T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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899.1 | what is there to be ashamed of??? | TLE::TLE::D_CARROLL | Hakuna Matata | Tue Jul 02 1991 19:53 | 18 |
| I'm not sure I follow you...what is the "shame" you are talking about?
The shame of being raped or the shame of being a rapist?
If it is the latter, well sheesh, s/he shoulda thought of the bible
*before* s/he raped.
If it is the former, the problem seems not to be in paradox, but in
the defining of raped as something to be ashamed of. I'm not a bible
expert, in fact I know very little; if you tell me the bible says it
is a sin to make public that which is shameful about yourself, I'll
believe you - but does it say that being raped is something shameful
about yourself? If so, the my philosophy and Christianity are so
grossly at odds that I can't begin to answer the question. Many people
feel ashamed after being raped, and that's awful, but if the bible
doesn't *say* you should feel ashamed, then why should it be a sin
not to hide it, since it isn't an "official" shame?
D!
|
899.2 | | WMOIS::REINKE_B | bread and roses | Tue Jul 02 1991 21:17 | 12 |
| Cindy
The old testament was written when women were men's property,
and the shame was in the devaluing of an asset, i.e. a virgin
or a wife.
If you'd like you can borrow my copy of "The Chalice and the Blade"
which goes into this subject in some depth (among many others).
hugs
Bonnie
|
899.3 | God wants us to heal | RIPPLE::KENNEDY_KA | | Wed Jul 03 1991 02:14 | 11 |
| Cindy,
I think D! has an excellent point. Sadly, the majority of women who
are raped do feel shame. The attitude of "It's the woman who is at
fault when she is raped" is what creates shame. I have a very loving
God and I personally don't believe that S/He would want a rape victim
to hide the crime due to shame. This is strictly from a personal
viewpoint, but as an ACOA I would be in a whole heap of trouble if I
thought God didn't want me to heal my shame, which I can only do by
sharing it.
Karen
|
899.4 | Sounds a bit contradictory. | ASDG::FOSTER | Calico Cat | Wed Jul 03 1991 09:25 | 16 |
|
Perhaps you can think of it as shame for things you've done, not
shame for things done to you.
Although this doesn't ring true at all with the Marking of Cain.
Why don't you post the passages in question... and also post the
punishment of Cain...
Kinda like if you beat your spouse, and your spouse goes around and
tells everyone. You might be ashamed of your acts, but the Bible might
be prohibiting you from telling your side. I can see that. I keeps
people from vocalizing excuses for doing something blatantly wrong.
But, Like D!, I'm not biblical scholar...
|
899.5 | | VALKYR::RUST | | Wed Jul 03 1991 10:10 | 15 |
| Without looking it up first, I can't be sure, but I have some dim
recollection of the passages in question referring to not bringing
shame upon the Christian community. That is, if something bad is
happening, take steps to remedy it quietly, without running around
telling the world that Simon's a lecher or Ruth's a thief or whatever.
In these days, I'd define it as escalating a problem through proper
channels and refraining from gossip about it (as opposed to, say, going
directly to the Geraldo Rivera show). *However*, it's painfully
clear that in many cases, and for many offenses, "quietly going through
channels" doesn't cut it - sometimes the only way to get help is to
stand on the roof and shriek. [I don't think that's un-Biblical; after
all, when serious measures were called for, some of those prophets made
_major_ public spectacles of themselves... ;-)]
-b
|
899.6 | Nit ... | STAR::BECK | Paul Beck | Wed Jul 03 1991 10:39 | 12 |
| > Without looking it up first, I can't be sure, but I have some dim
> recollection of the passages in question referring to not bringing
> shame upon the Christian community. ...
Since Proverbs (as cited in .0) is Old Testament, it wouldn't be
the Christian community in question.
It's worth bearing in mind (unless you're of the "every comma and
semicolon infallible" mindset) that the society to which books
like Proverbs were written was very different in many ways from
present-day society, and then-contemporary cultural values and
biases cannot help but be reflected in the writing.
|
899.7 | Text | NECSC::BARBER_MINGO | | Wed Jul 03 1991 12:10 | 61 |
| Re: -1
It would not be "just" the Christian community in question. You
are correct. I must apologize for the oversight. I did not wish
to overstep the Torah or Talmud in the discussion.
Re: Text
Following is a list of some of the verses I am trying to work on.
Immediately afterwards, is the interpretation that I see in it.
*Proverbs 11:13
*A talebearer revealeth secrets: but he that is of faithful spirit concealeth
*the matter.
If you discuss openly hidden abuses you are a gosip,
faithful individuals would not talk. So, we should not discuss what
is/has gone on in private.
*Proverbs 11:29
*He that troubleth his own house shall inherit the wind.
For incest, rape, or work environment- rooting out the trouble can/will
break your house, spousal relationships, environment down to nothing.
If you do not, maybe it will pass?
*Proverbs 24:29
*Say not, I will do so to him as he has done to me: I will render the man
*according to his work.
The desire to repay violence, inconsideration, impropriety with the
same is bad. It should not be stated or required. Must transgressors
go free? Vindictive or compensatory desires against criminals/harrassers
are not correct. It is G-d's job to handle this, and not the job
of earthly entities. But how does that apply with police? personnel?
*Proverbs 25:2
*It is the glory of God to conceal a thing: but the honor of kings is to
*search out a matter.
It is g-dly to hide transgressions, but worldy attempts to investigate
a problem. If you wish to plead to the lessor authority, you will
press for formal investigation.
*Proverbs 12:16
*A fools wrath is presently known: but a prudent man covereth shame.
You are a fool to display shame/anger at actions performed against you.
A wise person keeps it hidden.
However, the nature of negative actions against people requires that
it be opened up. So you can not persue and not be considered a fool.
---------------------------------------
I know, it is somewhat jumbled and unclear. But each of these leads
me do some form of Paradox. I am not a true scholar either, I am
searching for answers. The answers I am seeing are painful.
Does anyone else see this?
Cindi
|
899.8 | | CARTUN::NOONAN | Of course not silly! You're a *boy*! | Wed Jul 03 1991 12:15 | 8 |
| Yet another reason I do not believe the bible to be inerrant, and the
work of God.
And no, Cindi, I do not swear on a bible if I have to go to Court. One
of the things Quakers generally do not do is take oaths. When I served
jury duty, I affirmed.
E Grace
|
899.9 | | VIA::HEFFERNAN | Juggling Fool | Wed Jul 03 1991 12:26 | 46 |
| Cindi, here's a another possible interpretation.
