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==Philosophy== | |||
==A fresh start please== | |||
I have removed the following sentences (and corresponding references) from the "Evolutionary Process" section as it gives the false impression that metaphysics is somehow "over" in analytic philosophy and philosophy in general, arguably glossing over and/or ignoring the work done in the past few decades done by Kripke, Putnam, Lewis, Armstrong and many others. They read: | |||
I'm happy with clearing the talk page. I'm not happy with voting. Wiki doesn't work by votes but by consensus. (Although there is often a consensus to decide certain specific questions by voting.) Since Ilkali's first change prompted the whole controversy, that's the fair place to start. (I accepted it wasn't fair to have my version as the default, it's only fair that argument works the other way around.) | |||
::''...nor in philosophy. ] widely considers speculative ] to be outside the reach of ] and scientific scrutiny.'' <small><span class="autosigned">— Preceding ] comment added by ] (] • ]) 08:35, 31 March 2011 (UTC)</span></small><!-- Template:Unsigned --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> | |||
Also, we're not really going back to scratch by starting at that point, because anyone's free to propose, say, the text I wrote on Hinduism be returned. We just compare diffs in the article history, copy it here, discuss it, modify it and add it. I'd probably agree to that suggestion, but maybe I wouldn't, we'd need to discuss it. | |||
==Son of God== | |||
Since basically I wrote everything since Ilkali arrived, you could almost rebuild the article to any point you wanted by recommending blocks of text you'd have a fair chance of me agreeing to. | |||
The issue of "son of God" or "Son of God" is barely relevant to the article, but since Jeffro has raised it again, and the issues do have some circumstantial relationship to the article, I'll make a second brief response here. I trust Jeffro would not argue that "Jesus Christ, son of God" ''must'' be correct. In 99% of uses, ''son'' is appositional, an atheist describing Christian belief would write, "Jesus Christ, Son of God". It would be possible, though I'd love to see a source attesting it, to say "Jesus Christ, son of God", just as one might say "Adam, son of God" or "David, son of God". Here the intent is "Adam, son of God", the lower case is shorthand for a non-unique representative of a class (I believe ] suggests an implicit quantifier is introduced along with a new discourse variable in such constructions). In the same way, the capital is merely shorthand for the definite article in the case of Jesus, who some contend is the unique Son of God (while also being truly a son of God simultaneously). | |||
Think about it, if you agree, please ''you'' reset the article to the diff prior to Ilkali's arrival (27 April I think). Then feel free to delete my comments here, they're proceedural, not really addressing the article. If you don't agree, I guess I'll be making a couple of random reverts every 24 hours or so as a reminder that only consensus brings stability to an article. Until Ilkali arrived the article was stable but awful. Since then, I think some good work has been done, but it's never had consensus. Time to lock in some of that good work by giving it the endorsement of consensus. ] (]) 19:17, 22 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
One thing that decieves people in cases like this is English possessive constructions. In Greek and Hebrew (the languages on which theories about Jesus are ultimately dependent), there are different ways of forming the constructions, which make the issue easier to see. Hebrew (typical of Semitic languages generally) uses a ] in which a chain of modifiers precede a noun in the ]. Long chains are possible—"the children of the wives of the advisors of '''the king'''" (the last is absolute, the modifiers are construct). Where the absolute noun is definite, the whole chain is definite. ''B'n Elohim'' or the Son of God is definite because ''Elohim'' God is definite. Circumlocutions make it possible to avoid the implication of definiteness if required. Greek has multiple ways of saying "Son of God" again with different nuances of definiteness—''ho tou theou quios'' (literally, the of-God Son) is a very natural Greek construction, it would use an indefinite particle were it to wish to avoid definiteness in regard to such statements. | |||
I'd be very interested if Jeffro could provide some sources that show usage of Jesus being describe as "son of God" with a lower case "s". Otherwise, whatever he is suggesting regarding English syntax, might be true and I'm just missing his point, but is not particularly relevant, because it is hypothetical. Sources secular or devotional all use the capital, so even if I agreed with Jeffro, we'd be best off dropping it, because no consensus would form in opposition to the strong precedent of sources. What do you say Jeffro? Let sleeping dogs lie? ] (]) 01:46, 4 December 2008 (UTC) | |||
My opinion is unchanged ... we start from here. ] (]) 19:34, 22 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
:I "raised it again" purely because it seemed to be the only thing that might remotely resemble a basis for your claim that I had argued with the OED (which remains unclear). Insofar as your statement that ''atheists'' would capitalise (I've determined that you're also Australian so I'll drop the US spelling here) 'Son of God', I think they would be the ''least'' likely to do so. | |||
And neither is mine ... we start from here. ] (]) 11:53, 23 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
:To clarify my position on this so there is no doubt... if using the phrase as a ''title'' ('<nowiki> </nowiki> Son of God'), it would indeed properly be capitalised. In a statement such as 'Jesus was the son of God' in the same manner as 'Albert Einstein was the son of Hermann Einstein', it would be proper to use 'son', though 'Jesus was the Son of God' would be correct in the manner of 'Charles is the Prince of Wales'. No statement herein should be inferred as any opinion as to the existence of a god, gods, God, or to any progeny of such entities of any gender, or no gender.--] (]) 02:38, 4 December 2008 (UTC) | |||
::You're Australian! He he, drat. Work hard while I'm away mate, 'cause Tim and I are serious about scrutinising things when we return. Hmmm, you're Aussie, that ''does'' make it harder to tell you what I really think. ;) Don't drink and drive over the silly season and avagoodweekend! ] (]) 15:53, 4 December 2008 (UTC) | |||
== Consensus time == | |||
The Bible states (using theism) that God created man in his image, this man being exactly that: a man, only after the men was asleep | |||
To make things a little easier, it is probably worth applying this tag. Let's play by the rules. No changes until we discuss them. Until ''everyone'' agrees, no changes. | |||
and a rib was removed was a woman created. Since god created a woman for the man and man was created first, God must be a man, since he created the first being in his image.--] (]) 03:12, 9 December 2009 (UTC) | |||
] (]) 17:28, 22 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
== polytheism/pantheism == | |||
:Until ''everyone'' agrees, no changes from your preferred version of the article? How is that different from before you were blocked? ] (]) 17:26, 22 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
I don't really have any input on the JCI issues. However, I did notice that the "Polytheism" section sort of describes a form of pantheism. In a nutshell, Polytheism is the belief in many distinct gods, of various genders (including neutral or hermaphroditic - the Norse Loki does gender switching IIRC). They may or may not source from (or really be part of) one older god. Pantheism is the belief that many gods are worshiped separately, but are actually all one. (The reason I haven't stuffed this into the article is that I haven't gone and dug up sources yet.) | |||
