T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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642.1 | Genesis-Numbers | YODA::BARANSKI | Oh! ... That's not like me at all! | Wed Jan 06 1988 02:11 | 88 |
| What I am going to do, is look in my concordance for generic female terms, and
give the verses that look like they could be discriminatory. This may take a
loooong time, but I'm fairly certain we will develop a pretty accurate picture.
All quotes are from the New American Bible, Catholic Edition.
I would like to point out that there is (naturally enough) a major difference
between the Old Testament, and the New Testament. I consider the NT primarily
Christian, and the OT primarily 'Jewish'. To me as a Christian, the NT is the
heart of my faith, and when in doubt, I prefer to follow the NT.
Alternative words for Woman: Woman, Bondwoman, Kinswoman, Woman's,
Womenservants, Freewoman, Wife, Female
WOMAN
Genesis: 2:18
"The Lord God said: "It is not good for the Man to be alone. I will make a
suitable Partner for him".
The Lord God then built up into a woman the rib that he had taken from the man.
When he brought her to the man the man said: "This one, at last, is bone of my
bones and flesh of my flesh; This one shall be called 'woman.' for out of 'her
man' this one has been taken." That is why a man leaves his father and mother
and clings to his wife, and the two of them become one body.
Interesting that it does not literally say that woman was "created" after
man.
Genesis 3:16
To the woman he said: "I will intensify the pangs of your childbearing;
in pain shall you bring forth children. Yet your urge shall be for your
husband, and he shall be your master.
To the man he said: "Because you listened to your wife and ate from the tree of
which I had forbidden you to eat, "Cursed be the ground because of you! In toil
shall you eat its yeild all the days or your life. Thorns and thistles shall
it bring forth to you, as you eat of the plants of the field. By the sweat of
your face shall you get bread to eat, Untill you return to the ground from
which you were taken; For you are dirt, and to dirt you shall return."
Whose punishment was worse?
Exodus 21:22
When men have a fight and hurt a pregnant woman, so that she suffers a
miscarriage, but no further injury, the guilty one shall be fined as much as
the woman's husband demands of him, and he shall pay in the presence of the
judges.
Leviticus 12:2 (female sexual impurity)
"Tell the Israelites: When a woman has conceived and gives birth to a boy. he
shall be unclean for seven days, with the same cleanness as at her menstrual
period. On the eighth day, the flesh of the boy's foreskin shall be
circumcised and then she shall spend thirty-three days more in becoming
purified of her blood; she shall not touch anything sacred nor enter the
sanctuary till the days of her purification are fullfilled. If she gives birth
to a girl for fourteen days she shall be unclean as at her menstruation, after
which she shall spend sixty six days in becoming purified of her blood.
15:16 (1-15 are about male 'sexual' impurity)
When a man has an emission of seed, he shall bathe his whole body in water and
be unclean untill evening. Any piece of cloth or leather with seed on it shall
be washed with water and be unclean until evening.
If a man lies with a woman, they shall both bathe in water and be unclean
untill evening.
When a woman has her menstrual flow, she shall be in a state of impurity
for seven days. ... (19-30 are about menstral impurity)
Numbers 5:29
This then is the law for jealousy: When a woman goes astray while under the
authority of her jusband and acts impurely, or when such a feeling of jealousy
comes over a man that he becomes suspicious of his wife, he shall have her
stand before the Lord, and the priest shall apply this law [test] in full to
her. The man shall be free from guilt, but the woman shall bear such guilt as
she may have.
That should be enough to get discussion started...
Jim Baranski
|
642.2 | Adding fuel to the fire | SSDEVO::YOUNGER | God is nobody. Nobody loves you. | Wed Jan 06 1988 19:40 | 93 |
| RE .1:
>When he brought her to the man the man said: "This one, at last, is
>bone of my bones and flesh of my flesh; This one shall be called
>'woman.' for out of 'her man' this one has been taken." That is why a
>man leaves his father and mother and clings to his wife, and the two of
>them become one body."
>Interesting that it does not literally say that woman was "created" after
>man.
"Out of her man this one has been taken" sounds pretty unequal
me - especially since as humans reproduce people come out of
women. While it does not say, literally, that the woman was
created after the man, if he were not created first, how did
God take the man's rib and create the woman?
>Whose punishment was worse?
The man still has is autonomy - the woman has to submit
to whatever the man wants. Yes, he needs to work, but
he is "his own boss", so to speak.
>Exodus 21:22
>When men have a fight and hurt a pregnant woman, so that she suffers a
>miscarriage, but no further injury, the guilty one shall be fined as
>much as the woman's husband demands of him, and he shall pay in the
>presence of the judges.
This passage implies ownership of the woman by her husband. Similar
to passages of someone damaging your property.