*Proverbs 11:13
*A talebearer revealeth secrets: but he that is of faithful spirit concealeth
*the matter.
Don't engage in gossip about other people. Don't blab to everyone
about problems with other people. Try and deal with that person and
work it out directly if possible. Don't take revenge by telling
everyone about something that happened between you and someone else
(ie, in a spirit of vengence).
*Proverbs 11:29
*He that troubleth his own house shall inherit the wind.
Don't cause trouble for the sake of causing trouble.
*Proverbs 24:29
*Say not, I will do so to him as he has done to me: I will render the man
*according to his work.
Again, I think this applies more to the spirit in which things are
done? Is it out of vengence and hatred or love and compassion.
Obviously, there are people that are dangerous in their present state
(in my belief due to how they were raised - including pre-natally) and
how they are treated by society or whatever). Again, what is our mind
state in dealing with these people? Compassion or hatred? Even
acting out of compassion, people may have to be restrained. In
today's system, however, there is very little compassion. This goes
for the victims too.
*Proverbs 25:2
*It is the glory of God to conceal a thing: but the honor of kings is to
*search out a matter.
Not sure what this means.
*Proverbs 12:16
*A fools wrath is presently known: but a prudent man covereth shame.
I think of more as self-shame. In other words, it usually
not necessary to advertize our own blunders.
|
899.10 | alternate interpretations | BTOVT::THIGPEN_S | payback's a ... | Wed Jul 03 1991 12:32 | 48 |
| *Proverbs 11:13
*A talebearer revealeth secrets: but he that is of faithful spirit concealeth
*the matter.
A talebearer breaks the trust of a confidence, to betray the secrets of a friend
(or family member). The abuser has broken that confidence, by definition, in
the first place. The abuser has broken the law, even biblical law. I don't
believe the Bible orders us to conceal a crime.
*Proverbs 11:29
*He that troubleth his own house shall inherit the wind.
Who is troubling the house? not the abused child. the abuser can and should
inherit the wind. The abused child is not doing anything shameful or blame-
worthy.
*Proverbs 24:29
*Say not, I will do so to him as he has done to me: I will render the man
*according to his work.
This one's inscrutable. But remember, the Bible also says "an eye for an eye".
And I don't think even this quote says you must take what's dished out, no
matter what. It's a noble goal, to return good for evil. I can't always do it.
*Proverbs 25:2
*It is the glory of God to conceal a thing: but the honor of kings is to
*search out a matter.
:-) GOD is inscrutable. It is for us to try to understand the mind of God.
Good luck! it's impossible, by definition.
*Proverbs 12:16
*A fools wrath is presently known: but a prudent man covereth shame.
A fool's wrath is inneffectual. Prudence guides us to a more effective response
(we hope) to offenses we are offered.
Cindi, my own take on it is that you can find what you want in the Bible. This
same work that tells us "love (me) thy God with all thy heart" etc, also says
"go thy way, eat thy bread with joy and drink thy wine with a merry heart, for
God hath already seen thy works." I don't expect to ever find The Answer(s).
I seek anyway.
and though it offers guides for living right, the Bible does not promise anyone
justice (except in the long run) or a lack of suffering. only redemption and
the chance to serve God.
Sara
|
899.11 | | XCUSME::QUAYLE | i.e. Ann | Wed Jul 03 1991 12:37 | 6 |
| A thought provoking topic, and some excellent interpretations and
comments. I have some thoughts; will enter them when I've
mulled a while longer.
aq
|
899.12 | it always boils down to individual vs. state | SA1794::CHARBONND | barbarian by choice | Wed Jul 03 1991 12:51 | 9 |
| The supremacy of the individual over the group is a relatively
new concept. In every form of tribalism, the group takes precedence
over the individual. Or, the harmony of the community takes
precedence over the rights of the victim. (Rights are the property
of individuals.)
As a avowed individualist, I would say that a community which allows
it's members to be murdered, raped, etc. has no right to exist
in peace and harmony.
|
899.13 | Re .9 | NECSC::BARBER_MINGO | | Wed Jul 03 1991 12:55 | 41 |
|
>Don't engage in gossip about other people. Don't blab to everyone
>about problems with other people. Try and deal with that person and
>work it out directly if possible. Don't take revenge by telling
>everyone about something that happened between you and someone else
>(ie, in a spirit of vengence).
However, is it ok in the spirit of fear/as well as compassion?
Is court prosecution (for rape), or personnel prosecution (for
work harrassment)?
> Don't cause trouble for the sake of causing trouble.
Does that apply within the rhelms of harassment or rape?
>Again, I think this applies more to the spirit in which things are
>done? Is it out of vengence and hatred or love and compassion.
>Obviously, there are people that are dangerous in their present state
>(in my belief due to how they were raised - including pre-natally) and
>how they are treated by society or whatever). Again, what is our mind
>state in dealing with these people? Compassion or hatred? Even
>acting out of compassion, people may have to be restrained. In
>today's system, however, there is very little compassion. This goes
>for the victims too.
So as long as the victim has no revenge motive, In your opinion,
the text does not apply? The victims are to have compassion for
their transgressors?
>I think of more as self-shame. In other words, it usually
>not necessary to advertize our own blunders.
So, with regard to the topic at hand, since it is not his/her fault
or blunder the text does not apply?
Cindi
|
899.14 | | SWAM2::MASTROMAR_JO | | Wed Jul 03 1991 13:39 | 17 |
|
I agree with .11, some excellent interpretations here.
This may not apply, but I'd like to add that some things
from the Old Testament are refuted in the New. For example,
"an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth". Though this kind
of law was accepted in the Old Testament (when we were
at a time in which we needed this sort of response), Jesus condemned it
in the New.
Try to see the situation in which it was said. And if something
in the Old Testament bothers you, see how Jesus addresses it
(assuming you are of some Christian faith). I find it hard to
believe that Jesus would advocate concealing the truth, but rather
not screaming non-relevant things to cloud the intent of the
truth (making it more of a personel decision).
|
899.15 | another interpretation | TYGON::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Wed Jul 03 1991 14:02 | 11 |
|
>Proverbs 24:29
>Say not, I will do so to him as he has done to me: I will render the man
>according to his work.
do not attempt vengence in the "eye for an eye" manner - another words, do
not attempt to exact vengence yourself by acts of violence; rather, uphold
the law and "render the man according to his work" by prosecuting the abuser
as the law of the land dictates.
|
899.16 | | LEZAH::BOBBITT | the colors and shapes of kindness | Wed Jul 03 1991 14:04 | 23 |
|
I like to follow the spirit of the bible (or any other religious book
that appeals to me) rather than the letter.
