T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1144.1 | contrasting woman space to man space | DECALP::GUTZWILLER | happiness- U want what U have | Fri Sep 22 1995 08:04 | 27 |
|
"?-space" | "!-space"
-------------------------+-----------------------------
> noise level is... low high
signal level is... low high
> posturing is... not constant more constant
accomplishments are... not constant more constant
> always feels... more co-operative less co-operative
always feels... less active more active
> it is sometimes... a refreshing change no change
it is sometimes... no change exciting
> there is... a calmness and a spirit just words
> that is hard to put in words
there is... a dullness and fuzziness of thought meaning and action
that is hard to put into words
how about it! bottom line?
------------------------------------------------------
> take space to grow = leave room for doubt
passive, non-accomplishment active, productive
|
1144.2 | | DECALP::GUTZWILLER | happiness- U want what U have | Fri Sep 22 1995 08:09 | 15 |
|
> do women and men communicate differently?
the table in .1 is the product of several authors.
the table was developed in womannotes in a topic where the rationality
of women-only places is discussed.
the table is quite inspiring. it does suggest different modes of
communication between the genders.
andreas.
|
1144.3 | | DECALP::GUTZWILLER | happiness- U want what U have | Fri Sep 22 1995 09:04 | 14 |
|
a generic type of remark (not confined to just one individual):
[her personal problem is] "her inability to overcome the gyno-
repression self-flagellation chip on her shoulder."
what can we as men do to make C-P a comfortable and non-threatening
place for women?
andreas.
|
1144.4 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Fri Sep 22 1995 11:25 | 23 |
| Andreas:
I am being sincere here and don't mean to be crass...but to be honest,
I have little idea as to how to make women in C-P feel more
comfortable.
I would like it to be that way. At the same time it goes without
saying that in order to heal, a physician sometimes has to cut deep.
One of the tools used in America to make people feel comfortable is
a philosophy called, "Political Correctness". I am not going to banter
on that issue here as I'm sure I've beaten it to death already. But
the caveats to such philosophies are simple...the stifling of the
exchange of ideas and the supression of truth in the name of
sensitivity. These are two very dangerous notions and should never be
encouraged. We have already seen what it is doing to our secondary
educational system over here. Hopefully it will pass.
My advice in this forum would be to display the fruit of the
Spirit...that being peace, patience, kindless, goodness, etc. Other
than that, I truly believe convictions should not be squelched in the
name of sensitivity.
-Jack
|
1144.5 | | BIGQ::SILVA | Diablo | Fri Sep 22 1995 11:28 | 16 |
| | <<< Note 1144.4 by MKOTS3::JMARTIN "I press on toward the goal" >>>
| I am being sincere here and don't mean to be crass...but to be honest, I have
| little idea as to how to make women in C-P feel more comfortable.
If you left it would help.... heh heh..... (couldn't resist, Jack)
I think CP would be a better place for women if they would start
speaking up. Their voice is what will open doors. There will be resistance, but
I think it is the same for any group, any set of beliefs. I know for myself I
would welcome more women talking about their beliefs. It would really be a
wonderful thing!
Glen
|
1144.6 | i don't really know either | DECALP::GUTZWILLER | happiness- U want what U have | Fri Sep 22 1995 11:54 | 23 |
|
> I have little idea as to how to make women in C-P feel more
> comfortable.
maybe we ought to be asking our better halves what would make women
feel more comfortable?
maybe it's not an issue of comfort and coziness at all?
who knows, maybe this place is just another boring discussion conference
for self-indulging, self-loving, posing men and C-P holds nothing of
interest to a majority of women?
we won't know unless we ask.
i know that C-P is wide open and tolerant. at least it _appears_ this
way with not one set hidden note that i am aware of. so what are we
doing wrong here? *ARE* we doing something wrong??!
andreas.
|
1144.7 | | DECALP::GUTZWILLER | happiness- U want what U have | Fri Sep 22 1995 12:03 | 20 |
| re .5
glen, i got the idea of "just ask" from something you wrote to joe
back in the processing topic. thanks pal, the simplest approach is
sometimes the last one we think of!! :-)
now let me play devil's advocate for a moment:
> I think CP would be a better place for women if they would start
> speaking up. Their voice is what will open doors. There will be resistance,
> but I think it is the same for any group, any set of beliefs.
aren't the first ones to speak up and to brake down the barriers going to
be the radical types? aren't these readical types going to be easily dismissed
as having a skewed perspective, chip on the shoulder and all that stuff?
andreas.
|
1144.8 | | BIGQ::SILVA | Diablo | Fri Sep 22 1995 12:28 | 19 |
| | <<< Note 1144.7 by DECALP::GUTZWILLER "happiness- U want what U have" >>>
| aren't the first ones to speak up and to brake down the barriers going to
| be the radical types? aren't these readical types going to be easily dismissed
| as having a skewed perspective, chip on the shoulder and all that stuff?
andreas, at this point I don't think that will always be the case. We
are asking them to speak out if they feel compelled. As someone mentioned a
couple of notes back, maybe they can tell us what we could do to make them feel
more welcomed, more like participating. Maybe the 1st step might be that they
should contact someone off line with suggestions. But it will still come down
to they want to do this. I really hope they do as I would love to see more
womens viewpoints in here. I'd love to hear how they are doing in leadership
rolls, what obsticles they had to overcome (if any), etc. Hopefully we will get
that opportunity for this to happen.
Glen
|
1144.9 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Fri Sep 22 1995 12:46 | 6 |
| Easy rule of thumb....
Allow your doctrine to drive the agenda. Don't allow your agenda to
drive the doctrine.
-Jack
|
1144.10 | | DECALP::GUTZWILLER | happiness- U want what U have | Fri Sep 22 1995 12:53 | 6 |
| come gain, jack? you are talking in riddles.
andreas.
|
1144.11 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Fri Sep 22 1995 12:57 | 12 |
| I am hesitant as it may start ratholes
Certain individuals of the opposite gender believe certain ways because
they have an agenda. Therefore, it seems plausible to discredit
certain teachings of the word of God....lest it not match the agenda.
The agenda may be honorable and needed...however, the agenda can cloud
truth.
This is why I am saying...root yourself in truth and let your agenda be
based upon truth and not conjecture.
-Jack
|
1144.12 | | DECALP::GUTZWILLER | happiness- U want what U have | Fri Sep 22 1995 13:16 | 22 |
| i've been thinking about this thing with the truth and the agenda,
ever since you and steve leech brought it up last week in topic 1048.
everyone with a goal has an agenda. it would be dishonest to state
otherwise. every person has an agenda. every organisation has an agenda.
you cannot seek a truth without having questions in the first place.
the truth is the truth, unshakeable and absolute.
the questions come from the agenda.
all questions lead to the truth.
i don't see a problem.
the only problem i see is with wanting to make one person's agenda better
than another person's agenda.
andreas.
|
1144.13 | | CSOA1::LEECH | Dia do bheatha. | Fri Sep 22 1995 14:58 | 56 |
| re: .12
>the truth is the truth, unshakeable and absolute.
Some would make truth relative in certain areas of life, due to an
agenda or <insert personal reason>. I believe you are right, that
truth is an absolute. The problems begin when everyone uses a
different measure. When this happens you will have conflict.
How do you decide who is right and who is wrong? Truth does not
compromise itself to save one's feelings or agenda.
>the questions come from the agenda.
But the agenda *can* keep one from seeing the truth.
>all questions lead to the truth.
I disagree. All questions may lead to the seeking of truth, but
personal bias/agenda can confuse truth with belief, fusing them into a
tangle of half-truths. How do we untangle them when this happens?
>the only problem i see is with wanting to make one person's agenda better
>than another person's agenda.
It would be silly to call all agendas equal- regardless of how much one
believes in them. Some agendas will be more beneficial than others.
Some agendas may seem good, but perhaps in the long run will cause
great harm.
We can't simplify this as placing one agenda over another. As I see
it, the arguments have been going back and forth debating the truth of
a given idea. One group says it is the truth, another says the first
group is wrong. Then back and forth we go.
To be honest, though, we need to find a common ground for comparison.
Yelling at one another over truth is meaningless when those arguing use
a different measure.
I hold the Bible to be God's word. I see that it is filled with truth.
It is my guide and my "tester of the spirits". Others do not see it
this way, they find their truth elsewhere. Is my way the only way to
find the truth? No. However, it is the shortcut IMO.
I believe that simple logic can be our most effective way to meet on common
ground in many issues, amoung those who use different measures of truth.
In some areas, this will not work, but it is a place to start. Perhaps
if we all were less dogmatic and more logical, we may learn something
from one another.
Then again, maybe not. 8^)
-steve
|
1144.14 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Ps. 85.10 | Fri Sep 22 1995 15:37 | 4 |
| Paul spoke of a more excellent way.
Richard
|
1144.15 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | nothing's going to bring him back | Fri Sep 22 1995 20:47 | 39 |
| I think maybe rereading the test of 1.1 might make things a little more
clear on why there is little participation. Instead of supporting
women who are struggling to remain with a Christian faith, while
finding their place with their god, I see some people attacking the
philosophies that these women are bringing into the faith.
Now I am by no means Christian, nor do I purport to be, but being the
celebrant of a living religion, I know that challenges to the cultural,
written, and doctrinal stuff people have thrown into the walk with a
diety are a necessary part of the life of a given religion. Refusing
the dialog or attempting to squelch it when doctrial messages are
challenged is a sure way to kill off a discussion.
Now for me and I am sure others, Christianity and its preceding faith
have not been particularly woman-friendly, particularly among some of
the multitude of doctines that have grown out of this particular
one-god religion. I took one path away from it and towards an older,
living mother, others are struggling to follow the only two
commandments Jeshua set forth, to love one's god with all one's heart,
and to treat others as they would be treated. Is there anything else
in this inspirational text that is any more important? As far as I can
see the rest is so much historical and cultural stuff people can learn
from but is not breathed necessarily by your diety.
Some have been less than supportive to those who believe as the bible
as a guide, rather than as some graven image of a god. Some seem to
lack the faith that their god does speak directly to the hearts of many
of its followers. Some even seem to say that the voice some hear and
believe to be god couldn't be and are accusitive of wizardry, delusion,
or channeling.
Why am I here, being what I am and who I believe in? To add another
perspective. As one of a few women willing to speak in here I will
probably try to stay around a bit longer.
It isn't threatening to note in here, but it truly is interesting to
see what some people consider good, christian witnessing to be.
meg
|
1144.16 | | CSC32::J_OPPELT | Wanna see my scar? | Fri Sep 22 1995 21:26 | 1 |
| I wonder why there isn't this gender problem in YUKON::
|
1144.17 | | HURON::MYERS | He literally meant it figuratively | Fri Sep 22 1995 23:18 | 4 |
|
Because there, women know their place and the limits of their gender.
Eric
|
1144.18 | | CSC32::J_OPPELT | Wanna see my scar? | Sat Sep 23 1995 11:22 | 1 |
| Yeah, that must be it...
|
1144.19 | | VNABRW::BUTTON | Another day older and deeper in debt | Mon Sep 25 1995 04:16 | 26 |
| Re: .6 Andreas.
> maybe we ought to be asking our better halves what would make women
> feel more comfortable?
Maybe if we stopped referring to women in this kind of way, they
would begin to feel more comfortable. Most women would squirm at
this reference. I do, too. Why not say -- and mean! -- "partner".
Re: .5 Glen.
I know you were kidding Glen (proposing that Jack leave as an
aid to female comfort) but, if Jack did leave, it would probably
have the opposite effect. One of his most important contributions
here is that he raises the average intellectual level to a level
closer to that which most of the women feel comfortable, even if
they do not agree -- or strongly oppose -- much of what he says.
Re: (about) .15 Meg.
Food for a lot of thought. Thanks,
Greetings, Derek.
andreas.
|
1144.20 | | BIGQ::SILVA | Diablo | Mon Sep 25 1995 11:13 | 10 |
| | <<< Note 1144.18 by CSC32::J_OPPELT "Wanna see my scar?" >>>
| Yeah, that must be it...
Joe, why do you think there is not a problem with gender issues in that
file?
Glen
|
1144.21 | | BIGQ::SILVA | Diablo | Mon Sep 25 1995 11:14 | 7 |
|
Andreas, I was only kidding about Jack leaving. :-)
Glen
|
1144.22 | | CSC32::KUHN | We are the 801. | Mon Sep 25 1995 12:50 | 2 |
| re: 15
nice note!
|
1144.23 | | SMART2::DGAUTHIER | | Mon Sep 25 1995 14:08 | 19 |
| I dunno, are things that far "out of balance"? Is women's activity in the
notes conference consistent with DEC's "on-line" population stats for
men/women? Also, what about the percentage of women which are
Christian vs percentage of males which are Christian? Let's face it,
there are some christian practices/doctrines which supress women and
many women might refrain from the conference for reason of disinterest.
My female friends/co-workers wouldn't be intimidated to voice their
opinions in a notes conference or face-to-face for that matter. The
discussions in this conference seem civil and well managed. I don't
see a problem with regard to intimidation. In fact, I know some women
who would reply very aggressively to some topics to the point of
transgressing some guideline in 0.0.
