Join For His Glory for a discussion on how
https://christianforums.net/threads/a-vessel-of-honor.110278/
https://christianforums.net/threads/psalm-70-1-save-me-o-god-lord-help-me-now.108509/
Read through the following study by Tenchi for more on this topic
https://christianforums.net/threads/without-the-holy-spirit-we-can-do-nothing.109419/
Join Sola Scriptura for a discussion on the subject
https://christianforums.net/threads/anointed-preaching-teaching.109331/#post-1912042
Strengthening families through biblical principles.
Focus on the Family addresses the use of biblical principles in parenting and marriage to strengthen the family.
Read daily articles from Focus on the Family in the Marriage and Parenting Resources forum.
[If there is so much doubt, as he is suggesting, then his argument is worthless, one way or the other, and should be disregarded].So what is the real argument? The other lie to nail is that people who “believe in the Bible” or who “take it literally” will oppose women’s ordination. Rubbish. Yes, I Timothy ii is usually taken as refusing to allow women to teach men. But serious scholars disagree on the actual meaning, as the key Greek words occur nowhere else. That, in any case, is not where to start.
[And that single fact is the basis for this enormous edifice he is now going to build on those shaky foundations. What extraordinary logic! What a foolish position to adopt!]All Christian ministry begins with the announcement that Jesus has been raised from the dead. And Jesus entrusted that task, first of all, not to Peter, James, or John, but to Mary Magdalene.
He has clearly failed to observe that at Pentecost, it was the male apostles who did the speaking, and who usually got their heads handed to them in one way or another.Part of the point of the new creation launched at Easter was the transformation of roles and vocations: from Jews-only to worldwide, from monoglot to multilingual (think of Pentecost), and from male-only leadership to male and female together.
What utter nonsense. This casts discredit, as if more were needed, on his whole tissue of fabrication. Look at these translations. See anything common to them all?Within a few decades, Paul was sending greetings to friends including an “apostle” called Junia (Romans xvi, 7).
He entrusted that letter to a “deacon” called Phoebe whose work was taking her to Rome.
Note how he slimily slips in the word 'ordained' - casually and with no support into the statement. Trying very hard to create the impression that she was some sort of 'priest' or whatever else fancy dictates.The letter-bearer would normally be the one to read it out to the recipients and explain its contents. The first expositor of Paul’s greatest letter was an ordained travelling businesswoman.
The resurrection of Jesus is the only Christian guide to the question of where history is going. Unlike the ambiguous “progress” of the Enlightenment, it is full of promise — especially the promise of transformed gender roles.
Tripe.The promise of new creation, symbolised by the role of Mary Magdalene in the Easter stories, is the reality.
Imagining?I politely suggest that as long as we fail to scripture as the story of an evolving, transformative project of redemption, we will continue to fall into the trap of imagining that the Bible is a collection of timeless truths. Its not that simple, even though many stumble over this issue, making errors like the following:
But Wright's argument is more general - he makes the case that men and women are equally qualified to serve in any position of leadership.Drew,
This is not simply about allowing a woman to teach a man. It is about the role of the man in a leadership role as Bishop within the church. Nobody said a woman can't teach... Actually, I can show a handful of passages that show women teaching.
[If there is so much doubt, as he is suggesting, then his argument is worthless, one way or the other, and should be disregarded].
Please explain why. And please do not ignore the argument in post 92.Not a good idea.
Oh not this low-brow stuff again........
So he has to resort to lies to support his case. Not good.
I take your bunny hoping around the matter in conjunction with not specifically replying to my original response as a means of trolling.
Oh not this low-brow stuff again........
I am quite confident that I will be able to show that your arguments that this respected scholar is lying do not have a shred of merit.
K:
So you're claiming that those who lead in the church can convincingly say: 'You must believe me when I say I have bent what God said, because of my hardness of heart" ?
So what you're advocating is eisegesis rather than exegesis of what the New Testament says about the matter.
Re. your last sentence: Apples and oranges.
Yes, I see now that it can be read as a cheap shot. I apologize.Sure, and that's because they base their morality on feelings and opinions. While I understand your point, can you please tell me where I've failed to discern the matter in my last post? Was the content of my last post clear and articulate? Do more examples need to be expressed? Do you disagree with the examples or content in my last post?
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It is hard for me to believe you really believe this is a valid criticism of Wright's point.
Wright is asserting that the meaning of what is there in the 1 Timothy text is under debate by serious scholars.
Instead of dismissing the argument, are you prepared to actually deal with it? Are you challenging the assertion that serious scholars disagree about the text in question?
Oh not this low-brow stuff again........
I am quite confident that I will be able to show that your arguments that this respected scholar is lying do not have a shred of merit.
Thanks to Jesus, precedents abound, as Jeff said, where one command outweighed another.
As Jeff said, it is a matter of discernment. Because even Satan can use scripture for his own evil ends.
Also, the issue is not 'bending what God said'. The issue is that 'God bent what HE said', temporarily.
Well, sorry, I also recall Alice in Wonderland saying that words mean whatever she wanted them to mean...
If we can't even read and trust the Bible for what it says, without turning it inside out, where does this leave the promises and words of comfort for the believer?
What about the discussion of headship in 1 Corinthians 11: men, women, Christ, God (the head of Christ is God, etc.)?
It's hard to argue that Paul didn't really meant it, or if he did, then it doesn't matter anyway.
The Scriptures are the Word of God.. They should be treated respectfully. They are not a casual writing.