Decrypting what was written, rewritten, and reinterpreted so many
times, by so many people, with so many different ideas and ideals is so
complex.
Read a passage.
Listen to your inner voice.
See what echoes in you.
Form your own interpretation.
Wrangling over what the bible did and did not mean feels to me like
arguing over what our favorite colors are. Yours is not mine is not
hers is not his. Why must there be only one interpretation?
My interpretations are gentle, and full of good karma.
I do not believe in a God who torments mercilessly, or blames victims,
or seeks silence where words would heal and help.
-Jody
|
899.17 | the law vs. an individual | TLE::DBANG::carroll | Hakuna Matata | Wed Jul 03 1991 14:42 | 10 |
| What exactly is the text of the "an eye for an eye" quote? I have read it -
I don't remember exactly what it said, but unless I'm wrong, it was in
reference to the *law*. That is, the law should exact no more punishment
from wrong-doers than the wrong they did. It did *not* say that an individual
should avenge himself "and eye for an eye".
I don't think the passages against vegeance are in conflict with the
"eye for eye" quote...
D!
|
899.18 | (rathole) | FMNIST::olson | Doug Olson, ISVG West, UCS1-4 | Wed Jul 03 1991 14:44 | 4 |
| I always thought the "eye for an eye" came from the Code of Hamurabi,
not the bible old testament.
DougO
|
899.19 | Eye for Eye in Old T. | NECSC::BARBER_MINGO | | Wed Jul 03 1991 15:24 | 17 |
| Exodus 21:24
Eye for eye, tooth for tooth, hand for hand, foot for foot.
Leviticus 24:20
Breach for breach, eye for eye, tooth for tooth: as he hath
caused a blemish in a man, so shall it be done to him again.
Deutoronomy 19:21
And thine eye shall not pit; but life shall go for life, eye for
eye, tooth for tooth, hand for hand, foot for foot.
All old testament references.
The index references one New Testament in Matthew.
Cindi
|
899.20 | not being an expert... | TLE::DBANG::carroll | Hakuna Matata | Wed Jul 03 1991 15:31 | 6 |
| >Exodus 21:24
>Eye for eye, tooth for tooth, hand for hand, foot for foot.
Context??
D!
|
899.21 | | VIA::HEFFERNAN | Juggling Fool | Wed Jul 03 1991 15:34 | 12 |
| RE: Eye for an eye.
Thanks for posting the quotes Cindi.
I interpret this an an alternate statement of the principle of karma.
Leviticus 24:20
Breach for breach, eye for eye, tooth for tooth: as he hath
caused a blemish in a man, so shall it be done to him again.
Not that we should take an eye if someone has blinded someone but that
the person will suffer for causing suffering in others...
|
899.22 | | OXNARD::HAYNES | Charles Haynes | Wed Jul 03 1991 15:49 | 41 |
| The Deuteronomy verse isn't all that apt - it's in a section talking more
about sanctuary. The Exodus verse is relevant, but is in a section that mostly
just lists crimes and their punishments. The Leviticus verse I believe is the
most relevant. Here's its context:
Leviticus 24:17-22
And he that killeth any man shall surely be put to death. And he that
killeth a beast shall make it good; beast for beast. And if a man cause a
blemish in his neighbour; as he hath done, so shall it be done to him;
Breach for breach, eye for eye, tooth for tooth: as he hath caused a
blemish in a man, so shall it be done to him again. And he that killeth a
beast, he shall restore it: and he that killeth a man, he shall be put to
death. Ye shall have one manner of law, as well for the stranger, as for
one of your own country: for I am the LORD your God.
But in the New Testament (The Sermon on the Mount [Matthew, chapter 5]) all
that is changed, here is the relevant portion:
Matthew 5:38-48
Ye have heard that it hath been said, An eye for an eye, and a tooth for a
tooth: But I say unto you, That ye resist not evil: but whosoever shall
smite thee on thy right cheek, turn to him the other also. And if any man
will sue thee at the law, and take away thy coat, let him have thy cloak
also. And whosoever shall compel thee to go a mile, go with him twain.
Give to him that asketh thee, and from him that would borrow of thee turn
not thou away. Ye have heard that it hath been said, Thou shalt love thy
neighbour, and hate thine enemy. But I say unto you, Love your enemies,
bless them that curse you, do good to them that hate you, and pray for
them which despitefully use you, and persecute you; That ye may be the
children of your Father which is in heaven: for he maketh his sun to rise
on the evil and on the good, and sendeth rain on the just and on the
unjust. For if ye love them which love you, what reward have ye? do not
even the publicans the same? And if ye salute your brethren only, what do
ye more than others? do not even the publicans so? Be ye therefore
perfect, even as your Father which is in heaven is perfect.
A pretty high standard.
-- Charles
|
899.23 | Exodus | NECSC::BARBER_MINGO | | Wed Jul 03 1991 15:57 | 20 |
| Context-
Exodus 21:22-25
If men strive, and hurt a woman with child, so
that her fruit depart from her, and yet no mischief follow:
he shall be surely punished, according as the woman's husband
will lay upon him; and he shall pay as the judges determine.
And if any mischief follow then thou shalt give life for life,
Eye for eye, tooth for tooth, hand for hand, foot for foot.
Burning for burning, wound for wound, stripe
for stripe.
----------------------------------------------------------------
Cindi
|
899.25 | | VMPIRE::WASKOM | | Wed Jul 03 1991 16:24 | 16 |
| I have only gotten as far as .8, at which point I pulled down my Bible.
I would refer you to Prov. 11:2, which states "When pride cometh, then
cometh shame." For me, so long as the victim's attitude is not a
prideful, puffed up, vengeful seeking of retribution, there is no shame
attached to reporting that evil has been done to you.
Also consider an interpretation of "house" or "household" which is more
metaphysical than most of us are used to. I think of my house as my
refuge, my place of safety, my protection from storms (both physical
and emotional). That doesn't need to be a physical place, it can be a
state of mind. When someone is continually battering me, am I in a
place of safety? Do I have a "household" which still applies? I don't
believe so.