-dave
|
1144.24 | some thoughts | TNPUBS::PAINTER | Planet Crayon | Tue Sep 26 1995 13:28 | 33 |
|
Re.16
>I wonder why there isn't this gender problem in YUKON::
Surely you forgot the smiley face?
But if not, let me say that I don't bother to note there because of the
attitudes in general, and yes I do find it a male-dominated conference.
The majority of the women who are welcomed there, generally have views
that are basically in line with the men, and so there is no problem.
At least on the surface. (Let me add, however, that I am kind of a
strange case in that a lot of the moderators of that conference - both
past and present - are some very dear people in my life, and we get on
very well.)
Below the surface though, is an eerie silence, and that silence is from
all the women - Christian and non-Christian - who don't agree with what
is said there, but do not wish to be viewed or pronounced as basically
heretics, witches, and 'deluded'. As writer Marianne Williamson wrote,
"Be very clear. The silence is a sick one."
In general, women prefer to discuss rather than debate. At least I do.
It's a no-win situation when the other person (a man, usually) isn't
*really* listening...rather they're only selectively listening so they
can pick up on points to shoot down in the next round. More debating
goes on in notes files than does real discussions where both parties
work together to find common ground and work from there. (One exception
was between you and me in the abortion/adoption topic.)
Having said this, I leave it to (all of) your consideration.
Cindy
|
1144.25 | Something Huge Is Being Missed | LUDWIG::BARBIERI | | Tue Sep 26 1995 14:44 | 31 |
| Man, I've just read a couple of the replies here and I feel like
a BIG thing is missing although I think Richard cryptically hit
on it.
I don't think its so much what we're saying, its how we're saying
it.
I mean, how many of us really labor to write something in a very
tactful way so that if it is something contradictory to someone
else's beliefs, at least it can come accross softly?
Talking about agendas and speaking the truth totally misses the
point.
Its a challenge for me as well. Think about how we're conveying
our message and really try to come off as hearing the other side
as well.
It kind of reminds me of something someone mentioned in a seminar
on couples. He said that something critical that might be received
by a guy as the sound of a marble hitting the ground could be
received by a woman as the crash of a boulder. And I know this is
a generalization.
Isn't something being missed when we speak of agendas and needing
to give the straight truth, but no significance is being paid to
delivering it in such a way that it doesn't sound like a boulder
being dropped?
Tony
|
1144.26 | | POWDML::FLANAGAN | let your light shine | Tue Sep 26 1995 14:56 | 5 |
| Worst case, is that maybe there is no place in Christianity for a
feminist women. Maybe it's an oxymoron to be Christian and to be a
feminist.
There certainly are a lot of Feminists who have taken that position.
|
1144.27 | | TNPUBS::PAINTER | Planet Crayon | Tue Sep 26 1995 15:03 | 6 |
|
Re.25
I think you're on to something there, Tony.
Cindy
|
1144.28 | on communication | TNPUBS::PAINTER | Planet Crayon | Tue Sep 26 1995 15:17 | 167 |
| Here are some old notes I'm crossposting from another conference that
may be useful here, for your consideration.
Two more to follow.
Cindy
<<< HYDRA::DISK_NOTES$LIBRARY:[000000]DEJAVU.NOTE;1 >>>
-< Psychic Phenomena >-
================================================================================
Note 457.1 Religions and World Peace 1 of 29
FDCV13::PAINTER 154 lines 19-AUG-1987 21:55
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
{From "Christianity and the World Religions - Paths To Dialogue with
Buddhism, Islam and Hinduism", by Hans Kung with Josef van Ess,
Heinrich von Stietencron and Heinz Bechert, pp.440-443}
Hans Kung: NO WORLD PEACE WITHOUT RELIGIOUS PEACE
--------------------------------------
Concluding word:
This dialogue was not supposed to be anything more than an interim
report. It was, as explained, an attempt, a risky experiment, and it
is not for me to say whether it succeeded.
In its course, certain convergences and divergences between religions
have become clear. And if we have managed to clarify the one
question of what religious dialogue no longer has to argue over and
what it does, we will have achieved a great deal.
The Christian Responses in particular will be criticized - presumably
from both sides. For some they will be too "Christian"; for others,
not "Christian" enough; for some, too open, too yielding, too
pluralistic; for others, too narrow, too limiting, too self-conscious.
......
Why must this dialogue go on? First of all, in order to get an
increasingly better understanding of our contemporaries, the men and
women with whom our lives are becoming ever more closely linked. But
also to understand ourselves better, which we can do only through
comparison and encounter. ... And thirdly, because interreligious
dialogue is anything but a private, personal, local or regional
matter. Its global dimensions are obvious, and so are its
repercussions on the communal life of the nation and the world. These
days, nobody would seriously dispute the fact that peace in the world
very much depends on the peace among the various religions. And in an
age when the technology for an atomic holocaust is already in place,
this aspect of religious dialogue is more important than all the
meticulous academic precision, theological subtlety, and intellectual
sophistry.
There is, then, a significant connection between ecumenism and world
peace. Anyone who feels a sense of obligation toward world community
and who takes seriously the fragility of all human arrangements, who
has glimpsed all the possibilities of technical and human error, must
know what is at stake here. He must know that threats to peace and
the need to regulate it have long sense burst through the dimension of
specific, regional conflict, and have become global political
problems, on which the survival of us all depends. The ALTERNATIVE
TODAY IS PEACE IN THE ECUMENE (INHABITED WORLD) OR THE DESTRUCTION OF
THE ECUMENE ITSELF.
What can an edumenical theology contribute to the pacification of our
warlike world? Surely no direct solutions for all the complex
questions of strategy, military-industrial technology, and
disarmament. That is not its original and primary responsibility,
anyway.
Its very own domain of reflection and action - and even scientists and
politicians are beginning once again to pay more attention to this
ethical-religious dimension - is behavior, morality, religion. And
here ecumenical theology can help to discover and work the conflicts
caused by the religions, confessions and denominations themselves.
And there are a great many structures of conflict that will have to be
dismantled.
Everyone knows how much disaster has been occasioned in politics by
RELIGIOUS STRIFE AMONG CHRISTIANS. One need only recall Northern
Ireland to realize what I mean. And Catholic-Protestant antagonism
was likely a contributing factor, at least subliminally, to the insane
war over the Falkland Islands; just as the feelings of superiority and
the efforts to win hegemony by Protestant Yankees in Catholic Central
and South America - and the reactions to them - have always borne the
stamp of culture and religion.
What have churches done to oppose this? True, they have SPOKEN for
peace and not war, at least in recent days, and that is a good deal.
Generally they have done this speaking, to be sure, only where they
could do so without any risk. But have they DONE enough for peace: in
Vietnam, in Lebanon, in Argentina, in Great Britain, in Germany, in
Europe and America, Africa and Asia? Let me say once more,
unmistakably: Religions, Christianity, the Church, cannot solve or
prevent the world's conflicts, but they can lessen the amount of
hostility, hatred, and intransigence. They can, first, intervene
concretely for the sake of understanding and reconciliation between
estranged peoples. And second, they can begin to do away with at
least the conflicts of which they themselves are the cause and for
whose explosiveness they are partly to blame: They can settle the
doctrinal (and ensuing practical) differences that have divided the
Church.
This is not demanding the impossible of religions and the churches, it
is merely asking them to live up to their own programs and basic
intentions, asking them to direct their appeals for peace not only
toward the outside (important as that is), but to the inside as well,
and thus to do deeds of reconciliation and set up signs of peace in
their own backyards. We can be sure that these deeds of
reconciliation, that these sighs of peace, will not fail to radiate
powerful signals onto the fields of conflict "out there".
Furthermore, there is no denying that the great world RELIGIONS
THEMSELVES (and not just Christian denominations or ideologies that
have swollen into quasi religions) share the responsibility for some
of the most NOTORIOUS POWDER KEGS IN THE WORLD. Looking from the Far
East to the Near East, no one could fail to see that in the Vietnam
War there were religious factors at war (antagonism between Buddhist
monks and the Catholic regime); that the conflict between India and
Pakistan, the territorial split that occurred against the will of
Mahatma Gandhi, has to this day fed on the irreconcilable hostility
between Hindus and Muslims, continually leading to new massacres (not
to mention the blood shed by Indians and Sikhs); that the war between
Iraq and Iran has roots in centuries-old inner-Muslim rivalry and
enmity between Sunnites and Shiites?
This is to pass over the Middle Eastern conflict, where, as everyone
knows, Muslims, Jews, and Christians confront each other, armed to the
teeth, and where they have already lacerated on another in the fifth
war within the past few decades.
The most fanatical, cruelest political struggles are those that have
been colored, inspired, and legitimized by religion. To say this is
not to reduce all the political conflicts to religious ones, but to
take seriously the fact that religions SHARE the responsibility for
bringing peace to our torn and warring world. Christians, Jews, and
Muslims, Hindus and Buddhists, are facing the same challenge. The
peoples in question and the rest of the world would have been spared
tremendous grief if the world religions had recognized sooner their
responsibility for peace, love of neighbor, and nonviolence, for
reconciliation and forgiveness - as exemplified by the Hindu Mahatma
Ghandhi, the Christian Dag Hammarskjold, the Muslim Anwar el-Sadat,
and the Buddhist U Thant, all of whom promoted the politics of peace
out of religious conviction.
To sum up, ecumenical dialogue is today anything but the speciality of
a few starry-eyed religious peacenicks. For the first time in
history, it has now taken on the character of an urgent desideratum
for world politics. It can help to make our earth more livable, by
making it more peaceful and more reconciled.
There will be no peace among the peoples of this world without peace
among the world religions.
There will be no peace among the world religions without peace among
the Christian churches.
The community of the Church is an integral part of the world
community.
Ecumenism 'ad intra', concentrated on the Christian world, and
ecumenism 'ad extra', oriented toward the whole inhabited earth, are
INTERDEPENDENT.
PEACE IS INDIVISIBLE: IT BEGINS WITH US.
|
1144.29 | | TNPUBS::PAINTER | Planet Crayon | Tue Sep 26 1995 15:17 | 346 |
|
<<< HYDRA::DISK_NOTES$LIBRARY:[000000]DEJAVU.NOTE;1 >>>
-< Psychic Phenomena >-
================================================================================
Note 457.2 Religions and World Peace 2 of 29
FDCV13::PAINTER 343 lines 19-AUG-1987 21:56
-< Stages of Spiritual Development >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Excerpts from "The Different Drum", by M.Scott Peck, M.D.
=========================================================
From the beginning of the book:
"To the people of all nations, in the hopes that within a
century there will no longer be a Veterans Day Parade
but that there will be lots of living people left to march
to a different drum, because all the world loves a parade."
From Chapter IX - Patterns of Transformation, pp.186-200
--------------------------------------------------------
The key to community is the acceptance - in fact, the celebration - of
our individual and cultural differences. Such acceptance and
celebration - which resolves the problem of pluralism and which can
occur only after we learn to become empty (of intolerances) - is also
the key to world peace.
This does not mean, however that as we struggle toward world community
we need to consider all individuals or all cultures and societies
equally good or mature. To do so would be to fall prey once again to
a complex variation of the "illusion of human nature" a variation that
says "We are all different but all the same or equal in our
differences. This is simply not true. The reality is that just as
some individuals have become more mature than others, some cultures
are more or less flawed than others.
Thus we need labor under no compulsion to feel the same degree of
attraction to each and everyone - or the same degree of taste for
every culture. So Gale Webbe wrote in his classic work on the deeper
aspects of spiritual growth that the further one grows spiritually,
the more and more people one loves and the fewer and fewer people one
likes. (* Gale Webbe, 'The Night and Nothing, p.60) This is because
when we have become sufficiently adept at recognizing our own flaws so
as to cure them, we naturally become adept at recognizing the flaws in
others. We may not like people because of these flaws or
immaturities, but the further we ourselves grow, the more we become
able to accept - to love - them, flaws and all. Christ's commandment
is not to like one another; it is to 'love' one another.
Like community itself, that love is not easy to muster. It is a part
of the journey of the spirit. If that journey is not understood it
can be a major factor in driving us human beings even further apart.
The knowledge of its principles, however, can do much to bring us
together in peace.
THE STAGES OF SPIRITUAL GROWTH
...Over the course of a decade of practicing psychotherapy a strange
pattern began to emerge. If people who were religious came to me in
pain and trouble, and if they became engaged in the therapeutic
process so as to go the whole route, they frequently left therapy as
atheists, agnostics, or at least skeptics. On the other hand, if
atheists, agnostics, or skeptics came to me in pain or difficulty and
became fully engaged, they frequently left therapy as deeply religious
people.
"Same therapy, same therapist, successful but utterly different
outcomes from a religious point of view. ...It didn't compute until I
realized that 'we are not all in the same place spiritually'.
With that realization came another: there is a pattern of progression
through identifiable stages in human spiritual life. .....But here I will
talk about those stages only in general, for individuals are unique and do
not always fit neatly into any psychological or spiritual pigeonhole.
