alaskamolly
Queen of the Tundra
Well...I think both exist at the same time--a relationship of equals, and a relationship of authority rankings.
You see it in Eden, how God gives the position of authority to the husband:
Adam, not Eve, is asked to name the animals, for example. To name a thing is to call it what it is...and only someone in authority over a thing has the right to officially name a thing.
Also, God gave the rule about the "tree" to Adam, not to Eve. Adam was the 'delegated' authority--he passed on the word from God to Eve.
To me,it was obvious God viewed Adam as the one in higher authority. That doesn't mean God said Adam was better. It's simply that God created EVERYTHING to show us something--all of creation is a picture of God in one way or another (or so says Romans 1).
1 Corinthians 11 tells us why God has husbands and wives in or under authority. Man and wife are to represent the way God relates to Christ, and/or the way Christ relates to humankind.
Ephesians 5 gives us another analogy--The husband represents Christ, and the wife represents the Church. It's all supposed to be one big expression of a much higher truth. We are living storybooks, as it were.
The curse was simply God showing them what would happen to their roles now that sin was in the world. That sweet natural leadership and submission would now be corrupted...him wanting to dominate her (or go passive altogether), her wanting to usurp him (overtly or behind-the-scenes), and so it goes...
The whole history of the human race is an excellent case study of Sin and Rebellion, and male-female relationship are no exception.
However we know for certain that authority roles are to exist, simply because we have them given as commands in the New Testament. There is a level of mutual submission (a natural give-and-take that exists in all living things!) but that is to be found within the context of the authority structure.
For example, there is a mutual submission in my own body, but --the head and body recieve from one another, but the head is still the head is still the head. The mutual submission does not negate who is the one with the vision and the plans for the entire body--it merely makes it all work that much sweeter.
My 2 Cents!
Molly
You see it in Eden, how God gives the position of authority to the husband:
Adam, not Eve, is asked to name the animals, for example. To name a thing is to call it what it is...and only someone in authority over a thing has the right to officially name a thing.
Also, God gave the rule about the "tree" to Adam, not to Eve. Adam was the 'delegated' authority--he passed on the word from God to Eve.
To me,it was obvious God viewed Adam as the one in higher authority. That doesn't mean God said Adam was better. It's simply that God created EVERYTHING to show us something--all of creation is a picture of God in one way or another (or so says Romans 1).
1 Corinthians 11 tells us why God has husbands and wives in or under authority. Man and wife are to represent the way God relates to Christ, and/or the way Christ relates to humankind.
Ephesians 5 gives us another analogy--The husband represents Christ, and the wife represents the Church. It's all supposed to be one big expression of a much higher truth. We are living storybooks, as it were.
The curse was simply God showing them what would happen to their roles now that sin was in the world. That sweet natural leadership and submission would now be corrupted...him wanting to dominate her (or go passive altogether), her wanting to usurp him (overtly or behind-the-scenes), and so it goes...
The whole history of the human race is an excellent case study of Sin and Rebellion, and male-female relationship are no exception.
However we know for certain that authority roles are to exist, simply because we have them given as commands in the New Testament. There is a level of mutual submission (a natural give-and-take that exists in all living things!) but that is to be found within the context of the authority structure.
For example, there is a mutual submission in my own body, but --the head and body recieve from one another, but the head is still the head is still the head. The mutual submission does not negate who is the one with the vision and the plans for the entire body--it merely makes it all work that much sweeter.
My 2 Cents!
Molly
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Why did I leave egalitarianism? Well, I just couldn't support my views by using Scripture, except for by pulling and tweaking verses here and there...
Maybe my brain is just making unnecessary distinctions. I don't know anymore.