whole history behind them and
ought not be reduced to campaign rhetoric."
This does not sound like a women who doesn't believe in choice,
although it is not a full indicator of your view. I often find you
don't allow people to know your full views so that they are not
challenged.
>A wife that feels she should stick with here husband regardless >of
>what he does should be in conselling.
Excuse me Patricia but I don't believe that a wife doing nothing in an
abusive marriage is biblical. I believe that a wife can go to other
christians and have them confront the husband. I believe that she can
remove herself and her children from a situation that endangers her
life. I believe she can wait and pray while godly men correct the
husband and bring him back into a God-honoring relationship with his
wife. I believe God can change the condition of the human heart. I
think too often people are not willing to go through all this. It is
easier to cut their loses and leave or to not do anything about the
problem but be gripped by fear and angry at God. The bible does not
espouse letting problems go unresolved. It is biblical to teach,
rebuke, correct, and train people in righteousness. A wife can
unconditionally love her husband and not want or let him keep sinning
against her and against God. She owes it to him if she loves him to
not allow this sin to continue.
>Your interpretation is coming from yourself Jill. Only you can >make
>it go away.
That's a cop out! I'm not the only that has ever brought this up. Own
your own filters Patricia! I have no desire to hit next unseen on your
notes and I hope it doesn't ever come to that. I think we've had some
good discussions. Yes, I do resent some of your attitudes. So what?
You resent some of mine. I can still value you as a person created and
loved by God even though I think you are deceived, can't I?
Jill
|
657.57 | | PAULKM::WEISS | Trade freedom for His security-GAIN both | Tue Jan 17 1995 08:52 | 7 |
| Jill,
Glen Silva> I think you're way off base here...
What a great endorsement!
Paul
|
657.58 | | PAULKM::WEISS | Trade freedom for His security-GAIN both | Tue Jan 17 1995 08:55 | 9 |
| > Paul at least acknowledges that the statement calls for the
> wife to be unconditional with her husband. If a wife is unconditional
> with an abusive husband, it allow a man to violate a woman. There is
> nothing irresponsible or irrational about the statement.
Patricia, you've gotten quite upset with me for taking pieces of what you've
said out of context and misrepresenting them. Please don't do the same to me.
Paul
|
657.59 | Perfect Love | VNABRW::WILLIAMS | | Tue Jan 17 1995 09:20 | 39 |
| John, Mark, Thank you for the correction. It is easy to respond to
comments with enthusiasm and the love for God without first checking
with the written word.
Some of the subsequent comments on Full of Grace and Truth seem to be
lacking Grace and distorting the truth.
Brothers LOVE YOUR WIVES AND Sisters YOUR HUSBANDS. Sex is not "TAKING" but
"GIVING". Giving Love and affection to another, becoming one in union
with another.
When one wants to give but the other is not ready to receive, or join
in the giving, is it in love to proceed?.
Bring God in your lovemaking, He knows what it's about, He instituted
it!.
Does man buy a car without asking his wife and children which colour?.
God is the perfect parent. He doesn't make children without our
consent. He didn't make Eve without the help of Adam. He doesn't
correct our sinfull ways or solve world problems without our consent
and assistance. Our free will is unlimited even if it costs the World.
Even though it is Gods Wish and within His power to have a perfect
world He wants us to agree to it and be a part in accomplishing it.
Likewise we should not think of acting in a way contrary to the will of
our partners or without asking God to join us in our union with them.
That's not God like.
The way women are injustly treated in this mans world is a fact of life
and has so developed from nature where the male species where created
the strongest from the two. Someone had to be!. We cannot change this
this injustice overnight for everyone but we can change our hearts and
our attitude towards our own partners instantly. Lets try it!
Brother in Christ
Peter
|
657.60 | | BIGQ::SILVA | Squirrels R Me | Tue Jan 17 1995 10:17 | 48 |
| | <<< Note 657.55 by CSC32::KINSELLA "You are a treasure." >>>
| -< How about some balance? >-
Ya might want to get a scale.... :-)
| My comment about feminist men was a holdover from a discussion ages ago in CP
| when asked about her resentment towards men Patricia responded that she didn't
| resent all men but that she appreciated men who were feminists at heart.
I think I remeber that conversation Jill. It was very interesting. I
also remember her explaining what that meant too. It included a lot of people
Jill. It also carried a varying degree of appreciation as well. Let me ask you
something. Are there different levels of appreciation that YOU have for people?
