- Since God chose to use the male pronouns about himself, why is that not good enough for the people advocating inclusivity?
- God does not need more names.
- God as a mother is incomprehensible, and being incomprehensible will turn away more people than it attracts.
- Trying to adapt God to suit individual tastes is the same as building a new Tower of Babel.
- Changing how God is referred to creates a dangerous alternate image of God.
- The people advocating this also advocate ideas that go against the core message of Christianity.
- The moralizing tone and tendencies of these people and how they attack everyone who does not agree with their opinions is a problem.
- Bonking each other in the head with human-created ideological slegdehammers distracts from the main message.
...To be clear, here are my personal views on those reasons, since I'd rather not people assume I stand behind all of that.
- Jesus chose to use "Father". If the male pronouns are good enough for God, then it's good enough for me.
- That God does not need more names is kind of silly? Sure, he does not need them. Humans are the ones who do. So let humans use whichever name they feel is most respectful.
- No, it's not incomprehensible. Bad excuse.
- Adapting God to suit individual tastes... Well, I don't think that's a good thing in as far as it's the wishful thinking of humans, since it is incredibly easy to fool oneself in that way. But God doesn't teach everyone in the same way, so he's actually adapting himself to reach individuals, too. The goal remains the same though, and he has said that one day he will explain himself clearly, so I think it's best to retain some open-mindedness for that day.
- As many people have already pointed out, God already has thousands of names. Goes to show how difficult it is to describe him, but who was it that tasked humans to name things, again...?
- I am not for abandoning Jesus or the core message in any way or form regardless of what God is called.
- Any group that grows huge enough is bound to have some less civil people. That goes for Christians, atheists, feminists, sport fans, insert-other-group, and yes, it even applies to the groups that feel hurt by Christianity. Like many have already said, the tone maintained in this place is impressive. It would not be impressive if it was like this everywhere, though.
- Bonking each other on the head is a distracting thing, yes.
Putting the reasons I don't agree with myself up here may nonetheless have been a little unfair of me, since there may be no one here to defend or explain those views. Please keep that in mind.
Pneuma in the greek is a feminine noun - but note that may not convey much (das Mädchen - the girl - is neuter in German). However there is a lot of feminine imagery for the divine in both the Older and Newer testaments. G_d is also plural, and without gender, and... there’s a lot more diversity than we often acknowledge.
And I’ve heard the same arguments as you, Miragia, against inclusivity.
1. One of the first Names of God used in the Old Testament translates as "Elohim," and is the masculine plural form of the singular female "Eloha." It's been a VERY long time since I studied these things, but there's some evidence in the original texts to indicate that at some point prior to the time these things were written and codified the Hebrew deity was likely female. I know this is anecdotal and I'm not about to "Source: Dude, Trust Me" on this, so please do feel free to take that information with a grain of salt if you like. I do remember that being a thing though. Unfortunately, it's been more than 30 years since I had access to the original study books and can't for the life of me remember the names of them now.
Oh, I can answer some of this from the perspective of a former Jew that used to know modern Hebrew.
This is all I know on the subject from how it was presented to me so I could be wrong on some details.
Yes, in the torah God was referred to as masculine, his name would be included but we were told to insert "he who is most holy" or Ellohim (not sure how to spell that). Cant say much to the feminine aspect to the holy ghost, for as far as I know it was supposed to be only one being. "I am God, there is no one but Me." kinda thing.
Also no, God has many names. 72 known names and the number is supposed to be in the hundreds or thousands.
In the traditional bible, it dosnt make sense for a male dominant religion, that treated its women like property to give their supreme being any female traits that to them are inferior. So yes, your right on that point.
People disagreeing on Gods traits and changing them to fit a narrative is why there are three main religions from one book and counless subsects of christianity. Christians changed his identity when forming the new testament and spliting his identity into 3 or 4 individuals. (No Satan in the original text, he would supposedly talk to himself for he is literally everything)
Thats at least off the top of my head, let me know if I'm unclear on anything.
Thank you for your interesting knowledge and perspectives, Speck, Tarnagh and tzelly. ^^ I'm not going to speculate too much about things I have no education in, though personally I don't think God is either male or female. He's just playing by our rules and referring to himself as male since humans tend to think in those terms, and making clear to us whether he's male or female or both or neither really isn't a priority to him when we're living on borrowed time.
As for the trinity, I know that can be a difficult topic for non-Christians (and some Christians too) to wrap their heads around. I am quite certain that most who believe in the trinity do not believe that God are three different individuals, though. At least, as I see it, God is one being who shows himself in three different ways. What gender those forms of his happen to have does not change that God is still one.