With that caveat, let me list my own understanding of these stages and the
names I have chosen to give them:
STAGE I - Chaotic, antisocial
STAGE II - Formal, institutional
STAGE III - Skeptic, individual
STAGE IV - Mystic, communal"
Most all young children and perhaps one in five adults fall into Stage
I. It is essentially a stage of undeveloped spirituality. I call it
antisocial because those adults who are in it (People Of The Lie -
book by same name) seem generally incapable of loving others.
Although they may pretend to be loving (and think of themselves that
way), their relationships with their fellow human beings are all
essentially manipulative and self-serving. ...Being unprincipled,
there is nothing that governs them except their own will. And since
that will from moment to moment can go this way or that, there is a
lack of integrity in their being.
From time to time people in Stage I get in touch with the chaos of
their own being, and when they do, I think it is the most painful
experience a human can have. A few, I suspect, may kill themselves,
unable to envision change. And some, occasionally, convert to Stage
II. Such conversions are usually sudden and dramatic and, I believe,
God-given. It is as if God had reached down and grabbed their soul
and yanked it up a quantum leap. The process also seems to be an
unconscious one It just seems to happen.
There are several things that characterize the behavior of men and
women in Stage II of their spiritual development, which is the stage
of the majority of churchgoers and believers (as well as that of most
emotionally healthy "latency"-period children). One is their
attachment to the forms (as opposed to the essence) of their religion,
which is why I call this stage "formal" as well as "institutional".
They are in fact sometimes so attached to the canons and the liturgy
that they become very upset if changes are made in the words or the
music or in the traditional order of things. ...Since it is precisely
these forms that are responsible for their liberation from chaos, it
is no wonder that people at this stage become so threatened when
someone seems to be playing footloose and fancy-free with the rules.
Another thing characterizing the religious behavior of Stage II people
is that their vision of God is almost entirely that of an external.,
transcendent Being. They have very little understanding of the
immanent, indwelling God - the God of the Holy Spirit, or what Quakers
call the Inner Light. and although they often consider Him loving,
they also generally feel He possesses - and will use - punitive power.
But once again, it is no accident that their vision of God is that of
a giant benevolent Cop in the Sky, because that is precisely the kind
of God they need - just as they need a legalistic religion for their
governance.
What happens to children when they are raised in a Stage II home
environment? They are treated with importance and dignity (and taken
to Sunday school as well) and that they absorb the principles of
Christianity as if with their mother's milk - or the principles of
Buddhism if raised in a Buddhist home, or of Islam if raised in a
Muslim home, and so on. The principles of their parents' religion are
literally engraved on their hearts, or come to be what
psychotherapists call "internalized".
But once these principles become internalized, such children, now
usually late-adolescents, have become self-governing human beings. As
such they are no longer dependent on an institution for their
governance. Consequently they begin to say to themselves, "Who needs
this fuddy-duddy old Church with its silly superstitions?" At this
point they begin to convert to Stage III - skeptic, individual. And
to their parents' great but unnecessary chagrin, they often become
atheists or agnostics.
Although frequently "nonbelievers," people in Stage III are generally
more spiritually developed than many content to remain in Stage II.
Although individualistic, they are not the least bit antisocial. To
the contrary, they are often deeply involved in and committed to
social causes. They make up their own minds and are no more likely to
believe everything they read in the papers than to believe it
necessary to acknowledge Jesus as Lord and Savior (as opposed to
Buddha or Mao or Socrates) in order to be saved. They make loving,
intensely dedicated parents. As skeptics they are often scientists,
and as such they are again highly submitted to principle. Indeed,
what we call the scientific method is a collection of conventions and
procedures that have been designed to combat our extraordinary
capacity to deceive ourselves in the interest of submission to
something higher than our own immediate emotional or intellectual
comfort - namely, truth. Advanced Stage III men and women are active
truth seekers.
"Seek and you shall find," it has been said. If people in Stage III
seek the truth deeply and widely enough, they find what they are
looking for - enough pieces to begin to fit them together but never
enough to complete the whole puzzle. In fact, the more pieces they
find, the larger and more magnificent the puzzle becomes. Yet they
are able to get glimpses of the "big picture" and to see that it is
very beautiful indeed - and that it strangely resembles those
"primitive myths and superstitions" their Stage II parents and
grandparents believe in . At this point they begin conversion to
Stage IV, which is the mystic communal stage of spiritual development.
...Mysticism also obviously has to do with mystery. Mystics
acknowledge the enormity of the unknown, but rather than being
frightened by it, they seek to penetrate even deeper into it that they
may understand more - even with the realization that the more they
understand, the greater the mystery will become. They love mystery,
in dramatic contrast to those in Stage II, who need simple, clear-cut
dogmatic structures and have little taste for the unknown and the
unknowable. While Stage IV men and women will enter religion in order
to approach mystery, people in Stage II, to a considerable extent,
enter religion in order to escape from it.
"Finally, mystics throughout the ages have not only spoken of emptiness
but extolled its virtues. I have labeled STAGE IV communal as well as
mystical not because all mystic or even a majority of them live in communes
but because among human beings they are the ones most aware that the whole
world is a community and realize what divides us into warring camps is
precisely the 'lack' of this awareness. Having become practiced at
emptying themselves of preconceived notions and prejudices and able to
perceive the invisible underlying fabric that connects everything, they do
not think in terms of factions or blocs or even national boundaries; they
'know' this to be one world.
...Perhaps, predictably, there exists a sense of threat among people
in the different stages of religious development. Mostly we are
threatened by people in the stages above us.
...STAGE I people are threatened by just about everything and everybody.
STAGE II people are not threatened by STAGE I people, the "sinners". They
are commanded to love sinners. But they are very threatened by the
individuals and skeptics of STAGE III and even more by the mystics of STAGE
IV, who seem to believe in the same sorts of things they do but believe in
them with a freedom they find absolutely terrifying. STAGE III people, on
the other hand, are neither threatened by STAGE I people nor by STAGE II
people (whom they simply regard as superstitious) but are cowed by STAGE IV
people, who seem to be scientific-minded like themselves and know how to
write good footnotes, yet somehow believe in this crazy God business."
...Much of the art of being a good teacher, healer, or minister
consists largely in staying just one step ahead of your patients,
clients, or pupils. If you are not ahead, it is unlikely that you
will be able to lead them anywhere. But if you are two steps ahead, it
is likely that you will lose them. If people are one step ahead, we
usually admire them. If they are two steps ahead of us, we usually
think they are evil. That's why Socrates and Jesus were killed; they
were thought to be evil.
...An understanding of the stages of spiritual development is
important for community building. A group of only Stage IV people or
only Stage II people is, of course, not so much a community as a
clique. A true community will likely include people of all stages.
With this understanding, it is possible for people in different stages
to transcend the sense of threat that divides them and to become a
true community.
In my experience the most dramatic example of this possibility
occurred in a relatively small community-building group I led several
years ago. To this two-day group of twenty-five, there came ten
fundamentalist Stage II Christians, five Stage III atheists with their
own guru - a brilliant, highly rationalized trial lawyer - and ten
Stage IV mystical Christians. There were moments I despaired that we
would ever make it into community. The fundamentalists were furious
that I, their supposed leader, smoked and drank and vigorously
attempted to heal me of my hypocrisy and addiction. The mystics
equally vigorously challenged the fundamentalists' sexism,
intolerance, and other forms of rigidity. Both of course were utterly
dedicated to converting the atheists. The atheists in turn sneered at
the arrogance of us Christians in even daring to think that we had
gotten hold of some kind of truth. Nonetheless, after approximately
twelve hours of the most intense struggle together to empty ourselves
of our intolerances, we became able to let one another be, each in his
or her own stage. And we became a community. But we could not have
done so without the cognitive awareness of the different stages of
spiritual development and the realization that we were not all "in the
same place,", and that that was literally all right.
My experience suggests that this progression of spiritual development
holds true in all cultures and for all religions. Indeed, one of the
things that seems to characterize all the great religions -
Christianity, Buddhism, Taoism, Islam, Judaism, Hinduism - is their
capacity to speak to people in both Stage II and Stage IV. In fact, I
suspect this is why they are great religions. It is as if the words
of each had two different translations. Let us take a Christian
example: "Jesus is my savior." At Stage II this is often translated
into a Jesus who is a kind of fairy godmother who will rescue me
whenever I get in trouble as long as I remember to call upon his name.
And that's true. He will do just that. At Stage IV "Jesus is my
savior" is translated as "Jesus, through his life and death, taught me
the way I must follow for my salvation." Which is also true. Two
totally different translations, two totally different meanings, but
both of them true.
"It is also important to remember that no matter how far we develop
spiritually, we retain in ourselves vestiges of the previous stages
through which we have come... I don't suppose I could be writing
this were I not basically a kind of STAGE IV person.
But I can assure you that there exists a STAGE I Scott Peck, who at
the first sign of any significant stress is quite tempted to lie and
cheat and steal. I keep him well encaged, I hope, in a rather
comfortable cell, so that he won't be let loose upon the world. (And
I am able to do this only because I acknowledge his existence, which
is what Jungian psychologists mean by the 'integration of the Shadow'.
Indeed, I do not attempt to kill him if for no other reason than that
I need to go down into the dungeon from time to time to consult him,
safely ensconced behind the bars, when I am in need of a particular
kind of 'street smarts').
Similarly, there is a STAGE II Scott Peck, who in moments of stress
and fatigue would very much like to have a Big Brother or Big Daddy
around who would give him some clear-cut, black-and-white answers to
life's difficult, ambiguous dilemmas and some formulas to tell him how
to behave, relieving him of the responsibility of figuring it all out
for himself.
And there is STAGE III Scott Peck, who if invited to address a
prestigious scientific assembly, under stress of such an occasion
would want to regress into thinking, Well, I better just talk to them
about carefully controlled, measurable studies and not mention any of
this God business."
"...Conversions from STAGE I and STAGE II are usually sudden and
dramatic. Conversions from STAGE III to STAGE IV are generally
gradual."
....It is during the process of conversion from STAGE III to STAGE IV
that people generally first become conscious that there is such a
thing as spiritual growth. There is a potential pitfall in this
consciousness, however, and that is the notion some have at this point
that they can they themselves 'direct' the process. ...I believe that
we cannot get to God under our own steam. We must allow God to do the
directing.
In any case, whether sudden or gradual, no matter how different in
other respects, Stages I to II and Stages III to IV conversions do
have one thing in common: a sense on the part of the persons converted
that their own conversions were not something they themselves achieved
but rather gifts from God.
As a part of the process of spiritual growth, the transition from
Stage II to Stage III is also conversion. We can be converted to
atheism or agnosticism or, at least, skepticism! Indeed I have every
reason to believe that God has a hand in this part of the conversion
process as well. One of the greatest challenges, in fact, facing the
Church is how to facility the conversion of its members from Stage II
to Stage IV without them having to spend a whole adult lifetime in
Stage III. It is a challenge that the Church has historically avoided
rather than begun to face. As far as I'm concerned, one of the
greatest sins of our sinful Christian Church has been its
discouragement, through the ages, of doubt. In so doing, it has
consistently driven growing people out of its potential community,
often fixating them thereby in a perpetual resistance to spiritual
insights. Conversely, the Church is not going to meet this challenge
until doubt is properly considered a Christian virtue - indeed, a
Christian responsibility. We neither can nor should skip over
questioning in our development.
In fact, it is only through the process of questioning that we begin
to become even dimly aware that the whole point of life is the
development of souls. As I said, the notion that we can totally
direct this development is a pitfall of such awareness. But the
beauty of the consciousness that we are all on an ongoing spiritual
journey and that there is no end to our conversion far outshines that
one pitfall. For once we become aware that we are on a journey - that
we are all pilgrims - for the first time we can actually begin to
cooperate consciously with God in the process.
That is why Paul Vitz, at a symposium with me, correctly told the audience:
"I think Scott's stages have a good deal of validity, and I suspect
that I shall be using them in my practice, but I want you to remember
that what Scotty calls STAGE IV is the beginning."
|
1144.30 | | TNPUBS::PAINTER | Planet Crayon | Tue Sep 26 1995 15:17 | 133 |
| <<< HYDRA::DISK_NOTES$LIBRARY:[000000]DEJAVU.NOTE;1 >>>
-< Psychic Phenomena >-
================================================================================
Note 457.3 Religions and World Peace 3 of 29
FDCV13::PAINTER 130 lines 19-AUG-1987 21:59
-< Stages of Community >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Excerpts from "The Different Drum", by M.Scott Peck, M.D.
=========================================================
From Chapter IX - Patterns of Transformation, pp.200-206
--------------------------------------------
TRANSCENDING CULTURE
The process of spiritual development I have described is highly
analogous to the development of community. Stage I people are
frequently pretenders; they pretend they are loving and pious,
covering up their lack of principles. The first, primitive stage of
group formation - pseudocommunity - is similarly characterized by
pretense. The group tries to look like a community without doing any
of the work involved.
Stage II people have begin the work of submitting themselves to the
principle - the law. But they do not yet understand the spirit of the
law. Consequently they are legalistic, parochial, and dogmatic.