Like do you find you appreciate Christians more than non-Christians? If so, you
should be able to see where Patricia is coming from.
| I'm not saying that anyone needs to hold all men in high regard Glen,
I'm glad you said that Jill, really! :-)
| but certainly one should be able to talk about the rest of them with some
| sense that they have not committed all the wrongs ever committed against
| women.
I agree completely with you Jill. Sometimes we may tend to put a whole
group of people into a catagory when there would be many individuals that
really do not belong. I think everyone can be guilty of that from time to time.
I know I can be. But when you prod for answers, you will usually see a clearer
definition of the various groups. I guess when I know what kind of men Patricia
is talking about, it's easier for *me* to see that she is very inclusive, and
while the words may not be specific, I understand what she means. And it's all
based on her dealings with men, and the history of what's happened to women.
Frankly, I really like how she has come to the conclusions she has.
| And certainly men don't need to be feminist to understand what *some* women
| have gone through.
Again, I agree with you. You don't need to be Christian to understand
what some Christians have gone through. I don't consider myself a feminist man.
From the things I have seen happen to people period, I am one who wants to see
equality for all. Women, men, people of color, etc. From listening, and that's
the key word, you begin to see where the other person has been. You begin to
see where the mistakes were happening. You can see sometimes, and have to
search other times for solutions. But it's never ending.
Glen
|
657.61 | | BIGQ::SILVA | Squirrels R Me | Tue Jan 17 1995 10:20 | 13 |
| | <<< Note 657.57 by PAULKM::WEISS "Trade freedom for His security-GAIN both" >>>
| Glen Silva> I think you're way off base here...
| What a great endorsement!
Why thank you ever so much Paul. It means so much to me that you
appreciate my words. Again, thank you very much!
Glen
|
657.62 | | CNTROL::JENNISON | No turning back | Tue Jan 17 1995 10:24 | 30 |
|
Patricia,
Why are you focusing only on the MAN side of the equation, and
what you see as the negative side of that to boot ?
The relationship of husband to wife places *GREAT* responsibility
on the man. He is to LAY DOWN HIS LIFE for his wife, as Christ
did for the Church. Do you understand what that is saying ?
I know that I do not envy my husband that responsibility!!!!
At the same time, I am called to submit to my husband. Now, if
my husband tries to use my role as defined by God against me,
he is *clearly* in the wrong. However, I am called to my duty
regardless of his behavior, and he is called to his duty regardless
of mine (Praise God, or I'd certainly be alone today - I have much
improvement to do in that area!)
You cannot look at the woman's role in marriage without looking
at the man's. The way you present it, the man has all the advantage
and none of the responsibility. It's hardly that way.
The fact that men (and others) have distorted the Bible for their
own gain does not make God's instructions to us invalid. It makes
the individual wrong for usurping God's word to support his own
selfish desires. If we are to use abuse of God's word to decide
what part of the Bible stays and what goes, we aren't going to
have much of a book left.
Karen
|
657.63 | | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Tue Jan 17 1995 11:34 | 6 |
| .62
Amen Karen!!! :-) :-)
|
657.64 | | CSC32::KINSELLA | You are a treasure. | Tue Jan 17 1995 14:01 | 23 |
|
RE: .60
Hi Glen,
Well I'm glad to see we agree on some of that Glen. I don't think
we're remembering the same conversation, so I'll let that piece go.
Glen the comparison you give to my appreciation level of christian
vs. non-christian is not a good correlation. While I'd agree the
majority of my friends are christians, I find myself being friends
or friendly acquaintances with lots of non-christians. I don't make
blanket negative statements about non-christians. I am not constantly
villifying them except for those who espouse to my christian beliefs.
I do not go around with an "us against them" attitude. I do not aim
to right all the wrongs ever done to christians by judging those I
meet now to be guilty of all of wrongs done non-christians against
christians in the past. Glen, I don't even want to hold grudges for
things done directly to me, let alone things done to others throughout
the centuries. I don't have the time, energy, or the bitterness to
do that not that at times I haven't felt that way, but I get over it.
It's healthier for everyone involved. In fact, it's biblical.
Jill
|
657.65 | | BIGQ::SILVA | Squirrels R Me | Tue Jan 17 1995 15:43 | 44 |
| | <<< Note 657.64 by CSC32::KINSELLA "You are a treasure." >>>
| Glen the comparison you give to my appreciation level of christian vs. non
| christian is not a good correlation. While I'd agree the majority of my
| friends are christians, I find myself being friends or friendly acquaintances
| with lots of non-christians.