Alison
|
899.26 | If you quote, quote *modern* English, please! | SMURF::CALIPH::binder | Simplicitas gratia simplicitatis | Wed Jul 03 1991 16:25 | 24 |
| re: .23
There is a severe hampering of communication involved with quoting from
the King James Version of the Bible. Words do not mean to us what they
meant to the scholars living in 1611. According to the OAD, mischief
(in the late 20th century AD) means this:
"conduct (especially of children) that is annoying or does slight
damage but is not malicious"
This is a far cry from what the passage in Exodus means; the word used
in the old texts from which today's current translations are made means
"serious injury." Once the serious nature of the damage is understood,
the idea of tit-for-tat punishment (note, no mention is made of revenge)
becomes more meaningful. And punishment of the kind prescribed can only
happen if the offense is made known; hence, covering up a serious injury
done to you is counter to the code as given.
The "eye for eye" is from the Code of Hammurabi, it is also from the
Duodecem Scriptae, the Twelve Tablets of ancient Rome, in which it is
called "lex taleonis," the law of retaliation. That's the same term
used by legal types today.
-d
|
899.27 | In the translation??? Re .26 | NECSC::BARBER_MINGO | | Wed Jul 03 1991 16:36 | 5 |
| I only had the King James with me today.
I will try to have the New Jerusalem, NIV, or some more modern
english text for future reference if it is preferred.
Cindi
|
899.28 | In media res sum? | SMURF::CALIPH::binder | Simplicitas gratia simplicitatis | Wed Jul 03 1991 16:45 | 12 |
| Cindi, I definitely prefer a modern translation when dealing with issues
of interpretation. For beauty of reading, I'll take the KJV any time.
If others prefer to interpret using the KJV, I can deal, but I fear that
those not into the subtle semantic differences inherent in linguistic
evolution will find some of the discussion somewhat obfuscated; and, as
we are all inherently imperfect communicators, the fewer obstacles we
throw up for ourselves the better.
:-)
-d
|
899.29 | Thoughts to ponder | RIPPLE::KENNEDY_KA | | Thu Jul 04 1991 02:40 | 38 |
| re .7
>For incest, rape, or work environment - rooting out the trouble
>can/will break your house, spousal relationships, environment down to
>nothing. If you do not, maybe it will pass?
Read Leviticus 18:6-29. These passages specifically deal with incest
and forbids sexual relationships with close family members. 18:29 says
"Everyone who does any of these detestable things-such person must be
cut off from their people. Keep my requirements and do not follow any
of the detestable customs that were practiced before you came and do
not defile yourselves with them. I am the LORD your God."
Hebrews 13:4
Marriage should be honored by all, and the marriage bed kept pure, for
God will judge the adulterer and all the sexually immoral.
My interpretation of these passages is that God clearly condemns sexual
immorality. By today's standards that would include incest, rape and
harassment (and fornication, adultery, etc). In Leviticus he states to
cast out the offender. In researching this in my Bible dictionary, the
interpretation there is to put the offender to death. My interpretation
of Hebrews is that God will judge the offenders and will do the
punishment.
I could not find anywhere in either the Bible, Bible dictionary or
concordance that talks about the shame of victims nor could I find
anywhere that the victim is blamed for sexual immorality.
As an afterthought, I looked up confession. 1 John 1:9 says, "If we
confess our sins, he is faithful and just and will forgive us our sins
and purify us from all unrighteousness". Could shame and the anger
that accompanies shame be a sin? Even though I don't have clearly
defined thoughts around this, it seems to me that God wants us to
confess these feelings to him so he can purify us and relieve us of the
negative feelings and fill our lives with happiness, joy and freedom.
Hmmmmm...interesting thought to ponder....................
Karen
|
899.30 | Mary Daly's take on it | BUSY::KATZ | Come out, come out, wherever you are | Mon Jul 08 1991 13:18 | 118 |
| *WARNING* This in NOT for the squeemish!
From Mary Daly "Beyond God the Father" (C) 1973
Chapter Four: The Transvaluation of Values: The End of Phallic
Morality pp. 114-117
THE MOST UNHOLY TRINITY: RAPE, GENOCIDE, AND WAR
The first dimension of what I have baptized as The Most Unholy Trinity is
rape. It is clear that there has always been a connection between the
mentality of rape and the phenomenon of war, although there is much unseeing
of this connection when the was is perceived as "just." An example within
recent times was the horrible treatment of the women of Bangladesh. Many
hprrendous stories came out at the time of the civil war between East and West
Pakistan, but scant reference was made to "the heartbreaking reports that as
many as 200,000 Bengali women, victims of rape by West Pakistani soldiers, had
been abadoned by their husbands, because no Moslem will live with a wife who
has been touched by another man." 29 Joyce Goldman, a writer who discovered
such a reference buried in a postwar "return to normailty" article, decided
that if male reporters would not investigate, she would attempt to do so. The
experience of reading her account is unforgettable. A Pakistani officer is
quoted as saying:"We used the girls until they died." Many of the women
imprisoned in barracks (to be used by soldiers as "cigarette machines," as one
government official described it), tried to commit suicide. Goldman cites
reports of a town named Camilla, near Dacca, where women were raped and then
thrown from rooftops like rubbish. "One eight year-old girl who was found too
child-small for the solidiers' purposes was slit to accomodate them, and raped
until she died." 30 Goldman points to the obvious cruel irony in the fact
that these victims were then abandoned by their husbands as unclean, which is
an obvious corollary of looking upon women as objects and possessions, for
then they must have inly one possessor. Most significantly, she hsows that
the concept of a raped woman as damaged is only a morbid exaggeration of "our"
own attitudes, for the women of Bangladesh have suffered "collectively,
exaggeratedly what individual women in this and other 'advanced' countries
know from their own experience."31
One way of unseeing this is to protest that it happened in another culture, in
a Moslem country. Readers who react this way should be interested in an
article that appeared in the New York Times, November 19, 1972 (L, p. 47).
The item reports the death of a seven year-old girl, who, together with her
nine year-old sister, was lured by three teenafgeged boys to the roof of a
South Bronx tenement by a promise of pizza. The younger girl was raped and
thrown off the roof to her death. The older sister was sexually molested but
escaped. Police described her as "hysterical." Most of the rest of the same
page of the New York Times was occupied by an enormous advertisement for the
Saks Fifth Avenue Men's Store. The ad is a picture of three very cocksure
males in stylish sport clothes accompanied by three bulldogs. The words of
the ad:
There is something about and S.F.A. man. You can spot him anywhere....Even his
idlest comments are eminently commanding....