They are threatened by anyone who thinks differently from them, and so
regard it as their responsibility to convert or save the other 90 or
99 percent of humanity who are not "true believers." it is this same
style of functioning that characterizes the second stage of the
community process in which the group members try vehemently to fix one
another. The chaos that results is not unlike that existing among the
various feuding denominations or sects within or between the world's
different religions.
Stage III, a phase of questioning, is analogous to the crucial stage
of emptiness in community formation. In reaching for community the
members of a group must question themselves. "Is my particular
theology so certain - so true and complete - as to justify my
conclusion that these other people are not saved?" they may ask. Or
"I wonder to what extent my feelings about homosexuals (or any other
'group') represent a prejudice bearing little relation to reality?".
Or "Could I have swallowed the party line in thinking that all
religious people are fanatics?". Indeed, such questioning is the
required beginning of the emptying process. We cannot succeed in
emptying ourselves of preconceptions, prejudices, needs to control or
convert, and so forth, without first becoming skeptical of them and
without doubting their necessity. Conversely, individuals remain
stuck in Stage III precisely because they do not doubt deeply enough.
To enter Stage IV they must begin to empty themselves of some of the
dogmas of skepticism such as Anything that can't be measured
scientifically can't be known and isn't worth studying. They must
begin to doubt even their own doubt.
Does this mean, then, that a true community is a group of all Stage IV
people? Paradoxically the answer is yes and no. It is no because the
individual members are hardly capable of growing so rapidly as to
totally discard their customary styles of thinking when they return
from the group to their usual worlds. But it is yes because in
community the members have learned how to behave in a Stage IV manner
in relation to one another. Among themselves they all practice
the kind of emptiness, acceptance, and inclusiveness that have
characterized the behavior of mystics throughout the ages. They
retain their basic identity as Stage I, II, III, or IV individuals.
Indeed, knowledge of these stages is in part so important because it
facilitates the acceptance of one another as being in different stages
- different places spiritually. Such acceptance is a prerequisite for
community. But, wonderfully, once such acceptance is achieved - and
it can be achieved only through emptiness - Stage I, II and III men
and women routinely possess the capacity to act toward one another as
if they were Stage IV people. In other words, out of love and
commitment to the whole, virtually all of us are capable of
transcending our backgrounds and limitations. So it is that genuine
community is so much more than the sum of its parts. It is, in truth,
a mystical body.
...The conversion from Stage I to Stage II is essentially a leap of
socialization or enculturation. It is at that point at which we first
adopt the values of our tribal, cultural religion and begin to make
them our own. Just as Stage II people tend to be threatened, however,
by any questioning of their religious dogma, so they are also
"culture-bound" - utterly convinced that the way things are done in
their culture is the right and only way. And just as people entering
Stage III begin to question the religious doctrines with which they
were raised, so they also begin to question all cultural values of the
society into which they were born. Finally as they (the STAGE III
skeptics) begin to reach for STAGE IV, they also begin to reach toward
the notion of world community and the possibility of either
transcending culture or - depending on which way you want to use the
words - belonging to a planetary culture."
Aldous Huxley (from 'The Perennial Philosophy) labeled mysticism "the
perennial philosophy" because the mystical way of thinking and being
has existed in all cultures and all times since the dawn of recorded
history. Although a small minority, mystics of all religions the
world over have demonstrated an amazing commonalty, unity. Unique
though they might be in their individual personhood, they have largely
escaped free from - transcended - those human differences that are
cultural.
...I continue today no longer to belong anywhere in terms of what is
usually thought of as a culture. But I am far from being alone.
Slowly I have found a person here and a person there in the same
predicament. And ours was not a miserable affair, like the poor "man
without a country" who was doomed forever to roam the seas in a narrow
sailing vessel. To the contrary, we were far more free than most to
move through the nations of the world, no longer bound by cultural
conventions. There were times when it was lonely, but in recent years
men and women without a culture have been joining me by the tens of
thousands. None of us would go back, even if we could, but we do from
time to time experience a certain poignant sadness that, as perpetual
pilgrims, we "can't go home again."
....Nowhere in all of literature is there a better description of
someone who had transcended culture than in the Gospels. Before and
since Jesus, from time to time there have been saints who have
transcended their culture and also had "no place to lay their heads."
But they were one in ten thousand, if that. Today it is different.
Because of the multiplicity of factors - most particularly instant,
mass communication that brings foreign cultures to our door, and the
availability of psychotherapy that leads us to question the programs,
cultural and otherwise, within which we were raised - the number of
people entering the mystical stage of development and transcending
ordinary culture seems to have increased a thousandfold in the course
of a mere generation or two. They remain a minority - currently no
more than one in twenty. Still one wonders if the explosion in their
numbers might represent a giant leap forward in the evolution of the
human race, a leap toward not only mystical but global consciousness
and world community.* "
* Perhaps the greatest prophet of this leap was Teilhard de Chardin.
|
1144.31 | | BIGQ::SILVA | Diablo | Tue Sep 26 1995 18:30 | 13 |
| | <<< Note 1144.26 by POWDML::FLANAGAN "let your light shine" >>>
| Worst case, is that maybe there is no place in Christianity for a feminist
| women.
I know a lot of people who would love you to believe that, Patricia.
Don't you ever let them convince you. God will accept anyone who asks. Even
Jack Martin! :-) So yes, a feminist is welcomed by God.
Glen
|
1144.32 | | POWDML::FLANAGAN | let your light shine | Wed Sep 27 1995 09:29 | 16 |
| Glen,
I have absolute Faith that a feminist is welcome by God.
My faith that there is a place in Christianity for a feminist is not so
absolute.
I guess I may be in a similiar place as Richard if I am interpreting
Richard correctly.
Jesus may be the Way, the Truth and the Life, but is Christianity the
way, the truth, and the life? And if it isn't, then what am I suppose
to do about it!
Patricia
|
1144.33 | | POWDML::FLANAGAN | let your light shine | Wed Sep 27 1995 09:44 | 8 |
| Cindy,
It would be a lot easier if you didn't bring Scott Peck up.
Then I could retreat to the UU saftey net and never worry about world
community of liberals, conservatives, and fundementalists!
Patricia
|
1144.34 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Wed Sep 27 1995 10:22 | 22 |
| Patricia:
There is an old hymn that I have to remind myself of quite
frequently...
"Have thine own way Lord...have thine own way.
You are the potter...I am the clay....
Mold me and make me....after thy will.....
While I am waiting...yielded and still..."
I really don't know what to say about your dilemna. It would appear I
am what a feminist would consider "the enemy", considering I am of the
belief that men and women coexist, equally important in the eyes of God
and yet there is a variance in the roles of men and women. I believe
this, I've seen it work and I've seen for the most part solid family
units because of it. I have a hard time shunning that which works.
The only thing I would like to say is what I have said in the past.
A cause or a crusade in life must be molded by our outlook on God and
His Word. God and his Word must not be molded by a cause.
-Jack
|
1144.35 | | POWDML::FLANAGAN | let your light shine | Wed Sep 27 1995 10:43 | 15 |
| Jack,
I am willing to let God mold me as God will.
I am not willing to let institutional Christianity mold me as Christianity
might want too.
I am not willing to let fundementalist Christianity use the Bible on me
as they might want too!
It's that simple.
If it really works for you Jack, then I am glad.
Patricia
|
1144.36 | | BIGQ::SILVA | Diablo | Wed Sep 27 1995 11:17 | 1 |
| <---Patricia, that has to be one of the shortest, best notes I have ever seen!!!
|
1144.37 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Wed Sep 27 1995 11:22 | 5 |
| Glen....
Excellent note!
|
1144.38 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Wed Sep 27 1995 11:28 | 22 |
| ZZ I am not willing to let institutional Christianity mold me as
ZZ Christianity might want too.
You mean as institutional Christianity might want to...and that is
fine.
ZZ I am not willing to let fundementalist Christianity use the Bible
ZZ on me as they might want too!
That may be as well...but truth is truth regardless of how
uncomfortable it may make us feel.
I am reminded of the times when Jesus was being tempted by Satan.
Every time Satan would try to tempt Jesus, Jesus would always refute by
saying, "Thus saith the Lord..." I believe this is why the Bible is
referred to in scripture as the Sword of Truth. You may recall even
Satan attempted to use the Word of God out of context...the caveat to
picking and choosing which scripture is inspired and which is not.
-Jack
ZZ It's that simple.
|
1144.39 | (;^) | TNPUBS::PAINTER | Planet Crayon | Wed Sep 27 1995 12:52 | 6 |
|
Re.33
Oops! Sorry Patricia.
Cindy
|
1144.40 | On Being Willing (and Unwilling) | STRATA::BARBIERI | | Wed Sep 27 1995 12:52 | 24 |
| "I am willing to let God mold me as God will."
Patricia, isn't that a tad bit presumptuous? I am of the persuasion
that I don't know my heart. God could be WILLING for me to make
a zillion different choices in my life and my understandings, but
it is possible that my heart is so hard that I don't discern the
communication of His will toward me all that well.
It is in a personal conviction of weakness that God can really work
through us. We all need to better know our own soul-poverty. The
better we have a sense of how much we *do not allow* God to mold us
as He will, the more we will cry out for that heart that really does
allow Him to mold us, and the more we really will enable Him to do so.
I believe there are a myriad of paradoxes in truth.
The following is one...
The more we think we are willing, the less willing we really are.
The more, in a sense of deep soul poverty, we think we are unwilling,
the more willing we really are!
Tony
|
1144.41 | Matthew 23:27 | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (DTN 297-5780, MRO2-3/E8) | Wed Sep 27 1995 13:45 | 30 |
| re Note 1144.38 by MKOTS3::JMARTIN:
> I am reminded of the times when Jesus was being tempted by Satan.
> Every time Satan would try to tempt Jesus, Jesus would always refute by
> saying, "Thus saith the Lord..." I believe this is why the Bible is
> referred to in scripture as the Sword of Truth. You may recall even
> Satan attempted to use the Word of God out of context...the caveat to
> picking and choosing which scripture is inspired and which is not.
I think that you just made quite the opposite point --
Scripture isn't infallible except when the interpretation
(the picking and choosing, if you will) is infallible. Satan
used Scripture, yet he was dead wrong, just as
fundamentalists are (sometimes) dead wrong in their use of
Scripture. Finding something in Scripture is no guarantee --
what made Jesus' quote of Scripture correct was not
Scripture, but Jesus!
(Remember, Jesus often told stories that were non-scriptural
in origin -- no conservative doubts their truth simply
because Jesus didn't find them in Scripture! You don't
believe that Scripture alone is infallible yourself, yet you
use it as a club to attack others!)
Now perhaps if you are Catholic you might believe that you
have a source of infallible interpretation upon which to
rely, but if you aren't, then you must rely on the Holy
Spirit, which is the same as Patricia's "still small voice".
Bob
|
1144.42 | | POWDML::FLANAGAN | let your light shine | Wed Sep 27 1995 13:54 | 8 |
| It is not presumptious.
I'm not saying I have absolute faith in my power to comprehend God's
will for me.
I'm saying I have absolute faith in the Master Craftsperson's power to
mold me as the Master wills.
|
1144.43 | | APACHE::MYERS | He literally meant it figuratively | Wed Sep 27 1995 17:00 | 15 |
|
From Note 1146.14
> Man: It is mankind's idea.
>
> Woman: I don't feel included when you use mankind.
>
> Man: I don't care. How many times have I told you womankind are
> included within mankind.
While I do care that you don't feel included in the term mankind, I
don't fully understand why. As a man, I've never felt included in
mankind just because the first three letters are m-a-n.
Eric
|
1144.44 | Re.43 | TNPUBS::PAINTER | Planet Crayon | Wed Sep 27 1995 17:28 | 14 |
|
Eric,
I'm not sure how to answer except to say, try putting yourself in a
woman's place, and reread what you wrote in the 'Man'/'Woman' dialogue,
and then see you you feel.
I have heard men actually say that they don't care how women feel -
that 'mankind' includes women, and it's 'always been done that way',
and is 'proper English', and so they have no intention of changing just
to cater to those feminist women who do not feeling included. And so
on.
Cindy
|
1144.45 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Wed Sep 27 1995 17:42 | 16 |
| Cindy:
In my case, I do care how women feel but at the same time I didn't
believe feelings took the primary role over proper English protocol.
Since Webster is an authority on the Enlish language, and since
Womankind and humankind are now in the dictionary, I now believe the
use of those words as proper and will start using them. See, I am not
as stubborn as you think!
Now what would you think of me if I stated the dictionary is a
wonderful book of truths; however, there are certain words like
humankind that I simply refuse to follow since they interfere with my
male dominance agenda. What would you think of me then???
-Jack
|
1144.46 | | POWDML::FLANAGAN | let your light shine | Wed Sep 27 1995 17:50 | 1 |
| our first call for the Innerrancy principle as applied to Webster!
|
1144.47 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Wed Sep 27 1995 17:54 | 6 |
| Patricia:
I am still interested in your reply on humility...washing feet and all
that.
-Jack
|
1144.48 | question | TNPUBS::PAINTER | Planet Crayon | Wed Sep 27 1995 18:01 | 7 |
|
Jack,
Let me ascertain one thing first - do you indeed, in truth, have a male
dominance agenda?