::I will leave your comment Ilkali, because it shows you are insisting on addressing editors rather than the text of the article. Your behaviour at this page has been disruptive for two reasons, you make edits without seeking agreement first (there are dozens of diffs to prove this). And you address editors not sources and text (plenty of text proves this too). I will digress no further. Issues with editors should be on talk pages or other forums. I shall remove my own comments about you eventually, because you and I are irrelevant to the article. | |||
But the polytheistic stuff seems somewhat out of place here. Polytheists don't have to ask what gender Thor is, or Diana, or Artemis. Do the non-JCI religions even belong here, or is the article really about "The gender of God in the Judeo-Christian-Islamic traditions"? | |||
::I will restore the page to the point prior to Ilkali's arrival, and see where we go from there. Any text added since that point can be recovered and added here for discussion. Comments about other editors are not welcome. | |||
--] (]) 02:55, 29 January 2010 (UTC) | |||
::Looking forward to suggestions for improvements to the article, it needs ''heaps''. I'll not be adding anything myself for a couple of months, but I'll take an active interest in the meantime. Perhaps Ilkali would like to get the ball rolling. How do you think things could be improved? ] (]) 18:01, 22 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
Yes, I know I reopened a can of worms, but the way the article reads the non-JCI sections are just after-thoughts or bolt-ons. | |||
:::''"I will leave your comment Ilkali, because it shows you are insisting on addressing editors rather than the text of the article"''. When editors are the problem, editors must be addressed. And did you seriously follow this sentence... | |||
:::''"Your behaviour at this page has been disruptive for two reasons"'' ...with this one? | |||
:::I've already argued for replacing the lead text. Abtract also forwarded a candidate, which I endorse over yours. My issues with yours are, again: 1) It is not specific to God, despite the article being titled 'Gender of God'. 2) 'in a God' is either a violation of the MoS (capitalised common noun) or a clumsier, semantically equivalent version of 'in God'. 3) The metonymy in 'religions believe' is jarring. | |||
--] (]) 03:20, 29 January 2010 (UTC) | |||
:::You asserted that Abtract's version commits OR and POV violations but didn't ever substantiate this claim. I ask you now to do so. ] (]) 18:33, 22 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
:The polytheism section doesn't contain any material about gender at all, so I'm going to ] and remove it. --] (]) 12:18, 1 February 2010 (UTC) | |||
::::All your points have been previously refuted by sources, Ilkali. Read the archive "Problems with the lead". As for Abtacts' proposal, the burden of proof is on the poster. No sources were offered for "most religions believe God is male" for example. I'm sure that's just wrong. No source, no text. ] (]) 11:53, 23 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
::Ah, that's what else was bothering me about it - the section as written had nothing to do with the topic! Thanks for the sanity check. --] (]) 03:46, 2 February 2010 (UTC) | |||
:::::''"All your points have been previously refuted by sources, Ilkali"''. Nope. In all cases you either attacked a position I didn't hold or cited a source that didn't support your claim. If you want to build consensus, you'll have to do more than just insist that you're right. | |||
:::::''"As for Abtacts' proposal, the burden of proof is on the poster"''. The default assumption isn't that every contribution violates every policy. When you claim that some material contains original research or expresses a POV, you must either support that claim or be prepared for it to be ignored. | |||
:::::''"No sources were offered for "most religions believe God is male" for example"''. That's a false quote. The actual text is "The '''gender of God''' has generally been considered to be male". The two do not mean the same thing. | |||
:::::Freezing the article in an early state isn't something that should be done lightly, and it should certainly last for as little time as possible. Since you are refusing to discuss the criticisms I raise, and thereby lengthening this process, I agree with Abtract that it should remain unfrozen. We can always change it back later if consensus swings your way. ] (]) 12:48, 23 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
== ] == | |||
::::::I also object to freezing, especially freezing back to a much earlier state. Overall the article looks much better than it used to. There are many uncontroversial improvements that have nothing to do with any dispute over the intro. Also, nobody ] this article. --] (]) 13:51, 23 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
Hello, all. Just wanted to point out that in the (bestselling?) book, "The Shack", God appears as a woman for most of the book (despite the name "Papa"). Shall I add that to the "Pop Culture" section? Or is a novel not considered Pop Culture? | |||
:Looks like we all agree about two things. We all want the article to go forward (not be freezed). We all agree ''that'' the article can be improved. Next step is agreeing on ''how'' it can be improved. | |||
] (]) 22:32, 28 March 2010 (UTC) | |||
:The main thing is, wherever we start, we only move forward with ''everyone's'' agreement (consensus), not by any individual or subgroup "owning" the step. In other words, it doesn't matter who ends up making an edit, because all have agreed and would be willing to make it anyway. | |||
:There are two fair options for where we start. Either A) minimial position -- the position prior to any dispute OR B) the maximal position -- text that includes everything currently under dispute. The former is simpler, since there is no consensus about what revision reflects the latter. It is also simpler to move forward, because slabs of consensus text can be added from the edit history, after being confirmed as having everyone's agreement here. (The updated Hinduism and Sikhism sections, for example.) | |||
:The only things potentially "freezing" this text would be: A) no one actually proposing this text (or any other text) OR B) attempts to add ''more'' than actually reflects consensus (which is attempting to "own" and bypass consensus, or, assuming better faith, just "clumsiness"). | |||
:So, Alynna, can you actually propose anything ''specific'', that already has consensus, to back your claim that consensus changes have been made. (I agree with you in general, but perhaps we're thinking of different parts of the article.) | |||
:And Ilkali, please stop returning disputed text to the article without consensus. Instead, propose parts of the revision ''you'' prefer for consensus here first. ] (]) 11:41, 24 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
:Excellent work of fiction for sure which was quite poplar and was also made in to a movie . . . I would answer your 2010 question as yes, it should go in to Pop Culture . . . just a note on the author's view that God is a black woman . . . Jesus depicted as a country type hick, no disrespect, and the Holy Spirit as a woman . . . i loved it . . . when I read God's word, the Bible, when i look at the Greek and the Hebrew and the Aramaic i too see God (Father Son Holy Spirit) a lot differently given studying the languages . . . ] (]) 19:22, 17 November 2023 (UTC) | |||
::Some uncontroversial edits of my own (I did not say "consensus", because I ] without <s>getting your permission</s> discussing it on the talk page. It would not be realistic for every change ever made to be discussed beforehand.) include: | |||
::*Adding the ] to the list of translations of John 16:13 | |||
::*Moving the "Branch Davidians and other" section under Christianity, after the one sentence not about Christianity was moved to Judaism. | |||
::There is no proof that everyone agrees on your favourite old version, so you can't claim it's a "consensus version". Going back there would be a HUGE step backwards. You appear to be the only person who has a major problem with the current incarnation of the article. Therefore, it is ''you'' who should suggest incremental changes, to the ''current'' version. --] (]) 12:44, 24 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