Jill, are they held on the same appreciation scale? Are you telling me
if you met someone, you would be happy, but would not get any happier if you
found out that person was a Christian? If you can't say this would happen, then
yes, you are correct that it is not a good correlation. But if you think you
would get a little/lot more excited about this person because they ARE a
Christian, then you have shown that your appreciation level does vary.
| I don't make blanket negative statements about non-christians.
I'm glad to hear that Jill! But in light to Patricia, neither does she.
In a forum such as this, we all can come across one way. But after Patricia has
explained things, do you still think she gives blanket negative statements
about men? I don't see that. In fact, I see her talk about many groups who get
hurt by many people.
| I am not constantly villifying them except for those who espouse to my
| christian beliefs. I do not go around with an "us against them" attitude.
Again, I do not see Patricia really doing that. Take me for example. I
agree with things Patricia says, but not everything. And visa versa. We seem to
be able to have good conversations though. We acknowledge each others views,
and we go with it. I know she has opened my eyes to a lot of things that I did
not know, or would even think could have happened. You don't really need to
agree with anyone. You don't need to hold back your own beliefs. But what has
to not happen is trashing another person for their beliefs, when the beliefs in
question have no harm on you.
| I do not aim to right all the wrongs ever done to christians by judging those
| I meet now to be guilty of all of wrongs done non-christians against christian
| in the past.
Again, I don't see Patricia doing this. (but with men) There is nothing
wrong with bringing up the past. The past allows us to learn for the future.
Glen
|
657.66 | | CSC32::KINSELLA | You are a treasure. | Tue Jan 17 1995 17:52 | 9 |
|
Forget it Glen. We read all this differently and I won't continue this
banter because I don't think it will achieve anything. Thank you for
sharing your views.
Have a nice day.
Jill
|
657.67 | | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Thu Jan 19 1995 14:16 | 101 |
| Let me thank those (especially) women who correctly understood my marriage
analogy. I stand by it and find Patricia's view that it is "evil at
its core" to be surprizingly narrow; but I don't fault her, giving her
the benefit of the doubt that she cannot see, instead of will not see.
I had to skim this note during lunch and most people spoke well of my
intent and meaning of my words. As for the Biblical model for marriage,
I'm clipping a piece from a lesson I did in 1990. These are the "triangles"
I alluded to some time ago.
Biblical Roles in Marriage
Sunday, July 1, 1990
1 Diagramming the Biblical Marriage
The lesson book I have diagrams several types of marriage:
Pass out the diagram sheets to the class
o The Traditional Male Dominated Marriage ^
/M\
Male Triangle up over Female Triangle down -----
\F/
V
For those of you who think you know that this best reflects my mar-
riage, I would suggest that you do not know Joy and I well enough.
And if I am not to be easily believed, corner Joy someday and ask
her.
The traditional male dominated marriage is often the type of mar-
riage some interpret the Bible to espouse. However, as we shall soon
see, the Bible does not put one or the other into superior or in-
ferior roles. In this model the husband rules the roost and the wife's
sole duty is to obey.
o The Egalitarian Marriage
^ ^
Triangles side by side both up /M\ /F\
---------
The abuses of the traditional marriage are rejected by feminism which
proposes the egalitarian model where each person has equal authority.
While this sounds good on the outside, what the model really es-
pouses is that all roles, tasks and functions can be divided equally
and are considered interchangeable. Differences in male and female
sexuality are down-played and are seen as incidental expect for the
obvious biological functions.
The issue in this marriage is how to maintain individual rights at the
highest level for both partners. This marriage attempts to cut the
cake exactly down the middle, and if one perceives the other to get
a few more crumbs, they cry foul.
-------
o The Egalitarian Submissive Marriage \M/ \F/
V V
Triangles side by side both down
Christian feminist (if this is not an oxymoron) propose the same
type of equality in mutual submission. And while the Bible does call
for mutual submission, this marriage model ignores the unique qual-
ities each gender brings to the relationship.
o Biblical Model for Marriage /\
\--/--\--/
Male Triangle up merged with Female Triangle down \/ \/
/\ MF /\
/--\--/__\
\/
The biblical role for marriage occurs much earlier than what we read
in Ephesians 5. Marriage is an entity that creates a new being when
two people become one flesh.
