aliantha wrote:What are we talking about, if not equality?
It would be a little ridiculous for me to deny that men and women are built differently, considering I've borne two children myself. But once the kids were weaned, the girls' father had all the physical equipment anybody would need to raise a kid to adulthood. As do you and rus.
So at that point -- say, two years into the each kid's life -- the whole thing of men saying, "Women are meant to raise the kids and men are meant to bring home the bacon," becomes all about domination and controlling the relationship.
Y'all can sugar-coat it with that b.s. about how husbands "honor" their wives by letting them stay home and take care of the kids, as God wants, while the men go out into the big, scary world and fight every day for the family's slice of brontosaurus or whatever. But it's still b.s. Men today are scared to death that if women can give birth, raise the kids, and pay for everything themselves, then they could be relegated to the role of sperm donor. And it's men who do badly emotionally if they don't have someone at home to take care of them.
You know, I think that without genuine Christian faith (and I just about HAVE to say "Orthodox" here, as individuals using Scripture to justify what they want to believe, or even simply honestly understanding it wrongly, is an inevitable problem - a person is not going to stumble across (OK, come up with on their own) a complete and correct framework of theology and philosophy except by a one-in-a-billion sheer accident. So without that, Ali, I think you're right. And that INCLUDES Christian versions that have strayed from the orthodox version (note that I am generally VERY careful with my capitalization of that word) - I'll iterate that small 'o' means 'correct, right, true' and the big 'O' refers specificallt to the teachings of the Orthodox Church. (I'd say "Eastern" Orthodox Church, but we don't say "Western" Catholic Church as a general rule.)
Without a genuine striving toward Christ that is correctly guided, I DO see a relationship going towards domination by someone. So I do so far agree with you.
Now it is precisely NOT Orthodox to 'sugar-coat' things by vague mumbling of 'honoring' (which, by the way, is the injunction to the wives (not women in general), not the husbands, and needs clarification and discussion so that you would see how it differs from certain practices such as in Protestant Sola Scriptura, where a good many people did indeed simply 'read it for themselves', and when love became a mere feeling, it became an irrelevant command, while the 'submit', 'fear' and 'honor' could be measured and imposed by people who weren't striving for the orthodox vision of themselves becoming like Christ. The whole part about love as being a complete self-sacrifice, a surrendering of the self - which is what the husbands are SUPPOSED to do -
precludes domination!!!
And yes, I think that without Christ, men can indeed be reduced to sperm donors (as women can also be enslaved by those in power and reduced to gestating factories and food supplies for babies. 'Brave New World' and 'The Matrix' are not so completely far-fetched as they may appear to some.
Everyone does badly if nobody at home loves them, whether you come home to a house full of hate, or a completely empty one.
So the whole key to all of that is 'without Christ'. Without our own submission of our own lives, starting with ourselves before even beginning to look at our spouses (and better if we never apply the expectations to our wives (or husbands) but stick to ourselves), there is no hope or possibility of achieving true equality that is also love and self-sacrifice, the submission of the self. But 'submit' and 'obey' are dirty words in our modern (aka temporary/fashionable) cult of the individual, who no longer has a context for submitting to become part of something bigger than himself. And so he gets his TV dinner, his Netflix, and goes home to the empty house and listens to songs about love that his heart aches for, and the loneliness that stifles him (or her).
With Christ - when we submit ourselves to Christ, we heed His commands to be like Him, and realize that we have to change ourselves. That we are NOT 'OK' just as we are; that we need to learn to love as He does, not a smarmy feeling that comes and goes, but to really totally give ourselves up, what we want for ourselves, what we like or prefer, etc, for the sake of our beloved. (That ultimately extends to everyone around us, as we are called to love our neighbor (the one near us) as ourselves. But the family is a beginning by mirroring the relationship of the Holy Trinity. Even Christ says that He does not what He wants, but what His Father wants. (There's a lot of mystery there, we don't try to 'scientifically' unpack it, like Thomist Catholics do - and Chesterton was a Thomist, in general terms, btw) All of that makes the things that feminist fear to be wrong and sinful (damaging to the self and others), and to be avoided.
"Eh? Two views? There are a dozen views about everything until you know the answer. Then there's never more than one." Bill Hingest ("That Hideous Strength" by C.S. Lewis)
"These are the days when the Christian is expected to praise every creed except his own." G.K. Chesterton