== Orphaned references in ] == | |||
:::There ''is'' no "current" version Alynna, whatever alternative is proposed as current is challenged by one person or another. | |||
:::Looks like it is only Ilkali who would be delaying consensus on your two changes above, then, since I don't object to them. I don't think we need additional translations of John 16:13, but I'm happy to wait six months until a passing editor complains there are too many copies, and agree to trim them then. | |||
:::Anyway, if Ilkali agrees to your changes above, we have consensus, and they become part of the new, "consensus" version. ] (]) 21:56, 24 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
I check pages listed in ] to try to fix reference errors. One of the things I do is look for content for ] in wikilinked articles. I have found content for some of ]'s orphans, the problem is that I found more than one version. I can't determine which (if any) is correct for ''this'' article, so I am asking for a sentient editor to look it over and copy the correct ref content into this article. | |||
::::''"Looks like it is only Ilkali who would be delaying consensus on your two changes above, then"''. Ilkali isn't the one insisting on freezing the article! I am fine with any of the edits up to the version three out of four editors prefer. We do not need to painstakingly confirm consensus for these kinds of changes. ] (]) 08:14, 25 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
<b>Reference named "britannica":</b><ul> | |||
::''"The main thing is, wherever we start, we only move forward with ''everyone's'' agreement (consensus)"''. Consensus doesn't mean that everybody agrees - otherwise any single person could indefinitely lock any article in a state he preferred. Let me ask you: Under what circumstances would you allow the article to be changed in a way that you disagree with? | |||
<li>From ]: {{Harvnb|Britannica|1992}}</li> | |||
::As for the content discussion, there are already specific issues raised above, such as my criticisms of your lead. If you don't want to discuss them, I question the point of this exercise. ] (]) 12:51, 24 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
<li>From ]: {{cite encyclopedia | year = 1988 | title = The Bahá'í Faith | encyclopedia = Britannica Book of the Year | publisher = Encyclopaedia Britannica | location = Chicago | id = {{ISBN|0852294867}}}}</li> | |||
<li>From ]: {{cite encyclopedia | year = 1988 | title = The Bahá'í Faith | encyclopedia = Britannica Book of the Year | publisher = Encyclopaedia Britannica | location = Chicago | id = {{ISBN|0-85229-486-7}}}}</li> | |||
</ul> | |||
I apologize if any of the above are effectively identical; I am just a simple computer program, so I can't determine whether minor differences are significant or not. ]] 23:05, 28 March 2010 (UTC) | |||
:::You continue to address editors rather than issues, Ilkali. Consensus ''does'' mean anyone can object to a change because they present a case against the change. It is, in fact, no different to what you have been enforcing since your arrival at the page by reverting anything you disapprove of. Only now, by invoking the "dispute mode", it ensures the discussion remains documented on the talk page, not a matter of editors using numbers to force an edit. | |||
:::It is an important and fair part of the process, that ensures no one's imput is discounted, nor anyone "railroaded". ] (]) 22:10, 24 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
==] ] from the ]== | |||
::::''"You continue to address editors rather than issues, Ilkali"''. What issues did you address in this post, Alastair? Did you address the issues I raised in my first comment in this section? The ones you ''still haven't addressed?'' Again, I question the point of this exercise. | |||
the AHD's indo european roots appendix states that the root for God is Gheu (ə) -. The root means: To call, invoke. I find it interesting that the other english word from this root is "giddy", as in insane or possessed. So god may be considered more of a verb than a noun, and genderless. hey, its not my research.] (]) 03:57, 11 January 2011 (UTC) | |||
== |
== Candidate for deletion? == | ||
Is it really necessary to have an article about the gender of an imaginary being, where gender is not a relevant concept anyway? ] (]) 12:09, 24 January 2011 (UTC) | |||
Versions of this article: | |||
# — fullest text — disputed | |||
# — shorter text — disputed | |||
# — version prior to dispute | |||
Even if you're right about God being imaginary, WP has numerous articles about imaginary beings, including ]. Would you like to get rid of all of those articles? As for the relevance of concepts of gender to God, that is a topic of serious discussion among people who write about God, as well as those who worship God. ] (]) 07:20, 13 March 2011 (UTC) | |||
The edit history shows a number of editors reverting to the shorter text version. This has been done with little use of the talk page. When talk has been used, no attempt has been made to address objections or cite reliable sources. | |||
== Does God need a gender? == | |||
The controversy tag on the page, and other standard Wiki policies make clear, that we are to seek consensus by: | |||
*addressing issues of ''content'' raised by those who disagree with us; and | |||
*to do this with reference to reliable sources. | |||
Is this topic still in discussion? | |||
While some may want to "fast-forward" to the "fullest text" so far as at 16 June, this is disputed, so has not been attempted. Others, however, have wanted to "rewind" some of that "fullest" text, while still "fast-forwarding" to 22 June, but have done so without addressing issues or seeking consensus. Warnings have been noted at User talk. | |||
God created male and female within material creation for the purpose of reproduction. Because humans are social beings sex and gender have relationship and social aspects for us. But since God is Spirit there is no need for gender. The use of He in referring to God is a condition of human language. "It" would be inappropriate. In Judaism and Christianity (O.T. and N.T.) God is sometimes called Father as an indication of a profoundly intimate and caring concern for us and our lives. God is above gender.--] (]) 20:59, 4 August 2012 (UTC) | |||
: That may be your belief. Other believers are equally adamant for theirs. Frex: | |||
The first attempt to seek consensus by providing sourced text is being offered by me below. Perhaps it will be rejected, such is life. I look forward to others offering their own proposals for consensus, along with the sources that they are following.] (]) 18:20, 25 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
:* {{citation | title = God is NOT Female | first = Mark | last = Henkel}}<!--URL blocked--> | |||
:* {{citation | url = http://www.truthbearer.org/doctrine/original-plan-for-marriage/12/ | title = As I, Myself, KNOW the Spirit, I KNOW that God is NOT "Female" | first = Ike | last = Graham}} | |||
:* {{citation | url = http://vaniquotes.org/God_is_not_female | title = Vaniquotes: God is not female }} | |||
: It seems that if God exists, it has chosen not to resolve this dispute. So its gender, for those who care about it, shall remain an issue. ~ ] (]) 21:37, 4 August 2012 (UTC) | |||
::I certainly didn't bring up the subject of God as female--however to clarify. Many languages do not have a pronoun especially for God. So the question is--what pronoun to use? So "He" for God (both capitalized) is often used.<br /> | |||
:''"When talk has been used, no attempt has been made to address objections or cite reliable sources"''. Not true. People have explained what is wrong with your lead (see the three points I raised above) and they've explained why the article shouldn't be frozen. Your mention of reliable sources is a red herring, as most of the issues are 1) stylistic, 2) regarding the purview of the article, or 3) over the relevance of some material. What kind of reliable source would you like for something like 'Alastair's essay is not about the gender of God'? | |||
