God and the Sexes
God and the Sexes
by Evelyn Birge Vitz
For Christianity, gender is both important and irrelevant. God creates, Christ redeems, and the Holy Spirit sanctifies men and women alike, along with Jews and Greeks, rich and poor, black and white. But, apart from salvation, gender possesses a special importance in Christianity that cannot be viewed as either accidental or superficial.
Both views flow from the fact that God is understood in the Judeo-Christian
tradition as being fundamentally, if mysteriously and
non-genitally-
But the fact remains that the Lord, the unique "I AM WHO AM," is a Father God, not an androgynous divine entity. Indeed, the entire Trinitarian Godhead is male: Christ is the Son, physically, genitally, as well as ontologically. And the Holy Spirit, though in some respects linked to the Old Testament theme of "Wisdom," has been, since the dawn of Christianity, understood in male terms. The Holy Ghost is not an "it," or a "she," but a third "he," united to the Father and the Son in the intensely loving but non-erotic union of the Trinity.
Human gender is unimportant to the Christian tradition in the sense that
all human souls are "feminine"
The Christian tradition maintained this powerfully gendered concept of the relationship between God and his people as a whole, and between God and the individual persons who constitute his people. At the mystical level, the Church is the Bride of Christ, living only in relation to him, obedient to him: Christ is the head and husband of the Church. Thus, the Fathers of the Church presented the Church as born from the wounded side of Christ, as Eve had been created from Adam's side: from his rib.
The same relationship is borne out at the individual level. Each of us is called to be responsive to divine love: to the love of the Father, to the inspiring love of the Spirit, and to the love of Christ the Bridegroom of the soul, for all are "brides" of Christ.
If all are female in respect to God, what then is the fundamental importance of gender, of sexual identity, to the Christian tradition-to Christian experience?
We return to the Fatherhood of God, and to the fact that he did not create
human beings as androgynous aggregates. Nor did he make five sexes, as some
at the United Nations are arguing today. Now, how does that list
But in the traditional Christian view, as taught in Genesis, God created
them
Nor is our sexual identity something that we can "construct," or that
society constructs for, or against, us. This is not to deny that different
societies organize and deploy sexual identity and sexual roles differently;
in this
The fact that not everyone feels comfortable with the sexual identity
assigned by God is neither here nor there. Many of us are not especially
pleased with the way God made us. If we were in charge, we would make
ourselves more gifted athletically or academically or musically, more
charming, taller and thinner, and so on. Moreover, sex and gender are at
Looking at the New Testament, we may as well begin with the obvious fact
that Jesus Christ chose twelve men as his Apostles; these were his original
followers and his commissioned emissaries to the entire creation.
Presumably, he did not choose them because men are better than women. One
of the Twelve was his betrayer, a fact which Jesus knew well in advance.
Moreover, no human can ever be as perfectly good as the Blessed Virgin.
Mary is honored as the Queen of Heaven, Queen of Angels, Queen of Saints,
etc. She is the Queen
Can it be that Jesus
If he did all these things, it must be because that was precisely what he,
as the Son of God-as God himself-
It has been charged that, at some point, Christianity got onto the wrong
foot about the way in which power is assigned differentially to the sexes.
But, in fact, this is the foot on which Christ
Paul follows Jesus's lead in his letter to the Ephesians when he says that
wives should obey their husbands and that men should love their wives as
Christ loves the Church. All husbands, like the Apostles, represent and
embody Christ in the world. And women carry on, and live out, in a special
way, the life of the Church. Husbands are to be to their wives
Should we women be offended? Am I angry that I can't be pope, and more to
the point, that I am not even theoretically
But before distributing authority as he saw fit, God had first
Though Jesus choose men as his disciples, he was extraordinarily good to women. He obviously loved women, as he loved men. He treated the women he met with great tenderness, justice, and mercy. And how those women, those non-Apostles, loved him! One need only think of the "sinful woman" washing his feet with her tears and wiping them with her hair, whose lavish gratitude he defended. Of his kind, tactful, handling of Martha or the woman with the hemorrhage. Of the Samaritan woman at the well, to whom he told the truth about her life, and to whom he promised eternal water. Jesus gave to women the honor of standing at the foot of the Cross, when almost all the men, his chosen Apostles, had denied him and fled. He also gave to these women the glory and the joy of being the first to see him risen from the grave. If you will allow me a bit of Christian irony and paradox, he also gave these same women the honor of his Apostles' disbelief; in this way, he first shared his cross with them after he had risen.
