Many times I have pointed out that after the biblical era God continued to teach Christian many things. The scriptures did not indicate that we should stop polygamy, concubinage, and slavery. But God taught us that we should stop polygamy, concubinage, and slavery.
The scriptures never say it is a requirement to have a wedding ceremony to be married but, the Protestants decided it should be required. One of the most significant things that God taught us.
But there are some things that Christianity is still learning. For example the equal status of women in Christianity. We are moving that direction slowly but why is this the tough lesson to learn? It is a hard question but I believe that it is a set of under laying beliefs.
It starts with the New Testament. Those in the New Testament thought that Yeshua could return at any moment and the priority was to spread the Gospel and save as many people as possible. They also thought that the time of severe persecution would soon occur, which it did happen for about 250 years.
So the reasoning by Christian leaders in the New Testament was that romance was a distraction. The church of Corinth asked Paul….is it good for a man not to touch a woman? 1st Corinthians 7:1
I would like you to be free from concern. An unmarried man is concerned about the Lord’s affairs—how he can please the Lord. But a married man is concerned about the affairs of this world—how he can please his wife— and his interests are divided. An unmarried woman or virgin is concerned about the Lord’s affairs: Her aim is to be devoted to the Lord in both body and spirit. But a married woman is concerned about the affairs of this world—how she can please her husband. I am saying this for your own good, not to restrict you, but that you may live in a right way in undivided devotion to the Lord. 1st Corinthians 7:32-35
The thinking was, why get married and have a wife and children if it all was going to end soon and why have a family to be horribly tortured and killed in the arenas. Paul gave marriage as a concession to prevent sin, but no one promoted or recommended marriage.
So most of the religious leaders in the New Testament were celibate. This continued after the biblical era, 65 AD and on.
Christian religious leaders were called Epískopos….meaning overseer. (Some like to call them Bishops and Popes but those titles do not occur until the English language evolved. Old English first… bisceop and English Bishop. In different languages Pope means Papa or father.)
The religious leaders continued these views towards love, sex, and marriage and families and most were celibate. So in a male dominate religion the negatives started to evolve….
If marriage was a distraction from the Lord, so were women. And why were they a distraction? Because of sex and the male desire for sex. Then women were labeled as tempters because who else tempts good men….the devil. So the demonization of sex and women was complete and the second rate status of women was locked into Christian thinking.
But not with everyone….most of the Christian congregations did not buy into the belief that love and marriage and family distracted them from God. It was mostly the Christian leadership that thought that celibacy made you more righteous or holy or more devoted to God. So love, and romance and marriage and families continued with the congregations.
Now love, and marriage and families and procreation is a big thing in reality. Usually a celibate religion will die out. So there grew a division on this topic in Christianity from the very beginning between the leadership and the congregations. This means what the leadership believed and lived and preached some thng that the
majority of their congregations did not believe or follow. Why? It was essentially wrong.
Now this becomes even more common in the Catholic Church ….4th century and on. Here are some of the things that the leadership thought…..
Origen, St. Jerome, St. Augustine, St. Ambrose, and St. Thomas Aquinas are not only the most famous theologians of Christian history, some held the titles of Fathers and Doctors of the Church and most were canonized as Saints. The bulk of modern beliefs, doctrines, and interpretations, in nearly all denominations, can be traced to these five men. It was bad enough that they subscribed to the violent nature of the Roman Empire, but their beliefs regarding women were devastating. These men had very negative views towards women and taught that anything to do with sex was straight from Satan. Any type of sexuality, beauty, feelings, or pleasure were the worst of sins, and celibacy, ugly, sorrow, suffering, and pain were Godly. There were Christians that actually tortured themselves. Romanic love in itself was considered wrong.
They believed marital sex was a sin even though they acknowledged that it was a necessity. A ridiculous conundrum of logic. A man’s desire for his wife was considered lust and the only time marital sex should occur was to have children and after that sex should stop. Origen actually castrated himself because he thought his penis was tempting him. Ouch! This is after a slue of sexual issues and statements against the evils of women and sex.