It does not require too surrealistic a leap of imagination to associate the
three "emminently commanding" males and their three bulldogs with the three
teenaged males who raped the seven year-old girl and threw her to her death.
After all, the latter, too, were "emminently commanding." In a rapist
culture, this quality expresses itself in a variety of ways.
"Informed" Christinas and Jews may protest that rape and brutality are alien
to our own heritage. The reader, then, should refer to biblical passages
which tell a different story, namely that there is a precedent for looking
upon women as spoils of war. In the Book of Numbers, Moses, after the
campaign against Midian, is described as enraged against the commanders of the
army for having spared the lives of all the women:
So kill all the male children. Kill also all the women who have slept with a
man. Spare the lives only of the young girls who have not slept with a man,
and take them for yourselves. (Numbers 31:17-18)
The story continues:
Moses and Eleazar the priest did as Yahweh had ordered Moses. The spoils, the
remainder of the booty captured by the soldiers, came to six hundred and
seventy-five thousand head of small stock, seventy-two thousand head of
cattle, sixty-one thousand donkeys, and in persons, women who had never slpet
with a man, thirty-two thousand in all. (Numbers 31:31-35)
In Deuteronomy, the advice given to the Hebrews is that when they go to war
and yahweh delivers the enemy into their power, they may choose a wife from
among them.
Should she cease to please you, you will let her go as she wishes, not selling
her for money: you are not to make any profit out of her, since you have had
the use of her. (Deuteronomy 21:14)
Even outside of the context of war (if such a context is imaginable in a
patriarchal world), the value placed upon women in the Old Testament is
illustrated in the story of the crime of the men og Gibeah. A man woh was
giving hospitality to a Levite and his concubine was having dinner with them.
Scoundrels came to the house demanding to have the guest, in order to abuse
him. The response of the host was to offer them his daughter as substitute
for the guest. The devoted father is reported to have said:
Here is my daughter; she is a virgin; I will give her to you. Possess her, do
what you please with her, but do not commit such an infamy against this man.
(Judges 19:24)
Since the visitors refused this offer, the guest gallantly offered them his
concubine as a replacement for himself. They raped her all night and she
died. Tastefully, the guest, when he had returned home with her, cut her into
twelve pieces and sent those around Israel with a message about the crime.
The text offers no negative judgement upon the host or his guest. The crime
was seen as an offense against men, not agianst their female property.
NOTES:
29 See Joyce Goldman, "The Women of Bangladesh," MS. I (August 1972), p. 84.
30 Ibid., p. 88.
31 Ibid., p. 88.
|
899.31 | translation | NECSC::BARBER_MINGO | | Mon Jul 08 1991 13:45 | 43 |
| A different translation, as requested from the Jerusalem Bible
Reader's Edition.
Context-
Exodus 21:22-25
If, when men come to blows, they hurt a woman who is pregnant
and she suffers a miscarriage, though she does not die of it, the man
responsible must pay the compensation demanded of him by the woman's master;
he shall hand it over, after arbitration. But should she die, you shall
give life for life, eye for eye, tooth for tooth, and for hand, foot for
foot, burn for burn, wound for wound, stroke for stroke.
--------------------------------------------------
In KJV master is husband. I guess loosely, if we allow a woman to
be her own "master" today, then she shall determine what is to be
done in the event of this particular wrong.
As for other wrongs, the texts and stories indicated in the previous
replies do not indicate a very positive message for females.
Just as a minor example, this text does not handle the case when the
woman's "master" is her husband. Does this then, by omission here,
and in many other cases, act as a sanction for violence/negative
action against women?
--- There is a joke that goes.
"Women & Slaves should have an owner's manual."
"There is one, check the Bible."
The question still stays. With the exception of incest, as
pointed out in a previous reply, unmarried women are not protected in
the texts. Any wrong that comes to them, has only prayer as direction for
compensation.
I guess we will just have to pray VERY hard.
Cindi
|
899.32 | | BTOVT::THIGPEN_S | you meant ME??? | Mon Jul 08 1991 13:58 | 10 |
| hmmmm. Cindi, your reply (.31) reminded me of the Hebrew word ba'al, which has
three meanings:
ba'al the idol worshipped by certain non-Hebrews
husband
owner
context determines actual meaning; the idol being a much-disused meaning
nowadays.
sigh.
|
899.33 | Ba'al- [Only from Michner for me] | NECSC::BARBER_MINGO | | Mon Jul 08 1991 15:38 | 13 |
| Re. .32:
Is that
Ba'al
bet alef alef lamed? (A random guess).
Are there students of the Tora that could check the verse to verify
if this word, or some close derivative appears in the original text?
Cindi
|
899.34 | | BTOVT::THIGPEN_S | you meant ME??? | Mon Jul 08 1991 15:53 | 5 |
| I think yes, Cindi, beyt aleph aleph lamed. THis is based on my learning Hebrew
orally on a kibbutz, though, not on actual scholarship. I *think* it's right.
Bobbi "deadlines R us" can help?
Sara
|
899.35 | Michner didn't know Hebrew :-) Ba`al : Bet Ayin Lamed | CADSE::FOX | No crime. And lots of fat, happy women | Mon Jul 08 1991 16:56 | 21 |
| Meaning:
a non Hebrew god
owner
master
husband
If I have time tonight (and remember), I'll look up the passage in
Exodus in my Hebrew Scriptures, and provide the exact language.
I suspect that the word used *is* ba`al, with the meaning "master/husband";
remember, many women were concubines, rather than "wives", and the rule
was probably intended to cover both.
I used to drive the Kibbutzniks crazy with this. In modern Hebrew, the word
"Isha" means both "woman" and "wife" (surprise, surprise :-(, so I always
used to use the word "Ish" [man] to when speaking of a husband : "but you
mean 'Ba'al'" -- "No, I don't think he owns her!"
Bobbi "I'm doing this while waiting for my test driver to finish its deadline"
Fox
|
899.37 | | 19809::DUNNE | | Mon Jul 08 1991 17:47 | 13 |
| RE: 30 Mary Daly and the women of Bangladesh
Amnesty International has established a women's campaign in recognition
of this type of war crime, committed against women by government forces
all over the world. The Bangladesh situation is unfortunately not rare.
I will soon have information about this in GAMBLN::AMNESTY. The UN
Convention on all Forms of Discrimination Against Women will not be coming
up for ratification in the U.S. this year, as I previously reported in
this file, but the women's campaign is in full force.