>Leviticus 12:2 (female sexual impurity)
>"Tell the Israelites: When a woman has conceived and gives birth to a boy. he
>shall be unclean for seven days, with the same cleanness as at her menstrual
>period. On the eighth day, the flesh of the boy's foreskin shall be
>circumcised and then she shall spend thirty-three days more in becoming
>purified of her blood; she shall not touch anything sacred nor enter the
>sanctuary till the days of her purification are fullfilled. If she gives birth
>to a girl for fourteen days she shall be unclean as at her menstruation, after
>which she shall spend sixty six days in becoming purified of her blood.
Offline, we have discussed this passage. While it may be a good
thing for her to be "unclean" for a few days, so that she is left
alone to rest, why the difference depending on whether the baby
was a boy or a girl? Sounds *definitely* sexist to me. Even at
that, why the prohibition against goint into the sanctuary for 70+
days? Does God not love mothers enough to want them in his presence?
>15:16 (1-15 are about male 'sexual' impurity)
>When a man has an emission of seed, he shall bathe his whole body in water and
>be unclean untill evening. Any piece of cloth or leather with seed on it shall
>be washed with water and be unclean until evening.
Why a punishment for a natural occurance - esp. one that is not
totally voluntary? God made men the way he did. Now punish them
for the way their body works. Sounds like a child-abuser god who
makes things one way, then punishes them for being that way.
>If a man lies with a woman, they shall both bathe in water and be unclean
>untill evening.
Again, why the prohibition against something natural - and NECESSARY
for the survival of the race? At least this one is equally oppressive.
>When a woman has her menstrual flow, she shall be in a state of impurity
>for seven days. ... (19-30 are about menstral impurity)
Again, punishment for a natural, involuntary occurance.
> Numbers 5:29
>This then is the law for jealousy: When a woman goes astray while under the
>authority of her jusband and acts impurely, or when such a feeling of jealousy
>comes over a man that he becomes suspicious of his wife, he shall have her
>stand before the Lord, and the priest shall apply this law [test] in full to
>her. The man shall be free from guilt, but the woman shall bear such guilt as
>she may have.
Wonderful. A man becomes suspicious of his wife, so the priest
can punish her. He is free of guilt, even for a wrongful accusation.
Clearly unfair, as a man is allowed multiple wives and concubines.
This one could get interesting in connection with 635 and 636...
Elizabeth (Who believes in a God who loves us the way we are)
|
642.4 | Exegesis | FDCV10::IWANOWICZ | Deacons are Permanent | Fri Jan 08 1988 12:55 | 10 |
| Folks,
Substantial work already exists in the published realm. I recommend
again that reference be made to Phylllis Trible's ' Texts of Terror
' ----- in which she highlights four stories from the hebrew
scriptures with some analysis on the indignities [ polite term ]
endured by women. This is a highly respected biblical scholar who
has earned the respect of her peers for her articulate writings.
|
642.5 | A Jewish Viewpoint | WHYVAX::KRUGER | | Mon Jan 11 1988 15:22 | 49 |
| re .1, .2
Let's not go overboard with the King James. It is often a poor
translation (ie, this nonsense about Isaiah prophesying a "virgin"
birth when he actually said "maiden shall give birth" (young girl,
no connotations).
About Eve, I will have to go home and read my bible again.
About a "sexist God." Lots of nasty things have been said about
the old testament God. The NT God is sooooo much nicer. Well, the
God of the Torah (the first 5 books) layed it on the line, and told
you the rules. Interpretation was (supposedly) partially handed
down in oral form, and partially determined by man (in this case,
the gender is almost correct usage, whatever you may think of it).
God did not say sex is evil -- in fact, while the bible decries
certain so-called "abnormal" acts, sex is portrayed matter of factly
and without prejudice. Contrast that with the absurd pronouncements
of some of the disciples (who were basically men using their position
to "add in" some views of their own ;-) )
If you look at the words "unclean" as "evil" or "disgusting" then
yes, women are being discriminated against. On the other hand, if
you realize that the word is actually "ritually impure" and that
the only reason you would go to the temple is to give a sacrifice,
then it is not really something bad, just a restriction on behavior.
And it is one, that, like MANY applying to both sexes in Judaism
(such as keeping kosher) is COMPLETELY inexplicable, with no reason
given, other than because you are told to.
If you read the Talmud (the legal, written-down version of the oral
law) you see things like: women having the right to sexual satisfaction
(as a grounds for DIVORCE I believe!) Women having to accept a divorce
in order for it to be legal, the outlawing of polygamy on the grounds
of unfairness, etc. etc. Incidentally, the woman could NOT initiate
a divorce, but since the rabbinate was the legal body, recalcitrant husbands
was put in PRISON until he gave it.