Continued...
The scriptures never say it is a requirement to have a wedding ceremony to be married but, the Protestants decided it should be required. One of the most significant things that God taught us.
But there are some things that Christianity is still learning. For example the equal status of women in Christianity. We are moving that direction slowly but why is this the tough lesson to learn? It is a hard question but I believe that it is a set of under laying beliefs.
It starts with the New Testament. Those in the New Testament thought that Yeshua could return at any moment and the priority was to spread the Gospel and save as many people as possible. They also thought that the time of severe persecution would soon occur, which it did happen for about 250 years.
So the reasoning by Christian leaders in the New Testament was that romance was a distraction. The church of Corinth asked Paul….is it good for a man not to touch a woman? 1st Corinthians 7:1
I would like you to be free from concern. An unmarried man is concerned about the Lord’s affairs—how he can please the Lord. But a married man is concerned about the affairs of this world—how he can please his wife— and his interests are divided. An unmarried woman or virgin is concerned about the Lord’s affairs: Her aim is to be devoted to the Lord in both body and spirit. But a married woman is concerned about the affairs of this world—how she can please her husband. I am saying this for your own good, not to restrict you, but that you may live in a right way in undivided devotion to the Lord. 1st Corinthians 7:32-35
The thinking was, why get married and have a wife and children if it all was going to end soon and why have a family to be horribly tortured and killed in the arenas. Paul gave marriage as a concession to prevent sin, but no one promoted or recommended marriage.
So most of the religious leaders in the New Testament were celibate. This continued after the biblical era, 65 AD and on.
Christian religious leaders were called Epískopos….meaning overseer. (Some like to call them Bishops and Popes but those titles do not occur until the English language evolved. Old English first… bisceop and English Bishop. In different languages Pope means Papa or father.)
The religious leaders continued these views towards love, sex, and marriage and families and most were celibate. So in a male dominate religion the negatives started to evolve….
If marriage was a distraction from the Lord, so were women. And why were they a distraction? Because of sex and the male desire for sex. Then women were labeled as tempters because who else tempts good men….the devil. So the demonization of sex and women was complete and the second rate status of women was locked into Christian thinking.
But not with everyone….most of the Christian congregations did not buy into the belief that love and marriage and family distracted them from God. It was mostly the Christian leadership that thought that celibacy made you more righteous or holy or more devoted to God. So love, and romance and marriage and families continued with the congregations.
Now love, and marriage and families and procreation is a big thing in reality. Usually a celibate religion will die out. So there grew a division on this topic in Christianity from the very beginning between the leadership and the congregations. This means what the leadership believed and lived and preached some thng that the
majority of their congregations did not believe or follow. Why? It was essentially wrong.
Now this becomes even more common in the Catholic Church ….4th century and on. Here are some of the things that the leadership thought…..
Origen, St. Jerome, St. Augustine, St. Ambrose, and St. Thomas Aquinas are not only the most famous theologians of Christian history, some held the titles of Fathers and Doctors of the Church and most were canonized as Saints. The bulk of modern beliefs, doctrines, and interpretations, in nearly all denominations, can be traced to these five men. It was bad enough that they subscribed to the violent nature of the Roman Empire, but their beliefs regarding women were devastating. These men had very negative views towards women and taught that anything to do with sex was straight from Satan. Any type of sexuality, beauty, feelings, or pleasure were the worst of sins, and celibacy, ugly, sorrow, suffering, and pain were Godly. There were Christians that actually tortured themselves. Romanic love in itself was considered wrong.
They believed marital sex was a sin even though they acknowledged that it was a necessity. A ridiculous conundrum of logic. A man’s desire for his wife was considered lust and the only time marital sex should occur was to have children and after that sex should stop. Origen actually castrated himself because he thought his penis was tempting him. Ouch! This is after a slue of sexual issues and statements against the evils of women and sex.
Continued...
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