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I think you might be missing a "not" before "schismatic" in your first sentence, friend.

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I think you might be missing a "not" before "schismatic" in your first sentence, friend.
Forgive me, I did not know you were OCA. You cite such a well-traveled history that I misunderstood your affiliation, and I had an incorrect interpretation of what you profile label of "Generic Orthodox meant."
Do you support the Quakers?
?Women are allowed to read from the Torah.
Women are allowed to light a Menorah.
I alm Likely overstepping with this post, and If I am, maybe the moderators can delete it for me.Women do not count towards a Minyan (the quorum of ten required for Jewish prayer services) in traditional Rabinnical Judaism, nor do they read from the Torah in the synagogue (hence the Bar Mitzvah; the Bat Mitzvah being a more recent innovation in Conservative and Reform Judaism). Furthermore, Christianity is not Judaism; Judaism as we now know it is a family of related religions which are loosely derived from Second Temple Judaism and emerged in the chaos following the destruction of that temple around 70 AD. Specifically, Rabinnical Judaism and the Beta Israel of Ethiopia; later on we had the emergence of Karaite Judaism, which rejected the authority of the Rabbis and was possibly similar to how the Sadducees functioned, although it did not share their specific interpretation of the Tanakh, and then later on we saw Rabinnical Judaism become relaxed with regads to the Torah with the Reform, Conservative and Reconstructionist movements, and conversely made more intense with the Charedi, the Chassidim, and so on.
And the development of the mystical Kaballah really represents a profound point of departure between Judaism and Christianity, since the ideas of the Kaballah are essentially incompatible to the Christian Orthodoxy defined as broadly as possible.
I don’t think I’m allowed to support women priests,I alm Likely overstepping with this post, and If I am, maybe the moderators can delete it for me.
We need to get things back on track in this tread if it is going to progress.
If persons have issues with the roles that particular persons or groups may fil in a particular Church, then they need to take it to that congregational forum. Feeding trolls just keeps them coming back for more.
According to Christ and His Church, there is no such thing as women priests. So give it upI don’t think I’m allowed to support women priests,
in the Catholic forum.
Who was Mary of Bethany?According to Christ and His Church, there is no such thing as women priests. So give it up
What point are you making? (I only ask for clarification). Are you saying that you believe Mary of Bethany and Mary Magdalene were priests? If so, on what basis? If not, what did you mean? Thanks!Who was Mary of Bethany?
Who was Mary Magdalene?
So, you have answered your own question: If such came to be, the Catholic Church would cease to be.I don’t think I’m allowed to support women priests,
in the Catholic forum.
The Catholic Church is the bridge.So, you have answered your own question: If such came to be, the Catholic Church would cease to be.
I don't think either the Anglican communion, or the Orthodox, are likely to see things in the same terms.The Catholic Church is the bridge.
It must reach out to the Church of England,
and the Eastern Orthodox Church at the same time.
To experience the ministry of women, you can turn to the Armenian Church. The issue of the female priesthood in the AAC is rarely discussed and remains within the framework of traditional theology. Our official position remains steadfast: the priesthood is for men.
However, the ancient institution of deaconesses (the first of the four main degrees of the priesthood) has been preserved in the Armenian Church. Unlike the Greek Orthodox Churches, this practice has always existed in our country. The women who led this ministry could be nuns, manuscript scribes, protodeaconesses, deaconesses, and archdeaconesses.
In the Middle Ages, the institution of deaconesses in the AAC had both its supporters and opponents.
I don't speak NT Greek, but the three dictionaries I have referred to all say that the Greek word "Gune" can mean "wife" or "woman". None of them mention "deaconess".Do any of those on either side of the discussion, in preserved works, comment on 1 Timothy 3:11?
Some in modern times have variously indicated the word should be translated as wives or women, with some thinking that women in this case refers to deaconesses, rather than wives of deacons. Since you indicate the overall issue of deaconesses was discussed, I am wondering if any saw it that way. On the other hand, I am not sure whether the terms in the language/s these discussions took place in would be capable of various readings as in the Greek.
1 Timothy 3:8 Deacons likewise must be dignified, not double-tongued, not addicted to much wine, not greedy for dishonest gain. 9 They must hold the mystery of the faith with a clear conscience. 10 And let them also be tested first; then let them serve as deacons if they prove themselves blameless. 11 wives/women likewise must be dignified, not slanderers, but sober-minded, faithful in all things. 12 Let deacons each be the husband of one wife, managing their children and their own households well. 13 For those who serve well as deacons gain a good standing for themselves and also great confidence in the faith that is in Christ Jesus.
The passage is discussing deacons. So the question is, when it talks (in that context) about women or wives, does it mean women who are deacons, or women who are wives of deacons?I don't speak NT Greek, but the three dictionaries I have referred to all say that the Greek word "Gune" can mean "wife" or "woman". None of them mention "deaconess".
Two points occur to me: First, the very next words in 1 Timothy are:The passage is discussing deacons. So the question is, when it talks (in that context) about women or wives, does it mean women who are deacons, or women who are wives of deacons?
I have no problem understanding it as women who are deacons, especially given Scripture elsewhere gives us a woman deacon, but some people who insist women can't be deacons read it as the deacons' wives.
The 1 Timothy thought starts in verse 8, with "Deacons likewise..." So it's already discussing deacons. Then we get to verse 11 and the mention of the women/wives, and that's where it's not clear exactly what the author meant; the women deacons or the wives of deacons.Second, where in Romans 16 we read of Phoebe, for whom some English translations use "deaconess", though most use "servant", a different Greek word is used - diakonos (a servant or a deacon), not gune, used in the 1 Timothy verse:
“I commend to you Phoebe our sister, who is a servant of the church in Cenchrea,” (Ro 16:1 NKJV)