The sexuality of men and women is different and creates a beauti-
ful interplay of initiation and response between them. Together,
these different and complimentary aspects of maleness and female-
ness are the image of God in human form.
The hardest part people have with this model of marriage is the au-
thority of the husband over the wife. Scripture defines the head-
ship as being leadership grounded in sacrificial love not of dom-
ination.
Likewise, people have trouble with the wife submitting herself to
her husband but this in now way is a position of weakness or in-
feriority. It is a glad and voluntary submission to the husband's
initiating love.
Christ is the perfect example of submissiveness to the initiating
love of His father and it is Christ that Paul uses as the model that
Husbands should use in loving their wives.
The unity between a man and woman celebrates the equality and the unique-
ness of being a husband or wife: the common humanity and the distinct
sexuality. There are roles we each share and others which we do not
because we were created to compliment each other.
More as time permits.
Mark
|
657.68 | Biblical authority | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Thu Jan 19 1995 14:25 | 70 |
| .67> Continued
2 Authority
People, Americans in particular, have trouble with authority. We have
not lived under a monarch for over 200 hundred years so we really have
no point of reference there.
Since Paul uses Christ as the model for husbandly authority, let's see
what Jesus had to say about authority. Open your Bibles to Mark 10:35-
45; focus on verse 42.
James and John, thinking Jesus to be the head of the organization, ask
for places near the top. Jesus follows their line of thinking and then
turns it by saying those places are already filled. The others get wind
of the request and get indignant (because they didn't think of it first).
Jesus calls them all together like a father speaking to bickering chil-
dren.
He then points out in no uncertain terms that the authority structure
in the Kingdom of God is ordered differently than the structure of the
world:
* The rulers of the world lord it over their subjects.
* The mark of leadership in the Kingdom of God is servanthood.
* The Kingdom leader must be willing to be last.
* Christ's life is an example for authority in the Kingdom. Jesus gave
up everything to be servant of all.
And very often we limit Jesus' sacrifice to his death on the cross.
But indeed he gave up his glory in heaven to become one of us to save
us!
3 The Roles
Read Ephesians 5:21-33.
Paul begins this section with mutual submission. The behavior of mu-
tual submission can be found just a few verses earlier in Ephesians
4:32.
The Wife
Paul next addresses wives submitting to their husbands. Remember that
the submission to authority for Christians is voluntary, and based on
his loving sacrifice on our behalf. Christ's headship is healing, for-
giving, and life-giving; not dominating.
So Paul is saying that submission to her husband is not a submission
to a headship of dominance, nor is the wife's submission unqualified.
As a loving husband gives himself to his wife, his wife is to be sub-
ject to her giving husband.
The Husband
Paul says to love your wife as Christ loved the church. We have seen
how Christ loved the church; note that Jesus gave himself for the sin-
ful world and did not wait for a purified church. Jesus submitted him-
self to the Father and was a servant to humanity. So we are to sub-
mit ourselves to the Father and be servants to our wives. This is the
authority we should have in our homes.
The authority and submission of the husband and wife are qualified by
the demands of loving servanthood that right relationship in Christ
places upon our marriages.
|
657.69 | | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Thu Jan 19 1995 14:27 | 37 |
| .68> continued (final part of the lesson)
Interesting that I wrote this in 1990 and is very applicable today.
---
4 An Antiquated Ideal?
Ephesians 5 is in danger of being replaced in the name of cultural ob-
solescence. Ephesians 5 is not a cultural ideal although some things
have changed in the Bible due to changing values. Peter changed our
dietary habits, for one example. Another example lies in the sacri-
ficial system that was replaced by Christ, once for all. These were
steps away from the physical expressions into the spiritual expres-
sions of purity (or holiness) towards God. It is not what goes into
man that makes him unclean but what comes out of man. Acts of sacri-
fice did not please God as much as righteousness.
Ephesians 5 also steps away from the culture (and physical expression)
of that time. The command to husbands is to love with a love that im-
itates Christ's love. Wives are to submit as unto the Lord. These are
not cultural ideals but spiritual ideals. And before you take an edit-
ing pen to the Bible, consider first what the meaning and reasons are
behind a passage that doesn't quite fit today's American society.
o What does it mean to be submissive *as unto the Lord*?
o What are the *implications* and *responsibilities* of being the head
of the wife?
o What does it mean to love *as Christ loved* the Church?
o Why don't people seek God's mind on these Scriptures, instead of
dismissing what doesn't fit into their lifestyle?
-------
Good questions.
Mark
|