Debating those verses is for another thread but I want to say something.
Your previous post implies that feminism has contributed to the overall decay of our society. I won't argue that there are many men who are not stepping up to the plate and that there are many women who have contributed to the unstable family environment.
However, if we look through history (both Western and Eastern), we do not see consistent stability, peace, harmony, and perfect gender roles. For thousands of years, men were given permission by the church to beat their wives. Homosexuality and prostitution was quite rampant and popular in ancient Egypt. Wars and hate have existed since the beginning of time. Minorities such as blacks and women were oppressed for much of America's history.
No society is perfect and both men and women contribute to the overall problem.
But to restrict and control society based on gender roles (not based on ability but on one's sex) will only lead to oppression.
Do you believe women should not teach in schools and not speak in church?
I believe the womans main role is childbearing and the home. That is what God says, not me. I don't believe women should preach from the pulpit because theres a biblical problem with that.
Also the stats say differently, while feminism hasn't led to the decay in all of society I would say its the number one factor leading to divorce and the ruin of familys. Nothing else can explain such the dramatic rise in divorce after 1950 and the perfect timing of Roe V Wade and No Fault divorce right after:
Change Over Time in Divorce Rates
The number of divorced people in the population more than quadrupled from 4.3 million in 1970 to 18.3 million in 1996, according to a Census Bureau report on
MARITAL STATUS AND LIVING ARRANGEMENTS
"
14% of white women who married in the 1940s eventually divorced. A single generation later, almost 50 percent of those that married in the late sixties and early seventies have already divorced. ... Between 1970 and 1992, the proportion of babies born outside of marriage leaped from 11% to 30%."
Amara Bachu, Fertility of American Women: June 1994 (Washington D.C.: Bureau of the Census, September 1995), xix, Table K. Cited on page5 of
The Abolition of Marriage, by Maggie Gallagher
"According to the National Center for Health Statitics (1988: 2-5), the divorce rate rose from 2.5 per 1000 population in 1965 to 3.5 in 1970 to 4.8 in 1975."
"No-Fault Divorce: Proposed Solutions to a National Tragedy," 1993 Journal of Legal Studies 2, 15, citing National Center for Health Statistics, 1988, 2-5, cited by Thomas B. Marvell, Divorce Rates and the Fault Requirement, 23 Law & Society Review 544, n.4, (1989).
Divorce increased almost 40 percent from 1970 to 1975.
Brian Willats, Breaking Up is Easy To Do, available from Michigan Family Forum, citing Statistics from National Center for Health Statistics, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Cited in Kenneth Jost and Marilyn Robinson, "Children and Divorce:What can be done to help children of divorce," CQ Researcher, June 7, 1991, pp. 353, 357.
The marriage rate has fallen nearly 30% since 1970 and the divorce rate has increased about 40%.
Ahlburg and DeVita, "New Realities," 4-12. Cited on page 5 of
The Abolition of Marriage, by Maggie Gallagher
"In America, divorce used to be difficult to obtain and, usually, impossible without good reason: adultery, abandonment, abuse, alcoholism. In 1880, according to the historian Robert L. Griswold, one marriage in 21-fewer than 5 percent-ended in divorce. Over time, there have been peaks and valleys in the divorce rate, such as the period immediately following World War II, when returning soldiers found things rather different from how they had left them, or were themselves tremendously changed by war. "But beginning in the mid-1960s," writes Griswold, the divorce rate "again began to rise dramatically, fueled by ever-higher marital expectations, a vast expansion of wives moving into the work force, the rebirth of feminism, and the adoption of 'no fault' divorce (that is, divorce granted without the need to establish wrongdoing by either party) in almost every state." Griswold continues, "The last factor, although hailed as a progressive step that would end the fraud, collusion, and acrimony that accompanied the adversarial system of divorce, has had disastrous consequences for women and children.'"[Powell, D. (2003) Divorce-on-Demand: Forget about Gay Marriage- What About the State of Regular Marriage?
National Review, v55 i20. Retrieved June 9, 2004 from Expanded Academic ASAP.]
Reconciliation after Separation
A sociology professor from Baltimore posted this citation on the FAMILYSCI listserv:
"The only statistic I have is the one cited in my marriages/families
textbook, but it may (or may not) be dated: "Approximately 10 percent of all
currently married couples (9 percent of white women and 14 percent of black
women) in the United States have separated and reconciled" (Wineberg and
McCarthy, "Separtion and reconciliation in American marriages," Journal of
Divorce & Remarriage 29, 1993: 131-46). If there's a more recent cite, I
haven't bumped across it yet."
Catholic Annulment Statistics:
"For the year 2002: of the 56,236 ordinary hearings for a declaration of
nullity, 46,092 received an affirmative sentence. Of these, 343 were handed
out in Africa, 676 in Oceania, 1,562 in Asia, 8,855 in Europe and
36,656 in
America, of which 30,968 in North America and 5,688 in Central and South
America."
Year
Divorces per 1,000 population
1950 ...........
2.6
1955 ...........
2.3
1957 ...........
2.2
1960 ...........
2.2
1965 ...........
2.5
1970 ...........
3.5
1971 ...........
3.7
1972 ...........
4.0
1973 ...........
4.3
1974 ...........
4.6
1975 ...........
4.8
1976 ...........
5.0
1977 ...........
5.0
1978 ...........
5.1
1979 ...........
5.3
1980 ...........
5.2
1981 ...........
5.3
1982 ...........
5.1
1983 ...........
5.0
1984 ...........
5.0
1985 ...........
5.0
1986 ...........
4.9
1987 ...........
4.8
1988 ...........
4.8
1989 ...........
4.7
1990 ...........
4.7
1991 ...........
4.7
1992 ...........
4.8
1993 ...........
4.6
1994 ...........
4.6
1995 ...........
4.4
1996 ...........
4.3
1997 ...........
4.3
1998 ..........
4.2
1999 ..........
4.1
2000 ..........
4.2
2001 ..........
4.0