Disclaimer: The views expressed herein are those of the so-called
"Old Testament God" (a Christian label) not my own :-)
Serious Disclaimer: I don't believe any of this s**t but the bad
press of the old testament god is something that irks me. Christianity
has traditionally tried to do a smear job on other religions. God
is JUST -- if you don't like it, accept it, whatever, that is YOUR
PROBLEM. If you accept what Judaism or Christianity tells you, it
is essentially that God is so far above us that we cannot comprehend
her reasoning.
|
642.6 | More Jewish viewpoint | WHYVAX::KRUGER | | Mon Jan 11 1988 15:59 | 62 |
| re .-*
I might add that if you look at the *entire* bible, you tend to
notice certain patterns. God does not necessarily make sense to
humans. You might also notice that the pronouncements are in human
terms. Do modern people really think God wants animal sacrifices?
No, but the early Jews were from pagan backgrounds, and God dealt
with them in a manner they would understand.
In the same way, you can look on God's actions as not rocking the
boat, so that people could deal with it. Say you were Abraham. God
tells you to sacrifice your son. That, you can understand, it's
something that's been done. So you are prepared to do it. If God
tells you to lose all but one wife, you say "Why, am I less deserving
than the rest of the neighbors?"
It takes a long time before a culture is ready to accept radical
new ideas. Note that the Jews were constantly backsliding because
they were surrounded by idol worshippers, and still had an
idol-worshipping mentality. In the same way, society's attitude
towards women has undergone a tremendous change for the better.
But that was not God's problem, it was a people problem. So why
didn't God step in and intervene? You tell me.... I personally think
she's an MCP.
COUNTERPOINT
There are numerous stories which are downright nasty in their treatment
of women. I feel that these are all people-related, but others will
no doubt disagree. For example:
Jacob (Yaakov) has twelve sons, and one daughter, Dina. She is raped by
a local prince, who enjoys her so much, he asks for her hand (what
a deal, huh?) One of the twelve sons tells him ok, but he'll have
to convert, and all his town as well. When the men are all laid
up with the pain of circumcision (guys, time to groan) they kill
all of them. The kid is roundly criticised by his father. Moral?
I dunno, but the twelve boys were not shining examples at any time,
although one of them, Joseph (yo' seph) is considered a "righteous man"
(tzaddik). Moral? Don't be a woman in the old testament, you can
get hurt. Did the boys do well? No. Was the prince (Schem?) criticized? He
got the ultimate criticism.
I think the story is a *social* commentary, not a religious one.
Much of the bible is that way. It does not say that women should
not be treated as chattel, but every nasty act is shown as such.
In terms of sin, the Talmud states that a sin against God can always
be forgiven, but that sometimes, punishment MUST be part of the
process.
Sin against your fellow people
can only be forgiven if you try to undo the damage, and in some
cases, such as murder, there is no way to undo the damage. Death
is seen as the way to atone, to balance out the crime.
This is something primitive people could understand. Emancipate
women? Do you want me to emancipate my horse as well?
Sigh. No doubt I'll get flamed for this one. Though I've tried to
present the traditional Jewish view (as taught in an orthodox yeshiva)
I will state again that I do not believe any of this. God does not
author trashy sex novels. 'Nuff said.
|
642.7 | | RAINBO::MODICA | | Mon Jan 11 1988 16:24 | 1 |
| RE: entries by whyvax::Kruger......fascinating.
|
642.8 | Naaaaaaaaaay! | 3D::CHABOT | We've come to XPEX more of you | Mon Jan 11 1988 17:01 | 13 |
| re .5
Of course, if the husband runs off, the rabbinate can't put him
in prison, and there's no divorce, the wife can't remarry.
Yes, wives can run off too, however their status restricts their
mobility: an unescorted man can travel, but an unescorted woman?
Or horse?
Gee, as far back as I can remember, women are smarter than horses.
(Yeah, I know: women pay taxes, but horses get curb bits put in
their mouths.)
This equine analogy is a bit insulting to both sides of the fence.
Perhaps this is a blind-spot of mine, never having been a slave-owner.
|
642.10 | Ignore the issues, it's woman's problem... | NEXUS::MORGAN | In your heart you KNOW it's flat. | Mon Jan 11 1988 21:45 | 9 |
| Reply to .9; Russ,
Why do you think it was woman's problem?
In the past politicians and those in the place of power have insisted
that such things as procreation rights and equal pay were *women's*
*issues* and as such easily ignored. Saying that relations between the
sexes is woman's problem begs the question and seems to be a cop out,
a tired one at that.
|
642.12 | | BOLT::MINOW | Je suis marxiste, tendance Groucho | Tue Jan 12 1988 09:04 | 3 |
| Hey guys, how about taking the ratholes somewhere else for a change?