Cindy
|
1144.49 | | TNPUBS::PAINTER | Planet Crayon | Wed Sep 27 1995 18:06 | 18 |
|
re.45
Jack,
>proper English protocol.
Is a fallacy. This language has been evolving since its inception, and
will continue to. You may object to changing it due to 'feelings',
however since this culture teaches men to repress their feelings, I'm
not all that surprised at your response.
I sincerely doubt, furthermore, that it was a man who insisted that the
title 'Ms.' be included in the language, and yet finally after many
years it is an accepted title used quite commonly. And so on.
Cindy
|
1144.50 | ! | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (DTN 297-5780, MRO2-3/E8) | Wed Sep 27 1995 18:10 | 13 |
| re Note 1144.45 by MKOTS3::JMARTIN:
> In my case, I do care how women feel but at the same time I didn't
> believe feelings took the primary role over proper English protocol.
What was it that Jesus said about the relationship between
the Sabbath and people?
I think the same thing could be said about the English (or
any other) language -- it is made for humanity, and not the
other way around.
Bob
|
1144.51 | | APACHE::MYERS | He literally meant it figuratively | Wed Sep 27 1995 18:13 | 25 |
|
> I'm not sure how to answer except to say, try putting yourself in a
> woman's place, and reread what you wrote in the 'Man'/'Woman' dialogue,
> and then see you you feel.
I can't honestly put myself in the place of a woman... or an black, or
a Jew. I can sympathize, but I can't empathize.
From my perspective -- admittedly the socially secure perspective of
maleness -- I see the word 'man' as a homonym. In some uses gender is
implied and in others it is not. When 'm-a-n' (or 'm-e-n') is used as a
prefix or suffix, it has conveyed gender neutrality to me. For example,
mankind, and chairman. The word 'woman' has always been gender
specific.
I guess women, or more correctly some women and some men, don't share
this perspective of the word 'man,' that is it's context conditional
gender neutrality. For these people m-a-n *always* means maleness. This
leaves me wondering, is it that some people are insensitive, or is it
that some people are over sensitive? Maybe it's a little of both. I'll
say one thing, if you share your sensitivities with me I will try to
accommodate them.
Eric
|
1144.52 | a gentle reply to a gentle, honest, and caring note | TNPUBS::PAINTER | Planet Crayon | Wed Sep 27 1995 18:18 | 12 |
|
Thank you for that, Eric. I really appreciate your writing what you
just did.
Please feel free to share your sensitivities too.
If indeed, the word had been 'womankind', and you, as a man, came to
me and said that you didn't feel included in that, I would be one of
the first in line to insist upon it being changed to something that
was more inclusive.
Cindy
|
1144.53 | | nand.amt.tay1.dec.com::SCHULER | Greg, DTN 227-4165 | Wed Sep 27 1995 18:18 | 20 |
| > You may object to changing it due to 'feelings',
A case could be made that those advancing the "proper English"
argument are driven much more by 'feelings' than are feminists
who want more inclusive language. Indeed, it is more than
just a 'feeling' of exclusion that drives the desire for more
inclusive language. Language is powerful and helps shape the
way we think and act. Exclusive language has helped shape an
exclusive, oppressive, sexist society.
If the only argument against using inclusive language is that
it isn't "proper English" - that is to say the ultimate goal of
male/female equality is really SHARED with the "proper English"
crowd - then I am left with the impression that those who object
to inclusive language do so purely for emotional reasons.
Surely these mere feelings ought not stand in the way of the
universally desired goal?
/Greg
|
1144.54 | | POWDML::FLANAGAN | let your light shine | Wed Sep 27 1995 18:18 | 12 |
| Jack,
I don't think Jesus' intent was to have his suggestion of humility be
used as a tool against women. I don't think he intended that men
should use his words to suggest that women should display humility.
I think he was suggesting that people look inward at themselves and
demonstrate that humility. I think he was particularly concerned with
those pharasees who felt they belonged in a place of honor because of
there societal status.
|
1144.55 | | TNPUBS::PAINTER | Planet Crayon | Wed Sep 27 1995 18:21 | 4 |
|
Thanks, too, Bob and Greg. Indeed, indeed.
Cindy
|
1144.56 | | POWDML::FLANAGAN | let your light shine | Wed Sep 27 1995 18:29 | 3 |
| I do appreciate the voice of supportive men in this discussion too!. I
appreciate the fact that it is in fact a relatively small number of men
who insist that women should accept things as they have always been.
|
1144.57 | Thanks Patricia/A Question | LUDWIG::BARBIERI | | Thu Sep 28 1995 10:13 | 46 |
| Hi Patricia,
OK, I see I misinterpreted. Thanks for straightening me out
on what you meant!
Just an important note for all of us. The power is indeed
in the word, but that power can be totally suppressed (so
far as its power to change the heart is concerned) if it is
not received by faith.
Parable of the seed and the sower is relevant.
**************************************************************
I've got one thought here...
If any person is passionate about the improvement of any group
of which that person is a part...if that is a continuous common
denominator, would such be evident that the underlying motivation
is the exaltation of self rather than the crucifixion of self?
An example might be a black man who is passionate about black's
rights. Why black's rights? Why not women's rights? Could it
be because he is black and not a woman? And if so, isn't 'self'
in some subtle way still the ultimate underlying motivation?
And I'm not condemning a black man perhaps being passionate
about black's rights. I am only suggesting that the overriding
underlying motivation is the big thing.
God looks on the heart. He does not look on the outward act!
He looks down deep, deep and sees what motivates our behaviors!
I guess something that appeals to me (especially) is when a person
is passionate about things and those things he/she is passionate
about really are not self serving. The person esteems all others
above herself and thus is blind as to whether or not she just
happens to be a part of that group she is trying to help.
Like a total blindness to that age-old problem of serving self.
Does this make any sense at all????
God Bless,
Tony
|
1144.58 | self | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (DTN 297-5780, MRO2-3/E8) | Thu Sep 28 1995 10:26 | 17 |
| re Note 1144.57 by LUDWIG::BARBIERI:
> An example might be a black man who is passionate about black's
> rights. Why black's rights? Why not women's rights? Could it
> be because he is black and not a woman? And if so, isn't 'self'
> in some subtle way still the ultimate underlying motivation?
> And I'm not condemning a black man perhaps being passionate
> about black's rights. I am only suggesting that the overriding
> underlying motivation is the big thing.
I think you may be going a bit far in wondering whether
response in one's own community is "self" centered.
I don't think it is wrong to give *proper* regard to one's
own concerns, especially concerns one shares with others.
Bob
|
1144.59 | Was Not A Universal Statement | LUDWIG::BARBIERI | | Thu Sep 28 1995 10:44 | 16 |
| Hi Bob,
I respectfully disagree!
Note that I didn't say it was *necessarily* wrong. What I
did say is that if a person's 'causes' just always happen
to be one's wherein that person is a part of that group one
is trying to help and (just as coincedentally) is NEVER a
group that one is not a part of...
THEN I would suspect underlying motivation.
Again, God looks on the heart. The underlying motivation may
or may not be selfless.
Tony
|
1144.60 | | POWDML::FLANAGAN | let your light shine | Thu Sep 28 1995 10:45 | 26 |
| Tony,
I would go further and say, Self interest is important. I believe that
what is truly good for the individual members of society is truly good
for the society as a whole.
the equality and justice of each individual within a society is good
for the society as a whole. We are an interconnected web. Using
Christian language, "We are one body of Christ". An illness or blight
on any one part of the body is an illness or blight on the whole body.
The key though is understanding that what is truly good for me is not
having a bigger share of material goods but what is truly good for me
is to be truly loving and to be truly loved. That includes truly
loving myself.
As a woman who has felt oppression myself, I sympathize with all people
who are oppressed. I believe passionately in women's rights. I also
believe passionately in the liberation of people of color, in the
liberation of Gay and Lesbian brothers and sisters, and in the
liberation of all people living under the choke of poverty. I don't
want a world in which any one person dominates another, but a world in
which is radically inclusive and in which all live together in harmony.
Patricia
|
1144.61 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Thu Sep 28 1995 12:00 | 19 |
| ZZ Let me ascertain one thing first - do you indeed, in truth, have a
ZZ male dominance agenda?
Cindy, after thinking this through for about five minutes...still not
sure how to word it because no doubt it will fit somebodys description
of male dominence. I do NOT have an agenda per sae...my wife for
example does tend to give me direction at times and I tend to follow
it. However, the direction she gives me is in relation to taking the
role of Spiritual leader in the home. Now readers here consider this
dominence but I do not. I consider it the proper role of the husband
in a family unit.
What I will state however is it is a fallacy to say men and women are
the same. It is a lie to propogate this. Women and men have clearly
distinct roles...alone by their anatomy and in other ways by physical
ability. In short, women compensate for men where they are weak and
men compensate for women where they are weak.
-Jack
|
1144.62 | \ | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Thu Sep 28 1995 12:03 | 13 |
| Patricia:
I asked because I BELIEVE what Jesus did in washing their feet was a
big part of Spiritual leadership...something you aspire for. if this
be your desire, then you have to take the whole package. Jesus was
washing the feet of the disciples. The pharisees had nothing to do
with it. The apostles were arguing as to who was the greatest. Jesus
said that he who is the greatest among men must be a servant to all.
As an example, he washed their feet. This IS spiritual
leadership...illustrated by the leader himself. Are you ready to take
this yoke upon yourself?
-Jack
|
1144.63 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Ps. 85.10 | Thu Sep 28 1995 13:34 | 18 |
| ================================================================================
Note 1146.79 The Institutional Church 79 of 81
TNPUBS::PAINTER "Planet Crayon" 14 lines 28-SEP-1995 12:19
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Re.75 from Dolores
Men - at least the ones who care about why there aren't more women
actively participating here (and even those who aren't) - please
don't let this comment from Dolores escape you:
> I don't note here at all and maintain a read-only
> status because I don't have the energy to battle
> all the time. I agree with what you say, Patricia,
> but for me at this time in my life, I don't have
> extra energy.
Cindy
|
1144.64 | | TNPUBS::PAINTER | Planet Crayon | Thu Sep 28 1995 13:38 | 19 |
|
Re.61
Jack,
Then since you are not consciously trying to forward the idea of male
dominance, I cannot answer your question of how I would feel about it,
since it is a moot point.
I think that what you and your wife do in your own home with regards to
spiritual leadership is your business, as long as you treat each other
with respect and you do not abuse her in any way.
However, it's also important to respect that other people - including
me - do not choose this 'spiritual leadership' model for our own homes,
and there's nothing wrong with this either, regardless of whether you
think that it is wrong for others simply because 'the Bible says so'.
Cindy
|
1144.65 | from a woman in the past - Clara Barton | TNPUBS::PAINTER | Planet Crayon | Thu Sep 28 1995 13:46 | 15 |
|
Last night I was at choir rehearsal and picked up one of the UU
pamphlets entitled, "Can I Believe Anything I Want?"
Under the UU statement of: "We affirm and promote an ongoing search for
truth.", Clara Barton, Universalist and founder of the American Red
Cross, is quoted as saying:
"I have an almost complete disregard of precedent and a faith
in the possibility of something better. It irritates me to be
told how things always have been done....I defy the tyranny of
precedent. I cannot afford the luxury of a closed mind. I go
for anything new that might improve the past."
Cindy
|
1144.66 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Thu Sep 28 1995 14:07 | 19 |
| Cindy:
I have never stated a family unit couldn't practice spiritual
leadership, spiritual equality...whatever works. I have only extolled
the virtues of the man being the spiritual leader and it IS I who has
beared the brunt of being accused of male dominence...not the other way
around.
In fact, just this morning a mentioned to a certain person that
spiritual leadership is exemplified by Jesus washing the feet of the
disciples...that spiritual leadership requires the utmost
responsibility and also HUMILITY. If there is anybody out there who
aspires toward spirtual leadership, are you prepared to wash the feet
of those you minister to. Because as Jesus said "If you do not allow
me to wash, you can have no part of me."
Great servants make the best leaders.
-Jack
|
1144.67 | clarification | TNPUBS::PAINTER | Planet Crayon | Thu Sep 28 1995 15:25 | 29 |
|
Jack,
I don't ever recall personally accusing you of anything of the sort
(male dominance).
Also, it's been quite some time since I've actively read this
conference, so maybe it's better to consider either dropping or
reevaluating some opinions you hold so that you can more easily hear
and interpret correctly that which I'm saying. I don't like being
lumped in with stuff that I never said, and have assumptions made on
that which are completely incorrect.
If you think the Bible is telling you that you, as a man, should be the
spiritual leader in your home, and your wife doesn't have a problem
with that, then I don't really have a problem with you both doing that
either. Fine - great.
But, (BUT) I don't personally agree that this is what the Bible teaches,
and furthermore even if it did and you successfully Proved Beyond a
Shadow of a Doubt that it did, I *still* would not marry someone who
holds such an assumption/fact/whatever, because that's not the way I
prefer to live my life. Also, since I'm not Christian per se, it is a
moot point anyway, but that's an aside.
Hope this makes things between you and me more clear.