::For humans the pronouns used are "he" and "she." "It" is used usually for objects in English, or with pejorative intent (Latin-based languages are different). For a number of centuries references to humans used the terms "man," "men" and "mankind" with the unspoken implication that they included womenkind--their use certainly didn't exclude women. These usages involve the real limitations of human languages.<br /> | |||
:To reiterate: You are the only one out of four involved editors who thinks the article should be frozen in an earlier state. It is not tenable. If this happened every time a single editor disagreed with the change, and continued without limit until that single editor were satisfied, Misplaced Pages would collapse. Accept that the majority are against you, argue for the superiority of your version, and restore it ''if'' you get consensus. | |||
::But the use of He for God doesn't mean that God is a superhuman male. Genesis 1:27 says "God created man in His image....male and female He created them"<br /> | |||
:I ask ''again'': Under what circumstances would you allow the article to remain in the state that is currently preferred by three out of four involved editors, assuming you don't suddenly start preferring it? What would it take for you to stop edit warring? ] (]) 18:32, 25 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
::Since God is Spirit, does it mean that God created us with souls? The Bible doesn't clarify the point. However Jesus, the Son of God was certainly male in his physical body.<br /> | |||
::I don't think God is female; the Bible says "God '''created'''... male and female." (is this limited to material creation?)--] (]) 00:29, 7 August 2012 (UTC) | |||
::God is male, because, in the bible, it states that he created man 'in his own image', and this man just happened to be Adam, a male. If he created a person in his own image, and made the person male, that means the God himself is male as well, no? | |||
::Just to clear out any confusion, God created Eve because there was no suitable partner for Adam. In other words, Eve was NOT created in God's own image. ] (]) 15:48, 20 July 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::The initial gender of Adam is debatable, in Juddaism, Adam was ], while others claim the woman that was created before Eve was ]. Because when God created Adam, he created a man-woman or a man and a woman, depending on the translation or wording. ] (]) 18:00, 20 July 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::And the ] ] (]) 18:00, 20 July 2024 (UTC) | |||
To give a more NPOV this is true only in monotheistic religions--and the article as it stands says this. I think what is frustrating for many women today is that men tend to assume that God is male like them, feel threatened by the idea that God is not male like a human male and shut out any spiritual insights women might have. Jesus listened to women and responded to them (See the Marriage at Cana, Mary and Martha, Mary Magdalene as the first witness to the Resurrection). It's something the early Christian church accepted at first, then soon began to abandon. Why can't men follow Jesus? (I wish I didn't have to express this POV, but men often express a purely masculine POV and eliminate any insights women can contribute.)--] (]) 01:01, 7 August 2012 (UTC) | |||
== First sourced proposal == | |||
: Not all your Bible's authors favored listening to and responding to women. Frex, 1 Corinthians 14:34-35: "Let your women keep silence in the churches: for it is not permitted unto them to speak; but they are commanded to be under obedience as also saith the law. And if they will learn any thing, let them ask their husbands at home: for it is a shame for women to speak in the church." Is it any wonder why so many Christian men are male chauvinists? ~ ] (]) 11:10, 27 August 2012 (UTC) | |||
::The idea is: Misplaced Pages does not decide if God has a gender. Misplaced Pages simply makes an inventory of the notable opinions thereupon, the most notable and widespread being that God is male (whatever male could mean for God/a spirit). We don't take sides in this matter, all such notable opinions are worthy of being mentioned. ] (]) 23:00, 10 September 2012 (UTC) | |||
Let's start moving forward. Here's a sourced proposal, seeking comment from other editors. Does anyone have any objection to the following text to replace the current text on Hinduism? The source noted is Michael Witzel, ' The Evidence from Old Indian and Iranian Texts', '']'' '''7''' (2001): 1–118. | |||
{{od|::}} | |||
{{Quote| | |||
] | |||
The oldest of the Hindu scriptures is the ] (2nd millennium BC). The first word of the Rigveda is the name ], the god of fire, to whom many of the vedic hymns are addressed, along with ] the warrior. Agni and Indra are both male divinities. | |||
The Rigveda refers to a creator (] or ]), distinct from Agni and Indra. This creator is identified with ], first of the gods, in later scriptures. Hiranyagarbha and Prajapati are male divinities, as is Brahma (who has a female consort, ]). | |||
There are many other gods in the Rigveda.<ref name="Witzel"> | |||
Michael Witzel, ' The Evidence from Old Indian and Iranian Texts', '']'' '''7''' (2001): 1–118.</ref> | |||
They are "not simple forces of nature" and possess "complex character and their own mythology".<ref name=Witzel /> | |||
They include goddesses of water (Āpaḥ) and dawn (Uṣas), and the complementary pairing of Father Heaven and Mother Earth.<ref name=Witzel /> | |||
However, they are all "subservient to the abstract, but active positive 'force of truth'" (]), | |||
"which pervades the universe and all actions of the gods and humans."<ref name=Witzel /> | |||
This force is sometimes mediated or represented by moral gods (] such as ]) or even Indra.<ref name=Witzel /> | |||
The Āditya are male and Rta is personified as masculine in later scriptures (see also ]). | |||
There are some Hindu sects, such as ] and ], that have a well-developed philosophy of a mother goddess, and literature that harmonizes this to greater or lesser extents with vedic and other traditions. In these traditions, ] is often conceived of as the consort of Shakti, rather than '']''. | |||
In some Hindu philosophical traditions, ] is depersonalized (and demasculinized) as ], the fundamental life force of the universe.}} | |||
== Comparative Religion - Role of language == | |||
] (]) 17:40, 25 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
I would like to see some examples and citations to flesh out this potentially interesting point. Sadly, I'm not the person to add this information, but as an interested reader, I'd say it lacks clarity and credibility in it's current state. <small><span class="autosigned">— Preceding ] comment added by ] (] • ]) 18:04, 23 April 2011 (UTC)</span></small><!-- Template:Unsigned --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> | |||
:The text on Hinduism is not the problem, Alastair! The major disagreements are over the lead and your section on comparative religion, and you have consistently abstained from discussing either. Your case for indefinitely freezing the article is so full of holes now that even you must realise it was a bad idea. Do me a favor and stop edit-warring over it before I have to go to the trouble of reporting you. ] (]) 17:48, 25 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
== carm.org == | |||
::Yes, Hinduism is not the problem. Yes, the disagreements are over the lead and comparative religion (and gender). No, I have discussed those, it is you (and others) who assert, vote and edit without engaging with content. I have never suggested freezing the article, it is you (and others) who seek to freeze valid edits by reverting. I have never edit warred, only restored sourced or verifiable content that has been removed without consensus. You (and others) have edit warred, by reverting verifiable content without seeking consensus. I have now flagged the page for mediation cabal involvement. ] (]) 18:46, 25 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