And what of Mary? God honored women by calling his Mother to a perfection
that no one else-and in particular, no man-can achieve. Mary, imitated for
centuries by both sexes, has been the very definition, not of worldly
power, but of compassionate motherhood, of devoted service, of willing
obedience. We are told that, from the depths of her loving heart, she
"pleads for sinners." I sometimes think that that is women's most important
function on this planet: like Mary, like the mother who reminded Jesus that
even the dogs get to eat the crumbs that fall under the table, like the
woman with the unjust judge, like Martha and Mary who wanted their brother
Lazarus back, we women are here to love and to
What are the advantages of accepting such a Christian, specifically Catholic, view of gender and its importance? It is worth emphasizing the advantages of such a vision of gender as compared with Protestant views. The original Protestant reformers eliminated, along with many other things, the religious dignity of the female and the feminine: they got rid of the Church, the Bride of Christ. They demoted the Blessed Virgin to an only temporarily-virgin mother of Jesus-a nice lady, to be sure, but nothing extraordinary; no special crown in heaven for her! When they disbanded the Catholic Communion of Saints (all the redeemed being equally both wretches and holy), they sent into exile, along with the male cohort, such great female figures-friends of men and women alike-as Agatha, Agnes, Barbara, several Catherines, Cecilia, Christine, Dorothy, Elizabeth, and on through the saintly alphabet. In the insistence that all should marry, they eliminated the special vocation of consecrated virginity, which had given a special dignity and spiritual authority to nuns and other religious, as brides of Christ. They also attacked the indissolubility of marriage, which has-as even many feminists now recognize-protected women far more than men. Many holy nuns and abbesses have exercised remarkable power in the Church-even in the world-with a spiritual influence extending far beyond the confines of their convent. One thinks of Hildegard of Bingen, Catherine of Siena, and Teresa of Avila-of their eloquent but forthright letters to popes, kings and emperors; their wide and effective travels; and their unflagging zeal for renewal in the Church.
It is important to stress the fact that
By the time the Reformation was over, the female-and indeed all honor paid
specifically to women and femininity-had been expunged from Protestant
Christianity. The only important "female" left was the Whore of Babylon.
Only males and masculinity were given important roles and glorified. The
original result was that men were not only the leaders of churches, they
were
But there has been a recent development to all this. Since Protestantism
had no valued roles to assign to the feminine, as modern secular culture
has moved increasingly toward demands for "justice" for women-and away from
the roles of wifehood and motherhood-the only apparent solution was to
embrace the principle of androgyny. In fact, the attempt has been made to
abandon gender identity as having any theological significance at all.
Thus, even the traditional Christian sense that we are
In his
There are three ways of thinking about gender. The first, androgyny, ends
up in nihilism and perversion, by making sex arbitrary and trivial. The
second, crude male power over women, is, as we all so clearly see, the
result of original sin. The third is what Christianity has always taught:
the
This article was taken from the June 1995 issue of "Crisis" magazine. To subscribe please write: Box 1006, Notre Dame, IN 46556 or call 1-800-852-9962. Subscriptions are $25.00 per year. Editorial correspondence should be sent to 1511 K Street, N.W., Ste. 525, Washington, D.C., 20005, 202-347-7411; E-mail: 75061.1144@compuserve.com. "Crisis is offering CRNET members who are first time subscribers a subscription price of $19.95 or 53% off the cover price. Just mention CRNET when subscribing.
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