Cindy
|
1144.68 | | TNPUBS::PAINTER | Planet Crayon | Thu Sep 28 1995 15:26 | 8 |
|
Jack,
I am really curious - do you wash the dishes in your home? Bathe the
children? Clean the floors? Etc.? Or do you consider these things
'women's work'?
Cindy
|
1144.69 | absolute truth | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (DTN 297-5780, MRO2-3/E8) | Thu Sep 28 1995 16:37 | 31 |
| re Note 1144.61 by MKOTS3::JMARTIN:
> What I will state however is it is a fallacy to say men and women are
> the same. It is a lie to propogate this. Women and men have clearly
> distinct roles...alone by their anatomy and in other ways by physical
> ability. In short, women compensate for men where they are weak and
> men compensate for women where they are weak.
Jack,
The problem I have with statements like the above is that
they are not *always* true, yet are offered as universal
verity. As examples: Some men are physically weaker than
some women. Not all women are able to bear children.
It is a *lie* to say or imply that all woman have a certain
role, or that all men have a certain role. It is a lie to
say that because a certain person is female, then that
particular individual must play a certain role, and it is
equally a lie to say that because a certain person is male,
then that certain person must fulfill a certain role.
There is a vast difference between "true 99% of the time" and
"always true".
(I think this is another symptom of the human desire to
regard certain things as absolute truth, the insistence that
the things we rely upon must be *always* true -- *mostly*
true just isn't good enough for human nature.)
Bob
|
1144.70 | On Loving Self/Spiritual Leader/Humorous Musings | LUDWIG::BARBIERI | | Fri Sep 29 1995 12:37 | 48 |
| Hi Patricia,
Just to make note of a difference in understanding, I do not
believe in loving myself. 1 Corin 13 seems to paint a love
that does not look upon itself with that love. I do however
believe in personal dignity/respect and I find my comfort, not
in loving myself, but in contemplating God's love for me.
Yes, Jesus said to love others as you would love yourself,
but many scholars, including Luther, felt that it means, "The
way you used to love yourself. NOW go and love others."
Sort of like esteeming all greater than oneself.
Hi Cindy,
I admit to believing the word does call the man to assume the
role of 'spiritual leader' (whatever that means!). If I didn't
believe in the inspiration of the word, I wouldn't believe this.
BUT, I believe there is a Creator and men and women are physiolo-
gically different. There is some gender basis for some differences
in behavior.
To be 'spiritual leader' does not in any way imply being better.
I believe men and women are equal, each having differing strengths
and weaknesses in some ways.
Ultimately, some basis is probably relied upon as that thing which
forms our value sets. My basis is the word of God in conjunction
with reason and (hopefully!) submission to His promptings in my
mind.
I think an interesting tangent would be a discussion of the basis
for why we are having differing views on this. Just curious...
what is your basis?
By the way, I usually wash the dishes and take the laundry up and
down the stairs. I bathed the kids when they were younger and
changed diapers although my wife did the 'kid stuff' more often.
I wouldn't have minded if my wife *preferred* to do auto mechanics.
Maybe she's a sexist pig! She had a STRONG insistence that I
should do that! She's probably not going to help me cut and split
the 8 cords worth of logs I have in my backyard either!
Oh well...
Tony
|
1144.71 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Ps. 85.10 | Fri Sep 29 1995 13:34 | 12 |
| My wife mows the lawn.
My son sometimes takes out the garbage.
We buy the two logs we burn in the fireplace every year.
We pay a mechanic to work on the van.
One of the 3 pastors at my local church is a woman.
Richard
|
1144.72 | | POWDML::FLANAGAN | let your light shine | Fri Sep 29 1995 13:37 | 14 |
| Implicit in the commandment to Love thy neighbor as thyself is the
commandment to love thyself.
What rationale did you (or did LUther) use to seemingly alter the
commandment?
It is unfortunately that your belief in the innerrancy of the Bible
forces you to accept the premise that the man is commanded to be the
spiritual leader of the family. I have often wonder what this means to
a Christian women married to a non Christian man. I guess that if the
man insisted that the children be brought up in a different religion,
then the Christian women must agree!
Or are there some unspoken conditions to the requirement?
|
1144.73 | | POWDML::FLANAGAN | let your light shine | Fri Sep 29 1995 13:38 | 3 |
| Richard,
How come only 1 out of 3? (;-)
|
1144.74 | Re.70 | TNPUBS::PAINTER | Planet Crayon | Fri Sep 29 1995 15:03 | 16 |
|
Re.70
Hi Tony,
Long time! I don't have a basis, per se, that I can point to. I guess
it comes more from several experiences I've had where I've experienced
the essence of my own being far beyond the gender body that I happened
to be born into this time around. Because of this, I see no need
whatsoever of a male marriage partner being a 'spiritual leader' to me,
mainly as I prefer just go to God directly.
Btw, I have split wood before. (;^)
Cindy
|
1144.75 | | TNPUBS::PAINTER | Planet Crayon | Fri Sep 29 1995 17:03 | 9 |
|
An interesting comment to come from the Beijing 4th Conference on
Women:
>In Norway, where Brundtland has been prime minister for fifteen
>years, four-year-olds sometimes ask their mothers: "But can a man
>be prime minister?"
Cindy
|
1144.76 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Mon Oct 02 1995 11:13 | 25 |
| ZZ I am really curious - do you wash the dishes in your home? Bathe
ZZ the children? Clean the floors? Etc.? Or do you consider these
ZZ things 'women's work'?
No exaggerations here...pure truth...
I wash the dishes EVERY night. Every night I've been home the last
five years, I have washed the dishes. I wash the dishes during the
weekends as well. As far as bathing the children, I shower the boys
about 80% of the time. Michele likes bathing Audrey as she is a year
old and she is clinging to taking care of real little one's!
In my nine years of being married, I have swept and cleaned the kitchen
floor every week. I believe this to be a man's job as well as cleaning
the bathrooms...although I will say she does that more than I do. It
is happening this way because we have kind of fallen into a routine. I
never make beds because I am incompetant in such matters! :-)
The other thing, against popular belief, is that all these things I do
are a part of spiritual leadership. Michele thinks intricately whereas
I think of the whole picture. Therefore, I am able to complete tasks
alot faster than she does. She is far more detail oriented.
Therefore, I take on the tasks that would occupy much of her time.
-Jack
|
1144.77 | | BIGQ::SILVA | Diablo | Mon Oct 02 1995 11:37 | 33 |
| | <<< Note 1144.76 by MKOTS3::JMARTIN "I press on toward the goal" >>>
| Michele thinks intricately whereas I think of the whole picture.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Is there an oxymoron note? :-) Jack, I'm curious. How does one
think of the whole picture without thinking intricately?
| Therefore, I am able to complete tasks alot faster than she does. She is far
| more detail oriented.
Jack, a lot can be said from the above. Maybe you should slow down a
bit, and look more into details. I think this will help you complete tasks
correctly, and not just complete tasks. By tasks, I am talking about noting.
Details, especially in a forum such a this, become so very important. Something
we need to get the whole picture.
Speaking Spiritually now, details have to be there if a message is
going to be given/received correctly, right?
| Therefore, I take on the tasks that would occupy much of her time.
My father used to do the same thing. As my father is a lot like you, he
gets things done quicker. My mother is a lot like your wife, as she is detailed
in how she approaches things. Over the years my mother found it much easier to
do the work herself, though, as where my father wasn't paying attention to the
details, she ended up going back and redoing it again.
Glen
|
1144.78 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Mon Oct 02 1995 12:05 | 17 |
| ZZ Is there an oxymoron note? :-) Jack, I'm curious. How does one
ZZ think of the whole picture without thinking intricately?
To rephrase, Michele is more micro whereas I am more macro. If she
substitutes a Sunday school class for young children, she will spend
two hours writing out a lesson plan...three pages long. I on the other
hand will take an index card...write out five important points and
expound on those points. Considering the pace we have with the
children, there are times where my method is far more practical.
However, you are correct. She never forgets things or misses any
details. She tends to be more organized and yet she would have trouble
making deadlines. I make the deadlines but I'm more likely to leave my
notebook on the kitchen table. I rarely forget what I need but she
never forgets.
-Jack
|
1144.79 | | BIGQ::SILVA | Diablo | Mon Oct 02 1995 12:28 | 29 |
| | <<< Note 1144.78 by MKOTS3::JMARTIN "I press on toward the goal" >>>
| However, you are correct. She never forgets things or misses any details. She
| tends to be more organized and yet she would have trouble making deadlines.
Jack, if she is as organized as you make her out to be, she wouldn't
have trouble making deadlines, would she? Wouldn't the deadline be part of her
being organized?
| I make the deadlines but I'm more likely to leave my notebook on the kitchen
| table.
Then how did you make the deadline? :-) Jack, I have heard people give
updates on projects that made the deadline. Some looked like they were
researched, while others looked like they were done on index cards. With
children, for now anyway, you might be able to get away with index cards. With
this forum, it doesn't seem to be working. And I was talking about this forum.
I will say that the more you discuss this, the more I think I understand
you. Leaving out the details seems to fit you quite well. :-)
Oh yeah. You didn't address this, and I am still curious about it.
Don't details need to be there when talking, reading, listening to things about
God so the person listening, or reading will understand what is being said?
Glen
|
1144.80 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Mon Oct 02 1995 12:34 | 5 |
| Yes...those details need to be expounded upon...many details like
eternal judgement, sovereignty, righteousness, holiness, and many other
unpleasant attributes that are many times neglected in this conference.
-Jack
|
1144.81 | | BIGQ::SILVA | Diablo | Mon Oct 02 1995 13:09 | 3 |
|
Jack, yer gettin a little grumpy here! :-(
|
1144.82 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Mon Oct 02 1995 13:26 | 9 |
| Me???!!!!! Neverrrrrrrr........
Surely you realize you aren't the first person who has implied I leave
out detail here. I just wanted to be sure it is understood there are
alot of us with our hands in the cookie jar eh???
You like photography eh????? Pictures ehh?????
Ahhhhh.....say no more!!!
|
1144.83 | better half = neglected half | DECALP::GUTZWILLER | happiness- U want what U have | Mon Oct 02 1995 14:14 | 24 |
| re .19
derek,
my provocation with "better half" was intentional. though i agree,
the term "better half" implies an imbalance, perhaps i should have
used "neglected half".
being single and without partner by "better half" i mean quite literally
the better half _within_ ourselves.
which means that every man should have the courage to allow the "woman"
in him to grow, like every woman should also listen to the "man" inside
her.
how much do we give way to stereotypes and how much do we listen to our
hearts. i don't believe that in their hearts people across the gender
gap are as different as we sometimes want them to be.
andreas.
|
1144.84 | | BIGQ::SILVA | Diablo | Mon Oct 02 1995 14:20 | 3 |
|
Say no more..... I guess if I understood what you were saying.....
|
1144.85 | language shapes your thinking | DECALP::GUTZWILLER | happiness- U want what U have | Mon Oct 02 1995 14:43 | 19 |
| re .43,.44
is womankind a better term for mankind or just an unusual one?
with the english language you are blessed with far less controversy
than in french or german. in these languages, each noun has a GENDER!
in german for example, the default gender for god is maculin. wouldn't
you as a man expect to think of god differently if the gender of god was
feminin by default? then, if you also consider that in the german language
nouns like politician, supervisor, doctor, boss all have a *masculin* gender
by default it is no wonder that in germany there are comparatively less
female politicians and bosses than in the gender-neutral-english US!
andreas.
|
1144.86 | | DECALP::GUTZWILLER | happiness- U want what U have | Mon Oct 02 1995 14:52 | 14 |
| re .84
i can't read your thoughts, glen. but if you look at that table in .1
you will notice that at the headers it says "?-space" and "!-space" and
not "woman-space" or "man-space". you might find it easier to determine
your column under the "?" and "!" titles instead of under "woman", "man"
titles.
"woman", "man" are overloaded with stereotypes.
andreas.
|
1144.87 | | BIGQ::SILVA | Diablo | Mon Oct 02 1995 16:59 | 17 |
| | <<< Note 1144.86 by DECALP::GUTZWILLER "happiness- U want what U have" >>>
| i can't read your thoughts, glen. but if you look at that table in .1
| you will notice that at the headers it says "?-space" and "!-space" and
| not "woman-space" or "man-space". you might find it easier to determine
| your column under the "?" and "!" titles instead of under "woman", "man"
| titles. "woman", "man" are overloaded with stereotypes.
andreas, I should have been more specific. I can see what you are
saying quite clearly. What I did not understand though, was what Jack Martin
was talking about. Something about cameras and such. Sorry for the confusion.
Glen
|
1144.88 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Mon Oct 02 1995 18:22 | 4 |
| Glen:
Monty Python, cerca 1978. It was incoherent to display my apparent
noting style!!!
|
1144.89 | discussion on discussion (contd.) | DECALP::GUTZWILLER | happiness- U want what U have | Tue Oct 03 1995 07:05 | 43 |
|
re .24
> In general, women prefer to discuss rather than debate. At least I do.