This website aims to show that the Catholic Church and the Islam are heresies. Therefore it is not a reliable source anyway one would look at it. It is a highly polemic source instead of being academically descriptive. I have reverted edits based upon carm.org propaganda. ] (]) 22:39, 10 July 2013 (UTC) | |||
:::''"No, I have discussed those, it is you (and others) who assert, vote and edit without engaging with content"''. If you're talking about the discussions you and I had way back before you called me a troll and stormed out, then you obviously can't deny that I've engaged with content - else who were you talking to back then? And if you're talking about anything since then, then... where? | |||
:::''"I have never suggested freezing the article"''. Perhaps you are interpreting the term differently to how I intend it. You are insisting on keeping the article in an old state until some specified event occurs. That is what I call freezing. | |||
:::''"I have never edit warred, only restored sourced or verifiable content that has been removed without consensus"''. You have persistently reverted both the article and its talk page to states you prefer, and you were even blocked for doing so. Insisting that it doesn't count as edit warring because you're right and we're wrong isn't going to impress or convince anybody. ] (]) 19:34, 25 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
:In a historical, anthropological and sociological sense Christian are the persons/churches who define themselves as Christian. ] (]) 22:43, 10 July 2013 (UTC) | |||
::::Ilkali, this is my last post to you, until a mediator is here to hold you accountable for your claims. It was your actions, more than your words, that was troll like when I warned you the first time. History has only demonstrated that others have joined you in what are clearly disruptive edits to this article. You (and others), are quite entitled to dispute the fullest version of this article (), but not to insist on your own version (), without discussing ''content''. It is by forcing the dispute you make the version prior to your arrival () the point of departure, but that's only a freeze if you're unwilling to discuss matters of content with editors who have objections to the content of your opinions. And indeed, you have never reverted the artcile to anything except versions you prefer. On the other hand, I surrendered my own preference in favour of a genuinely neutral version — the one prior to our own disagreement. Those are the verifiable facts. I'll also document here your early 3rr violation, which I chose not to report, since you are so new to Wiki. Editing other's posts is also a no-no, except in special circumstances. | |||
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::::I take it that you genuinely don't understand how Wiki works, hence, you are being disruptive, but this is mitigated by inexperience and by the encouragement of others. Your disparaging comments, however, have been consistent, starting with "guff" in your first post, and "Christians and Jews don't know what a common noun is", "Trinitarian language is an abuse of language", etc. in follow-ups. But your main problem is misunderstanding not only the linguistics, but the meaning of ''ad hominem'', you genuinely feel attacks on a person can be valid arguments against what they say. You have been pointed to sources on this, but still refuse to accept it. | |||
::::Although I try to give space for this to be about content, it is sadly true that it is, and always has been, about Ilkali's disruptive edits and personal attacks, both of which are verified, not by my opinion (or anyone else's), but by your own actions and words. | |||
::::It takes time for volunteer mediators to arrive. You could save everyone a lot of time by thinking through how you could have done things better. I'd be thrilled to work with you if you could take responsibility and admit your mistakes. | |||
::::As always, I expect you will have the last word, and it will involve an attack on me to distract from your own actions. Go ahead, I can't stop you. ] (]) 20:29, 25 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
== Genesis 1:26-27: == | |||
:::::''"Your disparaging comments, however, have been consistent, starting with "guff" in your first post, and "Christians and Jews don't know what a common noun is", "Trinitarian language is an abuse of language", etc. in follow-ups"''. Don't you think it's misleading to put quote marks around something that isn't a quotation? If you want to refer to something I've said, use the ''actual text'', and provide at least the entire sentence. | |||
:::::''"your main problem is misunderstanding not only the linguistics "''. Cheap shots, Alastair. If you want to discuss the linguistics, I'm more than willing. I've spent enough time studying the subject (while earning my ''first-class degree'') that I welcome opportunities to apply it in real life. But you're not. You won't ever go beyond cheap shots. | |||
:::::''"but the meaning of ''ad hominem''"''. In future, if you cite these things, can you provide the diffs so everyone can just read the counter-arguments I wrote at the time? It's tedious to have to explain twice why you're wrong when once would do. | |||
:::::''"you genuinely feel attacks on a person can be valid arguments against what they say"''. Any evidence to support this? | |||
:::::I have no intention of "distract from actions". On the contrary, I invite you to shine a spotlight on them. Give us the diffs that so conclusively prove your accusations, or stop making them and ''start talking about the article''. I'm still waiting for at least one of: 1) you justifying the inclusion of your recently-removed sections on comparative religion and such, or 2) you defending your lead against the three criticisms raised above. ] (]) 21:03, 25 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
In the article, in the section, "In the Hebrew and Christian Bible" (http://en.wikipedia.org/Gender_of_God#In_the_Hebrew_and_Christian_Bible), the claim is made that Elohim was male and female, and they made man in their image. | |||
I simply note here that Ilkali again proves my point. He has just made a wholesale revision that includes removing sourced text, and he did so without any attempt to build consensus or support his edit with sources. It also includes permitting a lead that makes claims that are not supported by sources either in the lead itself, nor at any point in the whole article. It is not an accurate summary of the text, and is actually contrary to prior versions of the article. | |||
On the contrary, nowhere in Genesis is a female identity assigned to YHWH the Father, or to Ha Mashiach the son. In addition, if there was any doubt about the gender of the son, (because we can easily confirm the gender of the Father), we can check John 1:1-4: | |||
Additionally, although he claims he is misquoted, the sense of his words is accurate in context as can be seen from the Archived '''Problems with the lead'''. In fact, I have chosen his least objectionable language. He also says, ''Do you seriously not recognise the distinction between adherents of a religion and the religion itself?'' (later using stronger language), an unfair criticism of the many ''sources'' that use metonomy, but expressed as a personal attack. | |||
"In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with YHWH, and the Word was Elohim. The same was in the beginning with YHWH." | |||
He also appeals to his own authority (for the first time, though); however, that doesn't change the fact that the Oxford dictionary and published journal articles have been cited that demonstrate his claims do not hold. | |||
This shows that this "Word" (the second entity in Elohim, also known as the Messiah) was the same individual who was conversing with the Father in Genesis 1:26-27, since it says clearly that "The same was in the beginning with YHWH". | |||
And what gender was this "Word", that was with the Father during the creation? We can continue reading at John 1:3-4: | |||