Martin.
|
642.14 | a message from Liz the Person | MEWVAX::AUGUSTINE | | Tue Jan 12 1988 17:40 | 34 |
| liz the person speaking here:
[insert all standard disclaimers here]
Hold on Russ. Who are you, a young, white male, to tell us women
what we should and should not be talking about? You are a member
of a large community. Should we discuss issues of interest to
Russ Pollitz, and avoid issues not of interest to him just because
he offers an opinion about what should be discussed here? Do you
think that you're helping the goals of the community by saying that
topics we 'talk' about are "not only nonsensical, but destructive"?
I'm sorry men are upset about "losing contact with Women". That's truly
a difficult issue. Is it necessary, however, to discuss that issue here?
Is it necessary for the efforts of the community to be focused around
placating, educating, and supporting men? Is it necessary for the
members of the community to interrupt their agenda for the benefit of
men whose feelings are hurt?
You suggest that women listen to men in an effort to understand
their problems. You mention that men are "banging their heads trying
to figure why Women don't want them (here)". May I suggest that
a less painful path to understanding is just what you yourself have
suggested. Try listening for a change. (We can't even hear ourselves
think for all the head banging going on).
In the rape note, someone recently entered a note saying that the
attempt to "gain respect" by overpowering another is morally
contemptible. But that's an excellent metaphor for what's been
happening in this file for weeks now.
Losing patience
Liz Augustine
|
642.15 | "Help! I'm being scorched!" | WHYVAX::KRUGER | | Wed Jan 13 1988 15:59 | 23 |
| re. .8
In comparing a wife to a horse I was giving the analogy of property,
since others had stated that women were treated as chattel (and
I agree). Why do you feel insulted?
Women could travel alone in rabbinic times, although maybe it wasn't
considered wise. Then again, I know lots of people who won't walk
alone at night in a big city. In a world where a lone woman is
considered fair game, it makes sense not to walk alone. I don't recall
it ever coming up in the bible.
There are prohibitions in the Talmud against a woman being alone
with a man. The prohibition is to avoid temptation, and it is a
rabbinic directive, without, as far as I know, any punishment for
doing so. In fact, crimes like adultery are largely your own business.
While officially, adultery deserves the death penalty, the rabbinate
legislated this out of existence by requiring good proof (2 witnesses).
Thus, only very unlucky adulterers died.
The problem of a runaway husband is a bad one. The rabbinate did
what they could in the framework of the law. They did not feel they
had the authority to change that much.
|
642.16 | "Back to biblical..." | WHYVAX::KRUGER | | Wed Jan 13 1988 16:19 | 24 |
| The issue of purity/impurity is related to the physical vs. the
spiritual. Why the bible classifies menstruation as a greater class
than nocturnal ejaculation, I don't know, but either way, the impurity
is not a result of sin, and is no one's fault. Nore is it limiting,
except for the case of menstruation, which limits sexual activity.
Just a point of interest: According to Jewish law, the act of sex
constitutes marriage (although kind of a sleazy way; the ceremony
is considered an appropriate precursor). The ceremony can be as
short as a sentence, before two witnesses (who must be male, one
of the MANY instances of sexual discrimination by the rabbinate)
with a gift of more than a penny's value (kind of like civil contracts
involving "$1 + considerations" given from the groom to the bride.
The bride must accept.
Back to the first point in the above paragraph. Since sex constitutes
adultery, yes, a man is in better shape until he has sex with someone
he knows has has sex before and is not divorced. At that point,
he is guilty of adultery, and merits the death penalty. Barring
a large ratio of women to men (not common then, although child-bearing
and medical knowledge was more advanced than later in the middle ages)
there are simply no women available for polygamy except for the
very rich and powerful. So in practice, polygamy is rare, although
it is known because of the patriarchs.
|
642.17 | Talmud | CSC32::JOHNS | Yes, I am *still* pregnant :-) | Wed Jan 13 1988 17:04 | 9 |
| Since the notes by Kruger, I have been fascinated with this topic.
It was much to my surprise yesterday to open TIME magazine and find
that the Talmud is now being translated into readable Hebrew, and
plans are to translate to English as well. About 1/3 of the Talmud
has been completed now, or possibly more. Half of the Babylonian
Talmud, anyway. I am looking forward to being able to read this,
since I have learned so much from this note (topic) alone.
Carol
|
642.19 | | BOLT::MINOW | Je suis marxiste, tendance Groucho | Sat Jan 16 1988 17:57 | 26 |
| The Talmud is a written codification of the "Oral Law" -- which was
given to the Jews along with the Torah. In addition, it contains
debates and confrontations as to the meaning of the written and
oral law.
For example, the Torah says one may not work on the Sabbath. The
Talmud defines when Sabbath begins and ends, and what constitutes
"work."