Eileen
|
899.38 | Probably didn't get 'em all... | SMURF::SMURF::BINDER | Simplicitas gratia simplicitatis | Tue Jul 09 1991 11:24 | 56 |
| Uses of ba'al not indicating the Phoenician god, from the NIV:
Exo. 21:22 "...but if there is no serious injury, the offenders must
be fined whatever the woman's HUSBAND demands and the court
allows."
Exo. 21:28 "... But the OWNER of the bull will not be held
Exo. 21:29 responsible. If, however, the bull has a habit of goring
and the OWNER has been warned...the bull must be stoned and
the OWNER also must be put to death."
Exo. 21:34 "...the OWNER of the pit must pay for the loss; he must pay
[the animal's ] OWNER, and the dead amimal will be his."
Exo. 21:36 "However, if...the OWNER did not keep it penned up..."
Exo. 22:8 "But if the thief is not found, the OWNER OF THE HOUSE must
appear before the judges..."
Exo. 22:11 "The [ animal's ] OWNER is to accept this, and no
Exo. 22:12 restitution is required. But if the animal was stolen from
the neighbor, he must make restitution to the OWNER."
Exo. 22:14 "If a man borrows an animal from his neighbor and it is
injured or dies while the OWNER is not present, he must
make restitution. But if the OWNER is with the animal..."
Deu. 21:13 [ Of a woman captive taken in war ] "... After she has
lived in your house and mourned her father and mother for a
full month, then you may go to her and be her HUSBAND and
she shall be your wife."
Deu. 24:4 "...then her first HUSBAND, who divorced her, is not
allowed to marry her again after she has been defiled."
Jud. 19:22 "...they shouted to the OLD MAN WHO OWNED THE HOUSE, "Bring
out the man...so we can have sex with him."
2Sa. 11:26 "When Uriah's wife [ Bathsheba ] heard that her HUSBAND was
dead, she mourned for him."
Job 31:39 "if I have devoured its yield without payment
or broken the spirit of its TENANTS,"
Pro. 12:4 "A wife of noble character is her HUSBAND's crown."
Jer. 31::32 "It will not be like the covenant
I made with their forefathers
when I took them by t he hand
to lead them out of Egypt,
because they broke my covenant
though I was a HUSBAND to them..."
Joe. 1:8 "Mourn like a young woman in sackcloth
grieving for the HUSBAND of her youth."
|
899.39 | In re: my Bible citations and ba'al | SMURF::SMURF::BINDER | Simplicitas gratia simplicitatis | Tue Jul 09 1991 11:33 | 20 |
| Re: Ba'al and ownership
I think we may be up against a problem of foreign-language semantics.
Consider that in Jeremiah 31:32 (see my prior reply) the Lord God is
seen declaring that he held himself as a husband to the Israelite
people -- are we to assume that they were his property? I think not.
As much as we study *any* foreign language, we never grasp all the
subtleties of its meanings. Furthermore, any given word can have
myriad different meanings depending on context, date of usage, and so
on. Even in our native languages, we often don't understand all the
possible meanings of a word; I'd pick on Annie's use of "tart up" in
the "Do you like your name?" string as an example.
If there is one among us whose *native* language is Hebrew and who has
made an in-depth study of the evolution of Hebrew, that person would be
the one to give us a more accurate answer as to the connotations of
"ba'al" -- do we have a taker?
-d
|
899.40 | | JURAN::VALENZA | Post note ergo propter note | Tue Jul 09 1991 11:59 | 149 |
| My own view, in response to the question of whether or not the people
of Israel were considered Yahweh's property, is that the answer is
yes, at least as far as the prevailing theology of some of the prophets
of the time was concerned. Along those lines, here is a summary that I
wrote some time ago of a Pendle Hill pamphlet on how the ancient
religious metaphor of Yahweh's "marriage" to his people was related to
a patriarchal and abusive concept of marriage in general. I have
already posted this in two other notes conferences, but I since it
relates directly to this question of patriarchal religious values and
rape, I'll repost it here:
<<< LGP30::DKA300:[NOTES$LIBRARY]CHRISTIAN-PERSPECTIVE.NOTE;1 >>>
-< Discussions from a Christian Perspective >-
================================================================================
Note 11.4 Feminist theology 4 of 113
CSC32::M_VALENZA "Note with innuendo." 131 lines 20-SEP-1990 11:39
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Last January, I posted in the Religion conference the following note,
which summarizes the contents of an interesting pamphlet that is
published by Pendle Hill, a Quaker study center:
Yesterday I received in the mail a copy of a pamphlet that I had sent
away for. The pamphlet, published by the Pendle Hill (a Quaker study
center which publishes essays in pamphlet form once every two months)
is titled "Batter My Heart", and is written by Gracia Fay Ellwood.
This fascinating essay discusses the biblical images of God as a
patriarchal marriage partner. The author discusses the version of this
image presented in the Christian scriptures, though she focuses on how
the ancient prophets conceived of Yahweh as the husband in an
authoritarian marriage with Israel as the bride, and compares this
conception of a patriarchal "marriage" with what we know about
violently abusive patriarchal marriages between men and women. The
implications of this analogy are disturbing, and the author suggests,
among other things, that this traditional image should be altered.
The author states in the introduction:
The cause of equality, justice, and peace requires...a deep-level
understanding of the bases of hierarchy, oppression and violence;
and an important source of these evils in our culture is, unhappily,
the Bible, the very source that has often inspired its readers to
oppose them. I do not refer only to its influence upon those
Christians and Jews who consider it absolutely authoritative; the
Bible has done much to shape Western culture as a whole, to influence
commonly-held views as to the proper relationship between male and
female, between ruler and ruled, between the Divine and human. Its
effect has been ambivalent, tending to put out the fires of violence
and oppression by day while relighting them by night.
In her essay, after briefly discussing some of the male images of Yahweh
in the Bible, she then considers the specific example of the symbolism
of marriage used by the prophet Hosea:
In order to understand Hosea properly, one must know the outlines in
Canaanite thought of a sexual relationship analogous to a Sacred
Marriage. According to the texts found at Ras Shamra (ancient
Ugarit) since 1929, the union of Anath, a Goddess of high sexual
energy, with Baal, the bringer of order and the rain-giver, was
feted especially after Anath defeated Baal's enemy Mot (the power of
drought and death which prevailed during the hot summer), and
brought Baal back from the dead.