Specifically, ''God'' is capitalized when refering to the "One Supreme Being" (OED). It refers to a superhuman ''person'' whether capitalized or not (OED). Groups are spoken of as ''believing'' regularly in the literature (see archive for half a dozen examples, taken from pages of Google scholar hits in journal articles), according to a well-documented device of language (see links in archive). | |||
"All things were made by HIM, and without HIM was not anything made that was made. In HIM was life, and the life was the light of all men." | |||
I have taken the liberty to remove the false statement that Genesis 1:26-27 speak of a female Messiah who was with the Father. <span style="font-size: smaller;" class="autosigned">— Preceding ] comment added by ] (]) 18:27, 1 September 2014 (UTC)</span><!-- Template:Unsigned IP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> | |||
As long as sourced content is being removed (three sentences of '''Gender''' have three sources, sourced text in '''God''' is also being removed), and reversions are being made to disputed revisions, Ilkali (or anyone else) is "freezing" the article and disrupting progress. There is consensus that such behaviour is unacceptable. | |||
:That is ] based upon ], does not beat ] from ]. ] (]) 18:41, 1 September 2014 (UTC) | |||
With my next edits, I'll be adding a few sources to the full version of the article. I'd wait for consensus, but there's no rule against providing sources for text. This seems like a creative way of addressing expressed concerns and moving things forward. Other editors are welcomed to add sources and sourced text despite the dispute, I will do my best to gently guard against others simply reverting to an old version they prefer, without having attempted gain consensus for their removal of sourced and verifiable content. Cheerio. ] (]) 21:47, 25 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
::It is not "original research". It is quoting directly from the Bible itself. All other research is "original research", based on the Bible. Quoting from the Scripture is not "research"; it is citation. Saying that citing the Bible is "original research" is the same as saying that citing the constitution is "original research". Calling a secondary article "verifiable information" that has more credibility than the Bible itself is the same as saying that a Law student's thesis is more "verifiable information" than the constitution itself. That is flawed logic. ] (]) 19:36, 1 September 2014 (UTC) | |||
:Not addressing me directly doesn't mean you're not replying to me, Alastair. | |||
:''"He has just made a wholesale revision that includes removing sourced text, and he did so without any attempt to build consensus or support his edit with sources"''. Every person other than you agrees that this is the version of the article that should be taken forward. There was even , which I see you haven't replied to. Where did you gain consensus for including them in the first place? You didn't. You inserted them without discussion and ignored all claims that they were off-topic. Double standards, Alastair? | |||
:''"the Oxford dictionary and published journal articles have been cited that demonstrate his claims do not hold"''. As I already said, I'm not interested in rehashing old refutations. Drop the cheap shots and let people read the archive and decide for themselves. | |||
:''"Specifically, ''God'' is capitalized (OED). It refers to a superhuman ''person'' whether capitalized or not (OED)"''. This I will address, since it's directly relevant to the article. The MoS clearly states that common noun ''god'' (as in "many religions believe in a god") should not be capitalised. Even if the OED did support your position (it doesn't - go back to our earlier discussion for explanation of how you've misinterpreted it), it doesn't matter because the MoS is definitive here. | |||
:''"Groups are spoken of as ''believing'' regularly in the literature"''. Irrelevant, since religions aren't groups. My claim is not that the metonymy in "religions believe" is somehow illegal or incomprehensible - just that it is clumsy, in the same way that "Judaism doesn't eat pork" is clumsy. Finding some uses of it in literature does not in any way support the claim that it is not poor style. ] (]) 22:04, 25 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
:::What I just told you is well-established Misplaced Pages practice. We don't perform ] upon the Bible, Koran, Vedas, etc., but instead we trust scholars to perform this analysis for us. Coogan is a top of the food chain Bible scholar. See also ]. ] (]) 19:55, 1 September 2014 (UTC) | |||
== Expanded slightly on Hinduism == | |||
:::Torah isn't a ]. ] (]) 20:00, 1 September 2014 (UTC) | |||
I added a short note reworking a neat quote regarding Hinduism as essentially theist. Since it's only one short sentence and Ilkali's already expressed his view that the Hinduism section's not a problem, and that we don't want to be freezing the article, I don't think this stretches consensus much. | |||
::::Re: Your second revert: I noticed that after I replied, you weaseled in another revert, even though there is a very pronounced time between my response and your revert; i.e, it looks as if you would have seen my response here on the talk page, and then chosen to sneakily revert anyway. I'd like to ask you to respect the discussion process, and the entire purpose of the "Talk page" dialogue system, and engage in due dialogue when disputing changes. I have a right to contribute to the body of knowledge, and to remove factual inaccuracies, as does every other editor of the Wiki. | |||
The next section worth returning would be Sikhism, since, like Hinduism, prior text was quite misleading, and certainly contrary to the lead that others have said they prefer. I'll post it here for comment, and if there are no objections to the ''content'' of this Section, this will be even more progress on the article. | |||
::::In addition, the name of the section is "In the Hebrew and Christian Bible", so the only logical and standing final authority on this particular section is the Hebrew and Christian bible. My citations are from this very text, the Hebrew and Christian Bible. I have done nothing but correct a factual misattribution which misquotes the Hebrew and Christian Bible. | |||
It would be really nice if some of the other editors here could provide some sourced material too. There are a lot of gaps—Shinto is not covered, and the Islam section is woeful. | |||
::::Please show where or how my edit is not consistent with the Hebrew and Christian Bible, or else please refrain from further vandalization and opinionated reverts. Torah is a reliable source when the very section being edited is specifically describing the contents of the Torah section of the Hebrew and Christian Bible. ] (]) 20:03, 1 September 2014 (UTC) | |||
{{Quote|The scripture of ] is the ] (GG). Printed as a heading for the Guru Granth, and for each of its major divisions, is the ], a short summary description of God, in Punjabi. Sikh tradition has it that this was originally composed by ] (1469–1539), the founder of Sikhism. | |||
:{{lang-pa|ੴ ਸਤਿ ਨਾਮੁ ਕਰਤਾ ਪੁਰਖੁ ਨਿਰਭਉ ਨਿਰਵੈਰੁ ਅਕਾਲ ਮੂਰਤਿ ਅਜੂਨੀ ਸੈਭੰ ਗੁਰ ਪ੍ਰਸਾਦਿ ॥}} | |||
:]: ''{{IAST|Ika ōaṅkāra sati nāmu karatā purakhu nirabha'u niravairu akāla mūrati ajūnī saibhaṃ gura prasādi.}}'' | |||
:English: One Universal Creator God, The Name Is Truth, Creative Being Personified, No Fear, No Hatred, Image Of The Timeless One, Beyond Birth, Self-Existent, By Guru's Grace. | |||
The sixth word of the mantra, ''purakhu'', is the Punjabi form of ] ''{{IAST|puruṣa}}'' (पुरुष), meaning man (personal and male). Verse 5 of a 16 verse hymn in the 10th '']'' (or cycle) of the Sanskrit ] (RV) called '']'', speaks of a primal man, Puruṣa, from whom Viraj (woman) was born, being himself then reborn of her. | |||
*From him Viraj was born; again Purusa from Viraj was born. (RV 10:90:5) | |||
The masculine gender sense of ''purakhu'' in the Mantra is found in a verse like the following. | |||
*That house, in which the soulbride has married her Husband Lord—in that house, O my companions, sing the songs of rejoicing. (GG, p. 97.) | |||