The Talmud was written during the first 400-600 years of the Christian
era in order to preserve the oral law (and interpretations) during
the diaspora. It contains:
-- The Mishnah "repetition, teaching" -- a systematic collection of
religious/legal decisions developing the laws of the Torah.
-- The Gemara "completion, decision, teaching" containing supplementary
material.
along with additional material that represents the orthodox Rabbinical
literature.
In a civil context, you might reasonably consider the Talmud as a
combination of Supreme Court decisions (and disagreements) and law textbook.
Martin.
|
642.20 | An elaboration on the Talmud | WHYVAX::KRUGER | | Mon Jan 18 1988 17:42 | 30 |
| amplification on .19
The Talmud is composed of the Mishnah, written in Hebrew about 600-300
B.C.E. (Before the Common Era, the Jewish way of saying B.C.) The
Gemara was an elaboration on the mishnah, composed around 0 B.C.E.
It is written in Aramaic, a somewhat related but different language
that I for one never fully mastered. Usually present, but not an
intrinsic part of the document, are various commentaries written
in Hebrew, Aramaic, Yiddish, English, and many other languages.
Exactly which ones are put in depends on the edition, of course.
The original text, however, is not a translation and is therefore
unchanged.
The entire Talmud is characterized by many dissenting opinions,
and unresolved arguments that are compromized on and "left for the
messiah to resolve." It is both a legal document, a code by which
a Jew is to live his/her life, and a historical document.
The torah says not to work on the Sabbath. The mishna defines work,
and states punishments for disobeying this law (Judaism was a theocracy
at this time). The gemara discusses actual situations, argues the
issues back and forth in a very courtroom style, and gives a record
of what can only be called precedents.
There is a version of the Talmud coming out in Hebrew, but as far
as I know, there has been no attempt to translate large segments
of it to English. There are 64 Tractates (BIG books).
dov
|
642.21 | God is Good | WLDWST::WASH | Enjoying the experience | Thu Jan 21 1988 08:14 | 53 |
| This IS very interesting ..... There seems to be a sufficient
"Biblical perspective" of women from a Jewish perspective, from
a Christian (Catholic variety) perspective, and from a non-believer
perspective. So I will add my own perception (or a taste of it)
to add to this philosophic quorum:
We could debate the reasons why the OT laws were established and/or
why they were defined as they were. We could discuss the premise
for any or all "legal" or moral matters that existed from the Dawn
of Man (Adam/Eve if you will) to the time of Jesus Christ's sacrifice
on the cross - which, from the Christian perspective, is when changes
came about for such matters.
You CANNOT dismiss the existence of Satan from any consideration
of WHY laws existed as they did, and WHY the Messiah had to come
to rectify the nature of Satan's rule over this earth. It isn't
a simple "this quote vs. that quote" or this act vs. that act
understanding. It is an involved study that requires more than faith
or perceived reason to fathom - that is why Biblical debates continue
adinfinitum by those who believe and study within the context of
their faith.
So it should come as no surprise to my fellow noters when I state
that, in my view - from my understanding of the Old & New Testaments,
that the Lord's view of women is pretty much the same as His view
of men. There are some points that may be deemed "sexist" by a
humanistic oriented society, but such is expected. As for how God
views women, I need only look at such terrific women as Ruth, Rahab
and others in the OT to know how the Lord cherishes such people
as these. There are many examples in the NT as well that show how
God's love lives within their lives. It isn't a gender-specific
thing to consider when we attempt to view God's "treatment" of people.
It is a matter of heart/attitude that defines how He views us -
individually - male/female.
On that premise (from my point of view), I can certainly match "quote
for quote" example for example with those that would issue Biblical
"proof" for God's injustice (via man or otherwise) toward women
or individuals in the Bible. Perhaps you aren't aware of how involved
a process that can become, but believe me it is a protracted endeavor!
If you'd like a practical example, just call up any ol' topic in
the CHRISTIAN conference and see what I mean.
I am willing to take a stand, however, and represent (please join
me if you're out there) the pro-women view (God/Bible view) in this
discussion. I will contend with the adverse points and challenge
the basis for such Biblical interpretation, expecting a reciprocal
approach from those who contend the Bible is anti-woman.
If this is desirable, let the debate begin (and continue).
Otherwise, it's been a pleasure joining in the discussion.
Marvin
|
642.22 | Major flaws in focus | SSDEVO::YOUNGER | It's the LAW! 186,000 miles/second | Thu Jan 21 1988 08:40 | 18 |
| Actually, you can quite easily dismiss Satan from the OT laws.
The only Satan that appears in the OT is a sort of "Devil's advocate",
who points out each of a person's flaws, so that God can forgive
them, or to test a person (i.e., Job).