> It's a no-win situation when the other person (a man, usually) isn't
> *really* listening...rather they're only selectively listening so they
> can pick up on points to shoot down in the next round. More debating
> goes on in notes files than does real discussions where both parties
> work together to find common ground and work from there.
you make a very interesting observation of male dominated discussion, cindy.
the debating style of selectively listening so that points can be picked
up to be shot down in the next round, is very similar to the behaviour
of boys on the playground. seen in this light, the underlying motivation
must be that none of the debaters expect to seriously discuss, but rather
seek (albeit subconsciously) the fun of the game. this is all fine as long
as all participants join in the game. but to someone who wants to engage
in a serious discussion rather than just play, this debating style can be
very irritating. if a more profound response is sought, my recommendation
to break the play is, to 1) insist on the item you wish discussed and 2)
to take the playful (unreflected) statements of the debating noter(s)
seriously and to hold them up against them as a mirror. this is sure to
provoke a more thoughtful response and one which will seek common ground
rather than division.
and to make another observation on male dominated discussion, cindy, can
all discussions be expected to lead to grommon ground? common sense would
suggest so. sadly it seems, that particularly amongst men there is often
either complacency or lack of courage to look above and beyond the own
fence and to refuse to engage in discussion until a common ground is found.
the only common ground then found is the wall which divides the territories
on which it is agreed to differ. this discussion style has its merits too,
as it serves to avoid too many loops. but the whole idea of dialog is
completely missed if the motivation of this discussion style is to build
and strengthen the wall of division rather than to gradually take down the
wall, brick by brick.
andreas.
|
1144.90 | complimentary gender. | VNABRW::BUTTON | Another day older and deeper in debt | Tue Oct 03 1995 09:42 | 21 |
| Re 1144.83 Andreas
> which means that every man should have the courage to allow the
"woman" in him to grow, like every woman should also listen to
the "man" inside her.
There are still, unfortunately, many who deny this duality of gender
in humans despite a wealth of biological and psychological evidence to
support it.
My own childhood, during which I spent a great deal of time from age
7 to 15 "masquerading" as a girl (some call this sexual abuse; but I
loved almost every minute of it), gave me a very early and special
insight into this duality.
I can only underline and applaud Andreas' advice, above. It can lead
to the most exciting and rewarding insights into one's own inner
life if the complimentary gender is acknowledged and its voice heard.
IMO: there can be no greater enrichment of one's "here and now".
Greetings, Derek.
|
1144.91 | | TNPUBS::PAINTER | Planet Crayon | Tue Oct 03 1995 13:10 | 9 |
|
Re.78 and so
Jack - I congratulate you for sharing 'housework' tasks. I think that's
great.
(Still to read the last 10 notes...)
Cindy
|
1144.92 | | TNPUBS::PAINTER | Planet Crayon | Tue Oct 03 1995 13:21 | 21 |
|
Re.89
Thank you for that, Andreas. Great insight there about debating and
common ground.
I really do believe that if both parties want to find common ground,
then nothing will stop them - not language, not gender, not anything.
But if they *really* don't want to - even if they say they do - or
aren't fully committed to doing so, then nothing will work.
Also on the 'inner male/inner female' that we all have inside of us
from .83, which is so true.
Re.90
Yours too, Derek. I especially like 'complimentary gender' far better
than 'opposite sex'. My IHH (Internet Highway Honey) uses the same
term for the same reasons, btw. (;^)
Cindy
|
1144.93 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Tue Oct 03 1995 13:22 | 10 |
| ZZ Jack - I congratulate you for sharing 'housework' tasks. I think
ZZ that's great.
Thank you. I believe it is also important for the children to see this
so that they learn to respect their spouses when they someday marry and
also understand that there are alot of stereotypes out there in regards
to the duties of a wife and a husband. Again, humility is a big part
of spiritual leadership.
-Jack
|
1144.94 | Complementary .NE. Complimentary / Getting In Touch... | LUDWIG::BARBIERI | | Thu Oct 05 1995 13:39 | 30 |
| Hi,
Do you think complementary gender might even be better than
complimentary gender?
This whole 'female half' stuff kind of makes me shake my head
a little! But, I recognize it as a terminology disconnect.
Every cell in my body happens to have one x and one y chromosome.
I don't have a single one that is xx. Not one.
I think when you speak of 'female halves' and such, what you are
saying is that you are recognizing that there are various behaviors
that women are recognized as performing perhaps more often and/or
more intensely than men and vice versa. And you're simply talking
about one sex sometimes cultivating/getting in touch with those
behaviors more often associated with the other.
I mean, for example, of course men should better learn how to
nurture and submit and stuff, but those aren't 'woman things', they
just happen to be things women might do more often.
Actually, come to think of it, with the above in mind, to use
the term 'getting in touch with my female half' is really sexist
because it takes behaviors and applies them in a gender way.
Am I right on this?
Tony
|
1144.95 | | DECALP::GUTZWILLER | happiness- U want what U have | Thu Oct 05 1995 14:47 | 18 |
|
> Actually, come to think of it, with the above in mind, to use
> the term 'getting in touch with my female half' is really sexist
> because it takes behaviors and applies them in a gender way.
the terms used in .83 were 'better half' or probably better, 'negleted half'.
if you feel uncomfortable with getting in touch with the opposite sex inside
you then getting in touch with the subconscious is probably just as good
a suggestion. at least after carl gustav jung's typology, every aspect of
the conscious personality is reversed (compensated) in the subconscious
personality.
andreas.
|
1144.96 | | CSOA1::LEECH | Dia do bheatha. | Fri Oct 06 1995 10:11 | 17 |
| re: .94
I do not have a "female side" or "inner woman" or "<insert gender
behavioral label of your choice>".
Women do some things better than men. Men do some things better than
women. That's by design, IMO. I think it is wrong to apply gender to
any of these traits, as we all have them to some degree. This in no
way means that men have a "feminine side" or that women have a
"masculine side". Every time I hear such disengenuous psychological
drivel I feel like heaving lunch.
Men can be nurturing, but in general women are better at it. Women can
be physically strong, but in general men are physically stronger. Etc.
-steve
|
1144.97 | Why? | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (DTN 297-5780, MRO2-3/E8) | Fri Oct 06 1995 10:39 | 12 |
| re Note 1144.96 by CSOA1::LEECH:
> Every time I hear such disengenuous psychological
> drivel I feel like heaving lunch.
Why is this "disingenuous", Steve?
The people who use such language are quite sincere and have
no intention of deception, and the fact that you strongly
disagree with them doesn't change that.
Bob
|
1144.98 | | CSOA1::LEECH | Dia do bheatha. | Fri Oct 06 1995 10:57 | 9 |
| <---
You are right, I should not have used "disingenuous". Perhaps
"misguided" would have been a better choice.
In any case, you are correct. I strongly disagree with the concept.
(but that much is obvious 8^) )
-steve
|
1144.99 | Terminology/Jung Typology | LUDWIG::BARBIERI | | Fri Oct 06 1995 13:52 | 26 |
| But, its just terminology.
Andreas, by rejecting your terminology, I am merely being candid
about my personal view that saying I have a female half implies
saying I am part female. I'm not a hermaphrodite.
Other terms would just as well express your meaning all the while
also leaving out how some might incorrectly infer it.
I am not stating that I am against getting in touch with nurturing
and other characteristics more associated with women, I a, just
stating that your terminology can very easily imply totally false
things.
Like I said, every cell in my body is xy (male).
By the way, I think Carl Jung's typology thing was great!!!
I came out very low extrovert, sky high intuitive, high feeling,
and moderate judging.
I thought it was really neat.
So his middle name was gustav, huh?
Tony
|
1144.100 | | CSC32::J_OPPELT | Wanna see my scar? | Fri Oct 06 1995 14:15 | 2 |
| And to think that all this time I thought the term "better half"
was used by a man to refer to his wife in a complimentary manner...
|
1144.101 | | TNPUBS::PAINTER | Planet Crayon | Fri Oct 06 1995 15:26 | 8 |
|
Re.96
It isn't psychological drivel at all, but rather a very ancient religious
view of the totality of God or Oneness/Wholeness, and is represented in
the (also very ancient) Yin-Yang symbol.
Cindy
|
1144.102 | forgive my gruffness... | CSOA1::LEECH | Dia do bheatha. | Fri Oct 06 1995 16:20 | 8 |
| re: .101
I disagree, it is psychological drivel. I don't care if it's been
around for thousands of years, it's still drivel. "New" Age isn't new,
either, but I think it's drivel, too.
-steve
|
1144.103 | ok | TNPUBS::PAINTER | Planet Crayon | Fri Oct 06 1995 16:22 | 4 |
|
Well, one person's drivel...(;^)
Cindy
|
1144.104 | | ravel.amt.tay1.dec.com::SCHULER | Greg, DTN 227-4165 | Fri Oct 06 1995 16:37 | 8 |
| Obviously anything one doesn't understand or that causes
a visceral reaction ("heave lunch") *must* be drivel, Cindy.
Heaven forbid we allow another to simply be different or
hold a different view.
/Greg
|
1144.105 | Re.104 | TNPUBS::PAINTER | Planet Crayon | Fri Oct 06 1995 16:38 | 6 |
|
Oh how silly of me...I didn't realize.
Thanks, Greg. (;^)
Cindy
|
1144.106 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Fri Oct 06 1995 17:21 | 10 |
| ZZ I think it is wrong to apply gender to
ZZ any of these traits, as we all have them to some degree.
I actually agree with Steve on this part.
I once called a Soapbox participant a sissy boy and a gay participant
took offense to this. Said I shouldn't associate characteristics with
gender...just like Steve said.
-Jack
|
1144.107 | JHesus: xx or xy and why, why? | VNABRW::BUTTON | Another day older and deeper in debt | Mon Oct 09 1995 11:02 | 12 |
| re: .94 Tony Barbieri
> Every cell in my body happens to have one x and one y chromosone.
> I don't have a single one that is xx. Not one.
In all probability, you are right regarding your chromosone count. But
it gave me an interesting thought:
What do you think Jesus' cells looked like: xx? xy? or even yy?
What leads you to your conclusion?
Greetings, Derek.
|
1144.108 | | CSOA1::LEECH | Dia do bheatha. | Mon Oct 09 1995 11:53 | 7 |
| re: .104
Fine, feel free to believe in whatever drivel you like. Don't bother
me none. 8^)
-steve
|
1144.109 | anima/animus | DECALP::GUTZWILLER | happiness- U want what U have | Tue Oct 10 1995 07:53 | 42 |
| re .99
tony, right.
the terms (in the original texts) which carl gustav jung uses for
the counterparts in the subconscious are "anima" (for men) and "animus"
(for women).
from recollection, the anima is closely associated with mother and eros,
the animus with father and logos. the jungian eros (which is NOT to be
confused with plato's eros) concerns all to do with human relationships,
the capability/willingness of entering and maintaining relationships,
and logos is to do with the sense of discrimination, the capability
to discern and to rationalise.
(keeping the above in mind) as jung has observed, in a persons lifetime,
during the younger years (up to mid thirties maybe), a person is primarily
concerned with the development of the conscious personality. in the second
half of life, the focus is turned to the reconciliation with the anima (in
the case of men) or the animus (in the case of women) in order to round of
the whole personality.
describing this maturing process as seeking the "better half" or
discovering the "negleted half" is definitely misleading and over-
simplifying. as far as i understand, the reconciliation with the
anima/animus is a natural process and part of maturing.
you are right in pointing out the apparent sexism in gender specific
attributes. jung's work on anima/animus comes out of the PC-unaware 1930s,
where the position of women (particularly in jung's own country) was still
very much that of second-class citizens. a more important effect of jung's
work, which is also widely regarded as the basis for feminist theology
(and as a basis for the development of a specifically female rationality),
is that it provides a solid and coherent framework for the harmony and
equality between the genders.
andreas.
|
1144.110 | yin and yang | TNPUBS::PAINTER | Planet Crayon | Tue Oct 10 1995 12:45 | 22 |
|
Re.109
To add to that, and also what I missed in .99...
The 'inner female/male' doesn't so much occur at the physical level, as
it does at the energetic level, so it's independent of chromesomes,
etc.
Western science/medicine deals primarily with the gross physical body,
as opposed to the subtle energy body, however Eastern medicine does
focus on the energy body. Through things such as the pulse diagnosis,
for example (which I took a 1 day seminar on several months ago), an
Eastern practitioner can tell if your energy (Yang or Yin) is out of
balance. One can then take steps via diet, exercise (yoga, tai chi),
vitamins/minerals/herbs, energy/polarity balancing (which I can also do
at a beginner level), etc. - to bring the energy back into balance.
While Western medicine tends to treat the symptoms only, the Eastern
medicine gets at the root cause (almost always an energy imbalance or
block of some sort) and focuses on bringing back the balance instead.
Cindy
|
1144.111 | Perhaps I'm In Touch (according to Jung anyway) | LUDWIG::BARBIERI | | Tue Oct 10 1995 17:44 | 11 |
| Actually, if you want to take Jung's typology and use the
'male side/female side' terminology, given that I came out
a high feeler would probably imply (again given this jargon)
that I am really in touch with my female side!!! ;-)
I heard that of all Jung's typology, the only one with a
gender dependance is thinking/feeling where 60% of men are
'thinkers' versus 40% 'feelers' and 60% of women are feelers
verses 40% thinkers.