*You are the Husband Lord, and I am the soul-bride. (GG, p. 484.) | |||
Irrespective of the native language meaning of the Mantra, the standard English translation neutralises the implied gender role. Nonetheless, the Guru Granth consistently refers to God as ''He'', even in English. He is also almost uniformly refered to as ''Father''. | |||
*In attachment to ], they have forgotten the Father, the Cherisher of the World. (GG 4:9:42) | |||
*You are our Self-sufficient Father. || 2 || O Father, I do not know—how can I know Your Way? (GG, p. 51.) | |||
*You are the Universal Father of all, O my Lord and Master. | |||
Some of these references are inclusive, where God is both Mother and Father. | |||
*The One is my Brother, the One is my Friend. The One is my Mother and Father. The One is the Support of the mind; He has given us body and soul. May I never forget God from my mind; He holds all in the Power of His Hands. (GG 4:8:78) | |||
*Relying on Your Mercy, Dear Lord, I have indulged in sensual pleasures. Like a foolish child, I have made mistakes. O Lord, You are my Father and Mother. (GG 4:26:96) | |||
There is at least one reference to God as Mother, without reference to his fatherhood. | |||
*O my wandering mind, you are like a camel - how will you meet the Lord, your Mother?}} | |||
:::::No, Torah isn't a reliable source for anything on Misplaced Pages. You may want to read ] and ]. Then read ]. ] (]) 20:05, 1 September 2014 (UTC) | |||
I notice that the referencing is inconsistant. Page numbers are sufficient for quoting the Guru Granth, since these are standardised. Additionally, I obtained these from the major, standard English translation, I'll provide more details, so others can research this even further. ] (]) 07:41, 26 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
:::::See also ] which acknowledges this. ] (]) 20:09, 1 September 2014 (UTC) | |||
Done: | |||
*Singh Sahib Sant Singh Khalsa, English Translation of ], 3rd edition, Tucson, Arizona: Hand Made Books, ND. | |||
] (]) 08:01, 26 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
:::::Translating the Bible is a highly contentious process. Interpreting the Bible is a highly contentious process. That's why Misplaced Pages only trusts scholars to render the viewpoints of the Bible, and does not allow for original research based upon the Bible. ] (]) 20:12, 1 September 2014 (UTC) | |||
== Formal proposal to move forwards from the current version == | |||
::::::The section in question is asking, "What does the Hebrew and Christian Bible have to say on the Gender of God". I have not interpreted anything. I ''cited'' the source. The view follows naturally. I did not need to interpret anything. It flowed naturally from the '''letter''' of the text. | |||
"Current version" referring to the version that Ilkali, Abtract, and I have been consistently referring to as the current version. "Old version" referring to the version that Alastair has been reverting to. | |||
::::::Again, since the section being edited is a section on the view of "God" in the Hebrew and Christian Bible, and the originally disputed quotation is from Genesis 1:26-27, which is a Torah verse, the Torah is clearly the only final authority on anything written in this section. As a corollary of this, I ask you to prove that, from the Hebrew and Christian Bibles, the "Elohim" spoken of in Genesis 1:26-27 had a Female component. | |||
I propose this for the following reasons: | |||
* The majority of text in the current version is not the subject of dispute. | |||
* Relative to the old version, the current version contains significant changes that are not the subject of dispute. | |||
* The only text in the current version that actually seems to be actively disputed is one sentence of the introduction. | |||
::::::The burden of proof now lies with you. I have already proven, from the Hebrew and Christian Bible that it does not say this. In order for you to argue the opposite and perform any further reverts, it is left to '''you''' to prove, from the Hebrew and Christian Bible, that is does indeed say that there is a female component to Elohim the Creator, described in Genesis 1:26-27. I have again taken the liberty to revert your reversion. | |||
--] (]) 12:23, 26 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
::::::Please stop vandalizing the article, and respect the due process of burden of evidence. I have already, from the final authority on the section, given evidence. | |||
:Seconded. Freezing the entire article for so long is a bad idea in any case, but to do so over a single paragraph is bordering on insane. ] (]) 12:51, 26 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
:Preemptive clarification: To "move forward" from a version means starting any changes from that version, with no reverting to versions older than it. --] (]) 12:56, 26 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
::::::The only '''possible''' source of evidence for an analysis of the Hebrew and Christian Bible is the ''Hebrew and Christian Bible''. This is basic logic. The section is asking, "What does the Hebrew and Christian Bible say?". ] (]) 20:16, 1 September 2014 (UTC) | |||
This is a proposal to endorse deletion of sourced material (Gender section and God section) in the fullest text version. And to endorse unsourced text in the lead in the shorter version. Both contra Wiki basic principles, so I have no choice but to oppose. | |||
:::::::You either play by the Misplaced Pages rules or leave. The choice is yours. The burden of proof has been satisfied according to ] through citing a ]. The Torah isn't an authority upon the Torah. You are not a reliable source and neither is Torah. ] (]) 20:21, 1 September 2014 (UTC) | |||
The proposal also bypasses any attempt to make a case | |||
*seeking consensus | |||
*addressing ''content'' | |||
*on the basis of ''sources''. | |||
::::::::I am now very confident that the next step you will take is to ban me from further edits, so before you do this, I will take the liberty to point out the insanity in the reasoning that you are using to justify your reverts: | |||
Abtract is absent. We cannot assume yay or nay what he would say to new proposals. | |||
::::::::You just said, in '''your own words''', and I quote: "'''The Torah isn't an authority upon the Torah.'''". | |||
If there are no specific objections to Sikhism (as above), I shall return that tomorrow. | |||
::::::::Let the record bear that this person who is acting in the name and the authority of Misplaced Pages is being ''headstrong'', and denying the very basic logical premise that the contents of a book written as they appear, are the '''final authority''' on the content of that book. It follows naturally that a copy of Macbeth is the ''final authority'' on what is written in the book, Macbeth. | |||
Again, I invite other editors to make verifiable contributions of content to this article, it ''needs'' more contributions. ] (]) 13:08, 26 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
::::::::It also follows then, that the contents of the book, the Bible, are the '''final authority''' on the contents of the Bible. I am again, about to take the liberty to revert your revert, if you have done it again, since again, the burden of proof '''remains with you''', as I have already provided, from the ''final authority'', evidence to support my original change. | |||
:''"This is a proposal to endorse deletion of sourced material (Gender section and God section) in the fullest text version. And to endorse unsourced text in the lead in the shorter version"''. The material you talk about isn't in the version you keep reverting to either, so that point seems a little hollow. And Alynna's proposal isn't about picking any particular version to remain permanently, it's just about ending the repeated reversion to an earlier version. If you can argue convincingly that your text should be included, and thereby gain consensus for that view, it can be easily inserted at any point. If you convince other editors that your lead is superior, it can replace the current one at a moment's notice. | |||