The Ugaritic texts are dated many hundreds of years before the work
of the prophets, and Anath is scarcely to be found in the Hebrew
Bible. The biblical Astoreth seems analogous to her. In any case,
it is very likely in reaction to such a sexual relationship between
two Deities that Hosea and the prophets after him developed instead
a Sacred Marriage between Yahweh and Israel. Contrasting strongly
with the union of Baal and Anath, who are both very powerful in
their own right, the Covenantal marriage is unequal, decidedly
patriarchal, with Yahweh being the husband and Israel the wife. The
prophets never reverse the image.
The theme of Yahweh the abusive and authoritarian marriage partner
recurs over and over again. Worship of Baal or other deities is
considered an act of adultery, to which Yahweh responds with some sort
of violence, usually resulting in oppression of His people, until a
repentant Israel returns to Yahweh. The author, in startling ways,
compares this to the patterns of behavior in abusive marriages, as
described by various researchers (Lenore Walker, Del Martin, Roger
Langley and Richard Levy). Specifically, the prophetic imagery of
violent retaliation expressed for Yahweh by the prophets is often quite
disturbing. Ellwood describes how overkill, jealousy, possessiveness,
rape, and child battering are all expressed by Yahweh--mirroring the
traits often identified by these researchers to be characteristic of
violent marriages.
Ellwood then offers her theological criticisms to those images. She
explains that she is "not undercutting or rejecting all that the
prophets have given us, but applying the prophetic critique to the
prophets themselves." She suggests that the possessive images of
"adultery" and "fidelity" are themselves theologically suspect. She
further argues that the prophets' denunciations of social oppression
contradict the oppressive images of Yahweh that they advocated. She
points out that this image of divine justice was inappropriate, because
of "the failure of the unfaithfulness metaphor to meet the complexity of
the religious and political situation":
Israel was not one woman, who either "did" or "didn't", but many
persons, some of whom engaged in Canaanite worship while others did
not; some of whom exploited the poor, while others did not (or were
the exploited). The violence of Assyria and Babylon, though
striking with particular venom at the powerful, also destroyed many
defenseless and innocent. The metaphor is a theodicy, an attempt to
justify God in the face of this great horror: how could our
righteous God, who promised to cherish us and preserve our royal
line, do such a thing?...
Nonetheless, the poor fit of these and similar images was suspected
early. For the "wrath of Yahweh" to retaliate with murderous
violence against guilty and innocent alike was no improvement at all
on the original situation of class exploitation and violence.
Finally, she argues that this image of God as the patriarchal husband
"is unacceptable because it encourages tendencies to violence and
domination in human husbands/fathers."
Her essay continues with other images of God, including the image of
female Wisdom and certain patriarchal aspects of the New Testament view
of the Church as the bride of Christ. She then discusses, with
admiration, the one book of the Bible that celebrates an egalitarian
marriage, the Song of Songs. Arthur Waskow, I might add, has also
praised this work for similar reasons in his own writings.
Ellwood discusses the need to reimage God:
Can we continue to use male images for God in the old manner without
implicitly supporting patriarchy? Can we use any hierarchical
images for God (either male or female), or any images of submission
for humanity, without in some way fostering oppression?
I see no way that we can do so and remain loyal to our
testimonies...
Images of inflexible hierarchy are equally unacceptable, whether
they be "Queen" or "Lady", or genderless terms such as "Sovereign"
or "Ruler;" further, references to ourselves as "servants" of God,
or the life of the Spirit as "Holy Obedience" are likewise
unhealthy. Gender-free images of temporary hierarchy, such as
derive from teacher-student or guide-follower relationships, are
less questionable, if also less powerful. The same could be said of
God as "Parent."
This is only a brief summary of Ellwood's essay. It is a fascinating
work, and well worth the $2.50 I spent to purchase it.
-- Mike
|
899.41 | | BTOVT::THIGPEN_S | you meant ME??? | Tue Jul 09 1991 12:17 | 31 |
| I'm no expert at Hebrew (as you've all seen! :-) but since I brought it up, I'll
point out that there are NO experts in ancient Hebrew. There are scholars,
but they study a dead language. Modern Hebrew is almost certainly unlike the
ancient language -- in pronunciation, in context, among other things. For ex,
there are two letters for the 's' sound, and one of those letters is also used
for the 'sh' sound when marked in a certain way. In modern Hebrew the 2 's'
sounds are the same, but why would there have been two letters for the same
sound in the ancient language, if they were not different sounds that we no
longer distinguish?
Another example is verb tenses. Just as there are tenses in French with no
English equivalents, in Hebrew there are present, past, future, and conditional
tenses. That's it. You simply cannot express "I will have gone" without going
to a lot of extra verbiage!
But Dick is right about the uses of language, and words. Hebrew has no word for
'shallow' (or so I was told). You can say a lake is not deep, but you can't
say it is shallow. English has no equivalent to the French word 'chez', though
'place' (ala 'Jane's place') has been used. In the examples he cited, there
were two that brought me up short. The "old man who owns the house" (who should
come out and get raped!!!!!) -- did the "old" part and the house as the object
of ownership come from context? And the image of God as husband to the whole
people, well that goes right along with the Hebrews as the chosen people, and
if you think about it you'll see that God treated the Hebrews just like an
ancient husband treated his wives -- property, do what I say, believe as I say,
because I am. Reminds me a lot of the book of Job.
What we can think, how we can understand the world, is partly determined and
defined by the concepts our language can encompass. Cindi, is this what you are
trying to discover, in questioning the words and concepts used in the Bible
to describe how shame should be handled?
|
899.42 | Looking | NECSC::BARBER_MINGO | | Tue Jul 09 1991 12:37 | 26 |
| Re : .41-
I was trying to see where and how the topics on the title of this note,
and the subsequent behaviors/ interaction of our society was described/
percieved/ interpretable against the texts.
Attempting to answer questions like...
Is the reason battered wives have such a hard time of it, because
a large segment of our society is based on, or derived from a
particular text... and that text doesn't make provisions against it.
The same with harassment??? The same with incest ??? The same with
rape???
I have seen some interesting interpretations here. Some are
comforting, some are disquieting.
... As to the individual that did not believe that G-d allowed
bad things... I can not agree. If that were the case, these
things would not exist in the first place. He definately allows
them. I was just looking at the texts, trying to figure out what
things apply and what must be done AFTER he has allowed them.
