Post 25
RabbleRabble wrote:
[Men] might try to use logical arguments to defend their emotionally biased position, but even that is not something limited to men. I'm perfectly capable.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
(If the role of being submissive and silent is so suited to me then why does it feel so much like oppression?)
Fully agreed.
Quote:
The man up front says, "Yes, everyone has a work they can do in the church." In my mind I answer, "Yes! Men can preach, teach classes, lead singing, be elders, be deacons, lead prayer, and make announcements. And women... they can cook and make babies. Fabulous."
After reading the post
Life Without Men, I got to thinking that it's the men who are expendable AND THEY KNOW IT, hence the religious zeal with which they defend their so-called superior position. What woman needs defend her position? She knows without argument that she is needed for life on earth to continue. But men??? Now that is a different story. Since time immemorial, the males of our species have gone out to kill and be killed. They "sow their seed" in a batch of females and their purpose on earth is done. If they want to get more out of life, all that's left for them is to "preach, teach classes, lead singing, be elders, be deacons, lead prayer, and make announcements," etc.
Possibly the argument can be made that things have changed a little bit since "time immemorial." I watched a ten-minute video of Richard Dawkins yesterday (
Beyond Belief '06 - Richard Dawkins, on the
Shifting Moral Zeitgeist*) in which he compares beliefs about ethics from liberal thinkers 150 years ago with today. I have also come across similar literature of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries (1700s & 1800s) to what Dawkins quotes. Top of the list are beliefs about women and race. Only the most radical right-wing nut-jobs of today would subscribe to such beliefs today, if anyone does. No respectable conservative thinks that way anymore. Dawkins's point is that it doesn't take religion for social values to become more ethical. My point is that even the religious people change their views despite fundy religion.
That, however, does not change the case that women like you and I NEED intellectual stimulation on the same level as we need food, and that without it we are literally deprived of a basic life necessity. See
Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs. As a Christian, I drew consolation from the prophetess in ancient Israel who went to war with the captain of the army because he was too scared to go without her (Josh 4). Apparently not all "godly" women were subservient to males. The Bible records her as a war hero; the song about her victory is part of the biblical narrative (Josh 5). However, I do not remember ever hearing a sermon on it and it did not ease the oppression imposed on me.
*Find the entire movie at
Beyond Belief: Science, Reason, Religion & Survival, Salk Institute for Biological Studies, 10 parts, November 5 - 7, 2006, at
http://thesciencenetwork.org/programs/beyond-belief-science-religion-reason-and-survival/session-7-1, accessed July 11, 2009. "Shifting Zeitgeist" is taken from Session 7 Richard Dawkins, beginning at the one hour mark.