Tony
|
1144.112 | | POWDML::FLANAGAN | let your light shine | Tue Oct 10 1995 19:13 | 6 |
| tony,
I believe you are discuss myers/briggs type which has its basis in
Jungian psychology. You are right about the thinking/feeling side
though. The results on that scale alone are adjusted based on gender.
|
1144.113 | | CSC32::HOEPNER | A closed mouth gathers no feet | Tue Oct 10 1995 22:02 | 12 |
|
re: -1
Phew. I'm glad to hear that scale is adjusted somewhat since I am
one female that scored NOTHING on Feeling, ALL on Thinking. (That
does not imply I don't 'feel'. My first reaction is to analyze.)
But I have had some colleagues who have also taken the Myers/Briggs
give me a great deal of flack for how I tested out... ;-)
Mary Jo
|
1144.114 | | DECALP::GUTZWILLER | happiness- U want what U have | Wed Oct 11 1995 09:28 | 43 |
| re .111
you may very well be connected, tony!
in the typology, the four aids to orientation which jung describes are
thinking, feeling, sensing, and intuiting, as i translate the original
terms. thinking and feeling being judgemental, with judgement based on
reason and on emotion respectively, and sensing/intuiting being
non-judgemental, perception oriented. it is possible that jung ascribed
the thinking more often to men and the feeling more often to women as
the dominant senses of orientation (in both their extrovert and introvert
forms).
jung's typology targets on the individual with particular regard for
the aspect of inward and outward orientation (intro- and extroversion).
the orientation aids discussed for this purpose appear to be secondary to
the central subject of ex/introversion, since jung leaves it up to the
reader to extend his typology at will by, adding/redefining orientation
aids.
in contrast to this, the work on subconscious counterparts in men and
women, targets more explicitly on gender differences (differences which
have not gone undisputed particularly by female psychologists) where the
logos of the animus (male counterpart in women) is described as a
differentiating, dividing force whilst the eros of the anima (female
counterpart in men) is described as a connecting, integrating force.
so, to cut a long story short (i do find jungian psychology so very
interesting! :-) a woman connected to her animus would have to be one
happy to debate, analyse and to differentiate, whereas a man connected
to his anima would have to be one happy to moderate, facilitate and to
integrate!
andreas.
ps. every test i have taken gives me just over 50% "thinking extrovert"
though i definitely feel a strongly developing intuition. no doubt,
anima at work here! :-)
|
1144.115 | Neat Stuff | LUDWIG::BARBIERI | | Wed Oct 11 1995 09:36 | 15 |
| I have to admit, the Briggs/Myers thing is really neat.
Patricia, did they really adjust the feeling/thiunking part?
My 'take' was that they scored them identically, but simply
acknowledged that more men score on the thinking side while
more women on the feeling side. On top of that, do they
*really* adjust?
Andreas, my intuition was sky high. We had a whole group take
the test and my intuition score was the highest. "Ground control
to Major Tom!" (I was in orbit.)
I think its neat being a high intuitive tho.
Tony
|
1144.116 | | CSC32::HOEPNER | A closed mouth gathers no feet | Wed Oct 11 1995 12:58 | 30 |
|
Having people make assumptions on how a person will react/respond
based on whether that person is male or female can be tough on
communications.
For example, in the 'church', I encounter an inordinate number of
people who don't quite feel comfortable dealing with me because
I don't fit the traditional 'woman' mold. I don't have kids,
I work outside the home, I am not married, I work in a 'technical'
job, I hire someone to clean my house (so I can spend more time in
the barn), I don't 'do' crafts, I don't cook, I play a trombone,
etc...
These differences do not make me any less committed to the Lord. It
just means that I have different priorities and interests and
necessities. But having folks assume I will react in a certain
way or be interested in certain things just because I am female
causes some VERY interesting discussions.
It seems that at work, folks tend to make a lot fewer assumptions
based on gender than in the 'church'.
By the way, on the Myers/Briggs, I am INTP with all but the 'I' being
on the extreme ends of the ranges.
Ciao.
Mary Jo
|
1144.117 | | DECALP::GUTZWILLER | happiness- U want what U have | Wed Oct 11 1995 13:56 | 24 |
| re .116
> It seems that at work, folks tend to make a lot fewer assumptions
> based on gender than in the 'church'.
mary jo, i think certainly one big advantage of communicating at work,
is this electronic media - whilst much is lost communicating this way,
this form of communication does at least make for a high degree of equal
treatment and doesn't force one so much into traditional molds.
in my experience 'curch' environments are particularly prone to putting
on strong pressure on the individual to conform to predefined roles. in
a manner perhaps only matched by military environments, which also suffer
from the same short-comings! i find such pressure to conform to some
predetermined role can easily become overbearing to the point of being
suffocating, simply because the collective pressure is ultimately based
on disrespect (or fear) of individuality.
andreas.
|
1144.118 | | CSC32::HOEPNER | A closed mouth gathers no feet | Wed Oct 11 1995 15:10 | 19 |
|
I tend to not get fearful in such situations. Mostly I find it
annoying. But I also figure the Lord has me attending the specific
church for a reason. A dear brother of mine described my 'calling'
as 'A Ministry of Spoons' (as in stirring things up).
RE: Work versus church.
One thing I have noticed in the 'church' or in religious organizations
folks tend to be very careful about saying exactly how they feel or
think in attempts to not offend. But this can cause real issues to
not be addressed until things really get dicey.
At work, we tend to be more open to address issues as they arise.
Which causes little skirmishes but many issues get dealt with
immediately.
Mary Jo
|
1144.119 | | DECALP::GUTZWILLER | happiness- U want what U have | Thu Oct 12 1995 11:21 | 19 |
| re .118
> One thing I have noticed in the 'church' or in religious organizations
> folks tend to be very careful about saying exactly how they feel or
> think in attempts to not offend. But this can cause real issues to
> not be addressed until things really get dicey.
how true. this then can easily give the impression that problems are swept
under the carpet or that appearance counts more than reality!
coming to think of it, christians in particular are taught not to be quarrel-
some. given this restraint, what would you regard as a good christian way
of speaking your mind and of conflict resolution? is an open, honest and
straight-forward approach all that it takes?
andreas.
|
1144.120 | | CSC32::J_OPPELT | Wanna see my scar? | Thu Oct 12 1995 12:50 | 3 |
| .119
St. Paul addresses this in detail.
|
1144.121 | shut up woman and be quiet? | DECALP::GUTZWILLER | happiness- U want what U have | Mon Oct 16 1995 05:07 | 11 |
| do you have any particular council in mind?
from all that i have learned so far, i suspect that paul,
if he lived today, wouldn' be a great promoter of women's
rights. this wouldn't qualify him today as a source of
reference for integender communication.
andreas.
|
1144.122 | | CSC32::HOEPNER | A closed mouth gathers no feet | Mon Oct 16 1995 13:45 | 33 |
|
RE: Paul
I have studied LOTS about Paul and his writings. A couple of sources,
'Women At the Crossroads' by Malcolm and 'What Paul Really Said About
Women' by ?? have investigated the Greek the books were written in
and give interesting light to the subject of women and society and
the church.
On the basis of those two books as well as looking at the scriptures
as a whole, I suspect we would find Paul a proponent of treating
women well.
Historically, during Paul's lifetime, Hellenism was a very popular
mode of operation. And under Hellenistic culture, women were less
than slaves. And wives were less than prostitutes (as in prostitutes
of the Temple of Diana). So some of the scripture that appears to be
harsh regarding women's appearance and communication were aimed at
a culture that had shrine prostitutes and valued them more than
wives and daughters.
Yes, I know, this is a real debatable point-- the business of whether
we interpret Paul's letters purely word for word as rules for living
then AND now. Or if they need to be interpreted with some
understanding of who the target audience was.
However, Paul did say enough things like 'there is no slave nor free,
male nor female, for we are all one under Christ Jesus' that encourage
me to investigate the scriptures where he APPEARS to not value women
at all.
Mary Jo
|
1144.123 | | POWDML::FLANAGAN | let your light shine | Mon Oct 16 1995 14:08 | 16 |
| Mary Jo,
See not 544 on "Paul".
I believe that Paul recorded some things that contribute to the
liberation of all people. Paul also said some things which have been
used to oppress women, people of color, and homosexuals.
some statements that have been used to oppress women, have been falsely
and unfairly attributed to Paul. (i.e. the timothy/titus statements.)
Paul was a complex character, but to quote Richard he was "a man of his
time" which meant that he believed there was a place for men and a
different place for women.
|
1144.124 | Listeners? | CPCOD::JOHNSON | A rare blue and gold afternoon | Mon Oct 16 1995 15:40 | 26 |
| > <<< Note 1144.17 by HURON::MYERS "He literally meant it figuratively" >>>
> Because there, women know their place and the limits of their gender.
> Eric
I think there is a fairly wide variety in viewpoint in the other file. For
example, I share with many of the people there a view that the Bible is the
word of the Creator, Sustainer, and Sovereign of the universe. However, my
view on what it says about women and women's place in both society and the
church differs greatly from many in there, and from much of traditional
Christianity. I think the Bible presents a much stronger, more positive view
of women than many people seem to think, and that the "know your place",
"husband is the boss" attitude is not from what God's perspective, but is
a human twist to use the Scripture for human purposes. However, I do not align
myself with the feminist viewpoint either, if indeed, the things Patricia has
written in this file are what the feminist viewpoint is.
As to why men are more vocal in this file than women, (I may get into trouble
with this viewpoint) as a general rule, I think women tend naturally to be
better listeners and responders than men, who often seem to charge in and
vocally proclaim their views without spending as much time listening. Have
I put my foot into it now?
Leslie
|
1144.125 | | POWDML::FLANAGAN | let your light shine | Mon Oct 16 1995 15:46 | 6 |
| Leslie
My views are "a" feminist viewpoint and not "the" feminist viewpoint.
Except for our beliefs about the nature of the Bible, I would suspect
that you and I have more in common than not in common.
|
1144.126 | out on a limb a bit... | RDVAX::ANDREWS | by the blood of the green lion | Mon Oct 16 1995 16:17 | 23 |
|
while i don't mean to sidetrack the discussion here which appears to me
to be between non-gay women and men, i'd like to add my perspective.
personally, i don't feel myself to have a specific gender in the same
way that others here apparently do. i think of myself as a gay man as
being somewhere which includes both, as Native American people say of
gay people, i see myself as "two-spirited".
as far as communication with 'single-gendered' people goes, my experience
has been that 'single-gendered' women are much more apt to be willing
to communicate with me than 'single-gendered' men (many of whom are simply
unwilling to speak with me at all). while i'm not trying to stretch my
own experience too far, i would mention that even within our own Notes
files it is much easier to discuss gay issues in Womannotes than it has
ever been in Mennotes.
i don't believe that the lack of gay/lesbian participation (other than
glen and myself) in this file is necessarily due to the 'atmosphere'
or comfort level but by a general disinterest in Christianity by gay/
lesbian people given the treatment most have received.
peter
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1144.127 | | CSC32::HOEPNER | A closed mouth gathers no feet | Mon Oct 16 1995 16:27 | 14 |
|
Part of the reason this 'female' tends to not respond in these notes
very often is:
1. I am very busy with my job
2. I consider whether or not if it is worth it to me to take time to
respond--(i.e., I am responding just by emotion or do I have
something to offer folks in general OR is it better to just keep
my mouth shut and go on.)
3. I usually pray before responding. I usually regret it when I
don't (hence my personal name).
Mary Jo
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1144.128 | | CSC32::J_OPPELT | Wanna see my scar? | Mon Oct 16 1995 19:41 | 11 |
| re: my comment about Paul --
My intention in bringing up what Paul said had nothing to do
with intergender communication, but rather to specifically
address the question asked at the end of .119, namely:
>given this restraint, what would you regard as a good christian way
>of speaking your mind and of conflict resolution? is an open, honest and
>straight-forward approach all that it takes?
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1144.129 | | DECALP::GUTZWILLER | happiness- U want what U have | Tue Oct 17 1995 05:30 | 30 |
|
.128, and applied to intergender communication, joe, what would paul's advice
be? i am interested to hear this and am looking forward to learning from your
views on the question of .119
.127, mary jo, you truly honour this place by staying around! i wish i could
exercise your wisdom and restraint more often. i also often put in much time
and thought before entering a note and wish i could be more spontaneous and
proficient instead. but it's true, often discussions are just 'hot air' and
then it's better to go by that proverb which in german says 'word is silver,
silence is gold.'
.126, andrew, if gay men communicate better with single-gendered women then
maybe single-gendered men could learn something from gay men. i think that
some single-gendered men are good at communicating with women too, though.
at least in my case, i have always preferred the company of women over men,
and i also know of men which are also capable of relaxing and sharing in
conversation.
.124, leslie, nice to see that you're still here! no you haven't put your foot
in it at all. i think your note adds very well to the observations made in
.1, .24 and .89 - there are definitely differences. though rather than drawing
a line between the genders i prefer defining differences along masculin and
feminin attributes, as these can be represented in either gender.
andreas.
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