Up until a few hundred years before Christ, the Jews didn't believe
in an afterlife. When they did, it was just a dreary place of the
dead - no judgment - everyone went to the same place.
The Jewish concept of the Messiah was a political leader - one who
would throw out the Roman rule and establish an autonomous Judea.
The concept of overthrowing Satan wasn't even thought about.
In fact, the only time Jesus and Satan talk to each other, Satan
is trying to tempt Jesus. Satan fails, thus establishing Jesus'
worthiness.
Elizabeth
|
642.23 | | NEXUS::MORGAN | Heaven is a perfectly useless state. | Thu Jan 21 1988 13:39 | 14 |
| Reply to the last -.2;
I threw out both God and Satan as being two sides of the same
mythological coin. In the Eastern view God and Satan are akin to
a natural high and low pressure system. One pushes, one pulls.
And if memory serves me correctly, our Jewish friends basicly stated
that Satan was a Christian invention. Perhaps the Greek and Roman
influence of Janus and/or the ancient Inanna/Ereskigal mythologies
penetrated the Christian sects at an early date.
To me both mythological personages are out of the picture and the
race of man is in the forefront as inventor and perpetrator of
the domination type societies.
|
642.24 | Satan | WHYVAX::KRUGER | | Thu Jan 21 1988 17:11 | 15 |
| re .-2
Minor point of etiquette -- I would suggest the use of 'People' rather
than 'Man'. I don't find the usage offensive, but there are people
who do.
The concept of a Satan (NOT a yin/yang philosophy, which is quite
different) began in Persia, (Ahriman/Ahura Mazda). Dualism is a
convenient way to explain suffering in the world, but it doesn't
sit well with monotheism. Christianity solved this problem by placing
Satan subordinate to God (at least in the long run).
And of course, the only place Satan is mentioned in the bible is
in Job, although the Oral traditions are full of this type of thing
(presumably borrowed from other religions, notably Christianity).
|
642.25 | The tangent continues | WLDWST::WASH | Enjoying the experience | Fri Jan 22 1988 07:26 | 62 |
| I love it ..... I really don't know where to begin, with the few
moments I can afford to spend here. Interesting responses there,
extracting and focusing on the "concept" of Satan. Somehow I didn't
quite expect *this* approach, but let me offer my perspective to
the past few replies (forgive my synoptic overview, please).
First, I will say that there are indeed MORE than just one reference
to Satan in the Bible. Granted, many refer to him as the Devil,
Lucifer, the Evil one, Evil or other such terms (rather apparent
to whom they refer anyway). There are also *numerous* inferences
and symbolic references to Satan throughout the Bible, in both the
Old & New Testaments. To dispute the claim that he is found in only
Job of the OT, try looking at Isaiah 14:12 "How art thou fallen
from Heaven, O Lucifer, son of the morning! How art thou cut down
to the ground, which didst weaken the nations".
You will find references to Satan in Genesis, 1Kings, Daniel, Joel
and Ezekiel (9 & 33 I believe), in the OT. In the NT, you will find
references to him in Romans, 2 Corinthians, Ephesians (as in 4:27),
and Revelations (13:16-18, 20:4-10, 21:) just to name a few. Sorry
I can't offer more specifics, if I had a Bible here for reference,
I'm sure I could.
The name of this "entity" was originally Lucifer, or Hehlel' (Hebrew),
or Ho Heospho'ros (Greek) - Lucifer being the Latin equivalent of
the other two. Satan became his name once he was cast down to the
earth. Satan certainly was NOT a Christian invention, unless you
consider the OT a Christian invention, which it is not.
As far as the contention that Christianity or Judeo-Christian thought
is somehow an offshoot of Greek or Roman influences, that's really
stretching it ..... our entire Western culture is such a thing,
but the Bible does not reflect anything more than a nebulous
resemblance to the theologic or philosophic thought of those cultures.
Some would even go so far as to say the Bible derived it's stories
from earlier Babylonian tales, and I will agree there are similarities;
but the Bible will still stand alone when weighed against any other
doctrine outside of it's compositional parameters.
Mythological personages ? ........ well, I can see where some might
view God & Satan as such, given their point of view is leaning toward
such personages being fictictious or imaginary. But you must be
cautious when defining mythology, since it predisposes a view that
notions are based on convenience or tradition, not on fact - and
there is enough historical fact to substantiate Biblical events
and characters. The subsequent belief in those "supernatural" powers
we define as God & Satan, is of course everything, when it comes
to accepting them as Reality or Mythology. I will grant your belief
in Mythology if you will grant my belief in Reality.
As for the notion that the "race of man is in the forefront as inventor
and perpetrator of the domination type societies" - I couldn't agree
with you more - except I see it from the other end of the spectrum.