Cindi
|
899.43 | _WHOSE_ shame? | HIGHD::ROGERS | | Tue Jul 09 1991 14:43 | 33 |
| Cindi,
i'm not sure i'm on the track you were seeking, but perhaps i can
offer additional light (illumination). In the tradition in which i was
reared - one of the Judeo/Christian varients - the counsel of the Bible
had to be taken as a whole. In some cases that meant some apparent
conflicts had to be resolved; i was taught that New Testament teaching
ALWAYS superceded any conflicting Torah counsel. Of course, that is a
moot point to any non-Christian. Nevertheless, there is some support
within the pre-Christian scriptures, for the notion that the Mosaic Law
was given for a people who were so hard-hearted that they would not
deal honorably with each other - let alone, strangers - unless they
were constrained by narrow rules.
I don't have scripture handy to quote exact chapter/verse, but here
are some principles i've absorbed from much study.
Wherever possible disputes between believers should be resolved
privately. The assumption is that infidel courts are less qualified to
deal in true equity, which would include spiritual factors (eg: intent).
Calling an assault, even by a spouse, a "dispute" may seem
incongruous here, but remember, we're talking _principles_ here,
not cast_in_stone rules.
Keep in mind that believers were counseled that husbands were to
love their wives even as Jesus loved the Church. I find NO example
ever mentioned where Jesus slapped around any of his followers.
Believers were also counseled to be (rough paraphrase - i think)
gentle as lambs, BUT wise as serpents. A believer is not obligated, in
spite of the "turn the other cheek" message, to submit to abuse. One
is not to seek revenge, but one is justified in protecting oneself
against depredation. That certainly includes exposing the perpetrator,
if that proves to be the only available remedy.
Perhaps none of this fits the original intent of (.0), but it is as
close as i could fathom.
[dale]
|
899.44 | phallic morality indeed... | GEMVAX::BROOKS | | Tue Jul 09 1991 17:33 | 35 |
|
.30 -
Thanks for entering that enlightening passage...I'm tempted to call Mary
Daly and thank her too. (Can she really still be employed at Boston
College?!)
I believe Susan Brownmiller, in her book Against Our Will (about rape),
also has a lot to say about the subject of women as spoils in war.
<set just a tad annoyed here on>
Rape, enslavement, murder, hacking to bits...it seems there's ample
precedent for the view of Woman as Pond Scum, right in our very own western
religious/mythological symbol system...does anybody know whether the actual
treatment of Woman as Pond Scum began before the view became p.c. in said
symbol system, or did the latter lead to the former, instead of simply
perpetuating it?
I especially like the following quote:
"If... the tokens of virginity are not found in the young woman, then they
shall bring out the young woman to the door of her father's house, and
the men of her city shall stone her to death with stones because she has
wrought folly... so you shall purge the evil from the midst of you."
Deut 22:20-21
-- can you say "commodification of women's sexuality"? (that is, if you're
still alive?)
Back to the Goddess, ;-)
Dorian
<anon, anon>
|
899.45 | my theory | TYGON::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Tue Jul 09 1991 18:18 | 36 |
| re: -1
I have this theory:
it is reasonable to assume that the female's vulnerability to the greater
strength of the male in very primitive tribal structures set the precedents
for "modern" man's domination of women. Women were physically weaker, and
therefore became the spoils of war and, most probably, the first slaves.
A woman in primitive tribal society was hampered by pregnancy and
NEEDED the support of other non-pregnant individuals in order to find food
for herself immediately prior and subsequent to childbirth. A dedicated male
companion was the ideal solution to this problem. He never got pregnant
himself and he was stronger and more able to protect her and the child from
predators, etc. However, there had to be some mechanism to "hold" the male's
dedication while the woman was vulnerable..
from this need, it is my opinion, the rituals of binding a woman to a man
in order to grant him sole access to her sexually - the earliest forms of
marriage - evolved. The benefits the man gained from this relationship were
sole access to the woman and knowledge that the offspring from such a union
were his own....and they would, therefore, feel obligated to help HIM survive
when/if he should become vulnerable, and someone to maintain his "property"
while he hunted or warred. The woman got a chance to survive...if
she managed to survive pregnancy. She also got the job of raising the children
and tending the man's posessions. The early rituals which defined roles
within the tribes and explained frightening or beneficial events evolved
over time into religeons...Religeons defined by males and designed to offer
the most direct benefits to the males. Benefits to women were mostly
incidental. While some religeons evolved with strong female fertility icons,
they invariably had also stronger male warrior/hunter icons as well. While
early humans perceived the birth of children as important, the role of the
hunter/warrior was perceived as more immediately beneficial to the tribe's
survival....and more powerful.
It is reasonable, therefore, to assume that religeous writing was affected
by the "mindset" of the writers...ergo, you have male-dominant religeons.....
|
899.46 | another theory | BUSY::KATZ | Come out, come out, wherever you are | Wed Jul 10 1991 09:30 | 41 |
| Actually, this is my theory, based upon reading Sharon Welch, Rosemary
Radford Ruether, Judith Plaskow and Mary Daly's work on the subject.
In pre-agrarian societies, the role of women within the spiritual lives
of the communities were powerful. Linked with the Great Goddess, whose
power was that to grant life, women held sole possession of the most
mysterious and sacred forces, those which granted life itself. Their
roles as exemplars of the Goddess' power gave them power within the
society. While roles may have been divided along gender lines, these
roles were equivalent in power and importance (see Aboriginal society
in Australia)
Now when the agrarian age hit us and permanent, stationary communities
were established, two things happened. The first was the obvious
creation of town settlements that required some form of governance.
Government of any form is an essentially structuralist nature, and
structuralism, the use of hierarchies and meritocracies, are key
elements of our modern patriarchal communities.
The second process is more complex in theological terms. Agriculture
meant, for the first time, people exerted control over nature. The
forces of fertility and growth were harnessed to fit human needs. In
the eyes of the societies at the time, this meant that the Goddess,
while still powerful and potentially dangerous, could be managed and
controlled. For the women in this context, that may have proven
disasterous. Many agro-societies have mythologies of how the women
once controlled the sacred rituals, but the men usurped that power and
have kept it for themselves. In that light, women's fertility, as an
expression of the Goddess' power, became something that men needed to
harness and control. What grew out of this was a growing sense of
women as inherently dangerous to male authority that led eventually
into the Judeo-Christian representations of women as represently a base
"carnality" The classic dualism is women being of the body and men
being of the soul that formed out of the separation of fertility from
the holy.
They banished the Goddess. I say we need her back.
just a few cents worth...
\D/
|