The brothers were his half-brothers from Joseph’s other wives.
I do not see anywhere where it says Joseph had other wives. Technically Joseph was not his biological father, so any offspring of Joseph and Mary would be half brothers and sisters.
The brothers were his half-brothers from Joseph’s other wives.
Yes, and technically any sons of Joseph’s other wives would not be biologically related to Yeshua, but they were still family and would be called brothers.I do not see anywhere where it says Joseph had other wives. Technically Joseph was not his biological father, so any offspring of Joseph and Mary would be half brothers and sisters.
As long as a woman is under male headship, why would it matter? It’s not like there would be intimacy. As long as the elders would be in agreement with each other.I have trouble seeing that as accurate. I think it would mean multiple heads or coverings.
What pledge are you referring to?Also it seems the pledge women had been breaking was to Christ and not to the elders.
James was slated for martyrdom. John ended up living in relative peace in Ephesus where it is believed Mary lived out her days with him somewhat insulated from the shit storm her son unleashed on the Jewish world. Jesus gave Mary and John to each other out of concern for His mother who would have otherwise been in the thick of it without any sons to care for her.Bear with me @steve , because I have a very western mind
I really don't know why Jesus had John do that. I know Mary had other male children that could have taken care of her. Unless they were all very young and moved in with John as well?
I really do see headship as 'power over'. I have a very responsibility oriented philosophy (I prefer inalienable responsibilities to inalienable rights after all) but how can I be responsible for something I have no power over? Doesn't the head, by definition have authority over the body?
So I guess when you say "In reality it's about responsibility": Do you mean Headship is about responsibility and not power (authority) at all? If so I have no idea what I can do with that. It's like headship without headship. Or do you mean Headship is primarily about responsibility and to a lesser degree than usually advertised, power? If so then I'm right there with you. All of my authority I naturally derive from my responsibilities anyways.
I do truly believe male headship is important, and necessary, for most women, most of the time. But if it's an actual sin to be without headship then Paul's advice here:
However, if someone thinks he is acting inappropriately toward his betrothed, and if she is beyond her youth and they ought to marry, let him do as he wishes; he is not sinning; they should get married. But the man who is firmly established in his heart and under no constraint, with control over his will and resolve in his heart not to marry the virgin, he will do well. So then, he who marries the virgin does well, but he who does not marry her does even better.
is just absolutely reckless.
but it appears that a woman can, at least, outgrow her need for male headship.
In Western society, your assumption would make sense.
You assuredly will be limited to the amount of authority that she allows you to have, and 100% of the responsibilities.
When you obtain a fine animal (horse, bull, dog, whatever) you don’t think “Oh boy, I have the control over this animal”, no, you start thinking about what it’s needs are and what you are going to provide for it. Shelter, food, saddle? Does it need grooming?
Of course training it will be part of the program, and that involves control, but if you don’t start with providing water it’s not going to last very long.
https://newrepublic.com/article/129483/millennial-women-gravitating-bernie-sandersThat is a very interesting piece to put together and it makes so much sense.
But refuse to put younger widows on the list, for when they feel sensual desires in disregard of Christ, they want to get married, thus incurring condemnation, because they have set aside their previous pledge.
I have said it before, I believe that the female side of Adam was removed, not just a bone.
Neither is whole without the other.
For an eye opening look at how many different translations there can be to a verse go here.https://biblehub.com/1_corinthians/7-36.htm
in the context of Women of Scripture, 'younger widows' might refer to anyone under 115 years of age.
The Human Being (Adam) was an hermaphrodite until Yahweh saw fit to split him up to create human companionship.
How would one tell if someone else is trolling? As I mentioned in the private conversation I just began with you, I've never really known what people mean by trolling, so after sending my message to you I looked it up -- and discovered that internet trolling refers to people who are basically bomb throwers. I assure you I am not that. On occasion I may purposefully stir the pot, but only for the purpose of enlightenment, love, transcendence, growth, increased oneness with our Lord or general edification.I can't tell if you're trolling.
Paging @Pacman re conversation we had earlier today... Not sure we got this far, but discussed the removal of woman from man...And not just your belief -- but actual Scripture. The literal translation of the Hebrew (Concordant Version of the Old Testament) states that God put Adam (the Human Being) to sleep and removed the female 'angular organs' from him and used the dust of the earth with those parts to form a whole female human being, leaving Adam with just being male. 'Angular organs' was an idiomatic expression of the time that referred to not only genitalia but all the working parts associated with one gender or the other. The Human Being (Adam) was an hermaphrodite until Yahweh saw fit to split him up to create human companionship.
We resist that at our peril.
Paging @Pacman re conversation we had earlier today... Not sure we got this far, but discussed the removal of woman from man...
mi-tzalotav litteraly one of his sidesYeah I’ve seen that claim before. I’m curious of documentation... I admit I’m skeptical but I’ve been wrong before... @IshChayil or @Kevin can you weigh in on this?
But yes if that’s true then it definitely undergirds what we were talking about...
Transmitted and developed through dualistic Gnosticism in the East, the notion of an androgynous creation was adopted by the Haggadists in order to reconcile the apparently conflicting statements of the Bible.
A very creative translation, albeit, it seems more like the Greek legends than the biblical account.And not just your belief -- but actual Scripture. The literal translation of the Hebrew (Concordant Version of the Old Testament) states that God put Adam (the Human Being) to sleep and removed the female 'angular organs' from him and used the dust of the earth with those parts to form a whole female human being, leaving Adam with just being male. 'Angular organs' was an idiomatic expression of the time that referred to not only genitalia but all the working parts associated with one gender or the other. The Human Being (Adam) was an hermaphrodite until Yahweh saw fit to split him up to create human companionship.
We resist that at our peril.