Man (People if you insist) has indeed elevated Man to an esteemed
position - it is the very root of Secular Humanism, which can
essentially be defined as the most prevalent "religion" in our modern
world. (That should open another can of worms - but I still love
it).
Let's see where this all leads now ..... it's been fun !
Marvin
|
642.26 | Moderator Response | VIKING::TARBET | | Fri Jan 22 1988 09:18 | 7 |
| I can appreciate how the foregoing theological details can be construed
as necessary background information, but my sense is that it would be
difficult to carry on very much more such argument without the whole
thing seeming like a tangent or rathole. Can we presume that a
return to the actual topic is now imminent?
=maggie
|
642.27 | True and False Associations | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Fri Jan 22 1988 12:19 | 59 |
| A.S. The following was acceptable within this topic to one
moderator. I added some stuff to make it more applicable anyhow.
Marvin,
Your statements about references to Satan in the Bible demonstrate
a problem with such classifications. When Dov Kruger was speaking
of the Bible, he meant the Jewish Bible, which intersects with your
idea of the Old Testament. What I was taught in a course called
World Literature was that there were only three references to Satan
in the Old Testament, and two of them were in the Book of Job. Then
I was told that the Book of Job was foreign in origin; it was not
written by any Jew, but was accepted in because its philosophical
stance was correct/appropriate/true.
So, given the above, there is only one other reference to Satan in
the Old Testament (No, my teacher did not say where it was.), yet
you claim there are many. If this were CHRISTIANITY or even RELIGION,
that would be considered a valid claim. However, in this notefile
we look at things from cultural and historical viewpoints.
You say that Satan is mentioned in Genesis, but this is not so. The
*serpent* is the character mentioned. In old versions of the Goddess
religion, the serpent is her consort. The serpent therein is
considered to be the symbol of Immortality and Wisdom. It is the
former because it sheds its skin and seems to become young again.
It is the latter because any creature that is immortal must know
and understand everything. It is cast as a villain in Genesis (with
Eve, you will note) *because* it was the consort of the Goddess.
(The full explication of this requires a note of its own. Not now.)
Satan is not the consort of the Goddess; therefore, Satan is not
the serpent.
I do not know if you are considering Leviathan as Satan, but this
too is incorrect. The story of Leviathan derives from the legend of
the conflict of Marduk and Tiamat. Leviathan is Tiamat is the
Goddess. Therefore, Satan is not Leviathan either.
Lucifer is described as the Son of the Morning Star. The Morning
Star is the Goddess. Lucifer is thus her son, and perhaps her consort.
Again, this is not Satan.
Essentially, Marvin, Christianity has accepted the concept of a
powerful, evil, immortal entity, and back-projected it onto the
writings of its principle precursor religion. This is fine in terms
of Christian theology, but it is not a construct that will be acceptable
to Judaism or to cultural anthropology.
A further interesting note is that all these entities (described
above) which Christianity states are forms of Satan are properly linked
with the religion of the Goddess. I therefore feel that it is
legitimate to claim that Christianity has used this technique to
denigrate the Goddess religion, and, by extension, its followers.
Its followers, as the Bible itself makes clear, are predominantly
women.
We are now back to the topic.
Ann B.
|
642.28 | | SPIDER::PARE | What a long, strange trip its been | Fri Jan 22 1988 13:32 | 1 |
| Thanks Ann
|
642.29 | replies to replies to .0 | YODA::BARANSKI | Riding the Avalanche of Life | Tue Jan 26 1988 10:49 | 99 |
| RE: .2
""Out of her man this one has been taken" sounds pretty unequal to me"
If you look carefully at the quote, "The Lord God then built up into a woman the
rib that he had taken from the man." It sounds to me more like the rib was
transplanted from the man to the woman, rather then the woman was made from the
man. But it could be taken either way...
Hmmm... Woman from Man... isn't it usually the other way, at least these days?
~/~ :->
"The man still has is autonomy - the woman has to submit to whatever the man
wants. Yes, he needs to work, but he is "his own boss", so to speak."
I would rather have the woman's part, and be taken care of.
"This passage implies ownership of the woman by her husband."
I think that that is an assumption.
"Even at that, why the prohibition against going into the sanctuary for 70+
days? Does God not love mothers enough to want them in his presence?"
The assumption seems to be that women went off someplace while they were
unclean. Unfortunately I do not know where that was, or what it was like for
them. Perhaps it was restfull... but I don't know.
"Why a punishment for a natural occurrence - esp. one that is not totally
voluntary?"
It is not clear to me that this is addressed to purely natural occurrences. This
may be addressed to sickness, or even masturbation. This may be to help prevent
social diseases.
"Again, why the prohibition against something natural"
I do not see a "prohibition" here, but merely standards of cleanliness. Think
about it, you have a tribe of unkempt savages, and you want to teach them
cleanliness. How do you do it? have you ever heard a doctor tell you after an
operation, "Now I want you to take a bath at least three times a day,
*religiously*!"
Standard disclaimer: I do not claim that these *are* the reasons for various
Biblical laws, but these are merely possibilities I can think of.
"Again, punishment for a natural, involuntary occurrence."
Again, sanitation...
"Wonderful. A man becomes suspicious of his wife, so the priest can punish
her."
What the priest does is not described as a "punishment", but rather a 'test'.
"He is free of guilt, even for a wrongful accusation. Clearly unfair, as a man
is allowed multiple wives and concubines."
I have no idea if there is a similar such law for men, I was not looking for
such.
RE: .5
I am not using the King James, but rather the New American Catholic Bible.
'keeping kosher is inexplicable'
There are possible reasons. For instance, the prohibition of pork, pig biology
is *very* similar to humans, unless the food was prepared *very* carefully, you
stand a much greater chance of contracting, say trichinosis, then from beef.
"Christianity has traditionally tried to do a smear job on other religions."
Please believe that I am not trying to conduct a smear campaign against any
religions. I am merely looking at what the Bible has to say about women. Please
add your *valuable* insights, but please stick to the topic.
RE: .6
"Do modern people really think God wants animal sacrifices? No, but the early
Jews were from pagan backgrounds, and God dealt with them in a manner they would
understand."
That is the way I understand it as well.
"So why didn't God step in and intervene? You tell me.... I personally think
she's an MCP."
I would guess for the same reasons that Christ did not condemn slavery. But I
will not presume to state what God's answers were.
"There are numerous stories which are downright nasty in their treatment of
women."
There are a *lots* of stories of bad things happening in the Bible... for
various reasons. I suggest that we stick to considering individual items,
rather then generalizing.
Jim.
|
642.30 | The Topic is "Women in the Bible" | YODA::BARANSKI | Riding the Avalanche of Life | Tue Jan 26 1988 11:03 | 83 |
| RE: .8
"Of course, if the husband runs off, the rabbinate can't put him in prison, and
there's no divorce, the wife can't remarry."
I believe that after a certain time the husband may be assumed dead. But, in
any case, I would like to stick with 'The Bible', I'd rather not get into
arguments about 'what was' unless it is something directed to be done in the
Bible. I expect that will be difficult enough.
RE: .13 Russ...
Yes, Russ, I believe you are starting a rathole (FWIW). Please start a new
topic if you wish to discuss "just what constitutes an "Issue" between the sexes
and just what does not." This topic is "Women in the Bible".
RE: .14
"Who are you, a young, white male, to tell us women what we should and should
not be talking about?"
(not directed at me, but I'll answer before someone complains about me wanting
to keep this topic from being derailed)
No, I am not. However, I am requesting that if you want to talk about something
other then the topic, that you do it in another topic. (an answer which would
serve the stated purpose for FWO notes)
"Is it necessary for the members of the community to interrupt their agenda for
the benefit of men whose feelings are hurt?"
Interrupt? No. Listen to, and deal with in some timely and equitable basis?
*Yes*. (discuss it elsewhere...)
RE: .16 KRUGER (your notes are a valuable addition)
"Since sex constitutes adultery, yes, a man is in better shape until he has sex
with someone he knows has has sex before and is not divorced."
Could you explain this a bit more?
RE: Talmud...
While I welcome your knowledge, I have to say that your knowledge of the Talmud
leaves me in the dust... :-( Oh well, I guess I will just have to listen a
while... :-) (betcha didn't think I could! :-))
RE: .23 Mikie
"And if memory serves me correctly, our Jewish friends basicly stated that Satan
was a Christian invention."
I cannot find any reply in this topic stating that.
RE: .27
"If this were CHRISTIANITY or even RELIGION, that would be considered a valid
claim. However, in this notefile we look at things from cultural and historical
viewpoints."
And in this *topic* we are supposed to be looking at "Biblical" viewpoints!
(Sorry, but I get upset at the idea that XXX is not considered a valid claim as
defined by YYY)
"You say that Satan is mentioned in Genesis, but this is not so. The *serpent*
is the character mentioned."
You may consider the serpent to be the Goddess, however, that is not stated in
the Bible. Niether is it stated that the serpent is 'Satan', however. (is it?)
"The story of Leviathan derives from the legend of the conflict of Marduk and
Tiamat."
Again, does it state that Leviathan is (Marduk & Tiamat) in the Bible? I do not
see what does this have to do with "Women in the Bible"? The same with 'The
Morning Star'.
"I therefore feel that it is legitimate to claim that Christianity has used this
technique to denigrate the Goddess religion, and, by extension, its followers."
What Goddess religions were in the area in the early Christian Era?
Jim.
|