:''"Abtract is absent. We cannot assume yay or nay what he would say to new proposals"''. We can take note of the opinions he has previously expressed, however. ] (]) 14:14, 26 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
::::::::I will also again, for the record, ask that you ''respect and follow'' the due process of burden of proof and provide proof for a female component of "Elohim", as described in Genesis 1:26-27, which is the very text that is disputed by this entire discussion. ] (]) 20:31, 1 September 2014 (UTC) | |||
] Warning! User:Ilkali. You are removing sourced text without using the talk page to gain consensus. That is a basic Wiki policy. What peer reviewed experts on gender say about gender is relevant to gender of God, unless you can cite a source or make a good case. Similarly, an article that offers a comparison of the views of various religions, is addressed by sources that are well-known experts on comparative religion. Perhaps other views are needed, perhaps better sources can be found, but until these are offered, the opinions of these experts address the topic better than any of us. ... and, it's just the rules of those who provide the software we are using—sourced text cannot be removed without consensus. ] (]) 14:46, 26 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::Torah isn't an academic treatise about the Torah. In respect to analyzing the Torah, Misplaced Pages only trusts scholars, who publish peer-reviewed research and books edited by academic publishing houses (scientific/scholarly publishers). ] (]) 20:40, 1 September 2014 (UTC) | |||
:''"You are removing sourced text without using the talk page to gain consensus. That is a basic Wiki policy"''. Even if your text were impeccably sourced (and I do not think it is - you have far more assertions than citations), that wouldn't automatically justify its inclusion. Otherwise what is to stop you inserting the same text in every article in the encyclopedia? Content must meet basic standards of relevance, regardless of any other aspect of its quality. The burden is on you, as the person introducing material, to achieve consensus for its inclusion. ] (]) 15:09, 26 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::That is flawed logic, irrational and insanity. | |||
:A practical example: Let's say I inserted some ''extremely'' well-sourced text describing how ] kicked ]'s ass in ]. What would you do? Would you allow it to remain until you had convinced me that it was not sufficiently relevant, or would you remove it despite its good sourcing? ] (]) 15:31, 26 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::The situation is this: the original content of the article before I came here were ''inconsistent'' with the text of the Bible. I corrected this, and gave relevant citations. At this point, regardless of how you look at it, you have no right to intervene as a moderating influence. Your closest right to intervene is in the capacity of an independent editor, because I have not broken protocol or caused discord. I have disputed the content of the article, and provided relevant citations, as any editor should. | |||
] 2nd Warning! Removal of souced text. | |||
::::::::::Your intervention in the capacity of a Moderator is an abuse of privileges. At most you should be presenting proof of a Female component in the Genesis account, as any other editor is obliged to do. I reject your current actions in the capacity of a moderator in this matter, on the basis of your flawed logic, your '''inability to prove that the Hebrew and Christian Bible describes a female component to Elohim''', and your '''disrespect''', and high-handed abuse of the due process of dispute. | |||
:Ilkali is asserting his own opinion over ], ] and ], without even discussing this. Your Superman example is a straw man. You actions are disruptive and could be construed as "gaming the system", Ilkali. ] (]) 21:55, 26 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::Additionally, calling your logic "insanity" is not calling you "insane", and there is a difference between the two. The former is an attack on your epistemology. The latter is an attack on your person. You seem to be very intent on building a case to use to '''silence''' and '''censor''' me on this matter, by finding an excuse to ban me. I will again revert any revert you have made, '''pending proof''' from you, or '''anyone else''' that there is a Female component to Elohim, as described in the Hebrew and Christian Bible. ] (]) 20:56, 1 September 2014 (UTC) | |||
::''"Ilkali is asserting his own opinion over ], ] and ]"''. Deliberate misrepresentation. I'm not asserting that any of your material is inaccurate, just that it's inappropriate for the article. | |||
::''"...without even discussing this"''. What's ], Alastair? It's a talk page section I created when I removed your essays (where another editor expressed support for such), which you never responded to. I already linked you there once (), but again you ignored it. ''I'm'' not the one unwilling to discuss the matter. | |||
::''"Your Superman example is a straw man"''. Support this assertion. What's the fundamental difference between the two? | |||
::''"You actions are disruptive and could be construed as "gaming the system", Ilkali"''. Only by you, Alastair. ] (]) 22:25, 26 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
{{od}}{{quote|Your words, images and ideas are not suppressed, simply not being promulgated on the website of a private charity. You are free to post your words, images and ideas on your own website, blog, newspaper, podcast, tshirt, bumper sticker or other form of free speech. There is a handy essay here, ]. Perhaps your website will be of such quality that millions will turn to it for information. There are quite a few places to start a blog free of charge....|] (]) 01:59, 31 August 2014 (UTC)}} | |||
:::You admit you are "not asserting that any of your material is inaccurate." Yet you insist on reverting it! You assert Durkheim, Stark and Bainbridge "irrelevant" and "inappropriate"! On what basis? Yet you insist on reverting the text! | |||
:::Superman is irrelevant to the gender of gods. Theory of Religion discussing the meaning of ''god'' in different cultures is clearly more relevant, if not essential to the topic '''Gender of God'''. The burden of proof is on you to establish consensus to remove sourced text. | |||
:::Claiming policy against constructive edits is called gaming the system, quoting rules against their intention. You do this in words. You do it with edits. And you do it in personal attacks on me. ] (]) 13:32, 27 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
Quoted by ] (]) 21:32, 1 September 2014 (UTC) | |||
::::''"You admit you are "not asserting that any of your material is inaccurate." Yet you insist on reverting it!"''. Its accuracy, like that of the hypothetical Batman piece, is irrelevant. I revert it because I believe that each part of it is either insufficiently relevant or excessively detailed. | |||
::::''"Superman is irrelevant to the gender of gods"''. And, on making this judgement, you would remove the text and demand that he who added it must justify its inclusion? Your words: "You are removing sourced text without using the talk page to gain consensus. That is a basic Wiki policy". But you admit you would do exactly the same in the example I cited. The only difference between the two is which side you agree with, and you can't presuppose that you're right when arguing about cases like this. | |||
::::''"Claiming policy against constructive edits is called gaming the system"''. For me to be gaming the system, I would have to believe that my actions were not constructive. You're supposed to be ], Alastair. ] (]) 13:57, 27 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
:I have listed this discussion on the Active Disagreements, awaiting a 3rd opinion. Let the record show that two moderators, Jim1138 and C.Fred have reverted changes without even appearing once on the talk page, and have therefore violated due process of discussion. ] (]) 21:34, 1 September 2014 (UTC) | |||
== 2nd 3RR violation from user Ilkali == | |||
::Don't push your luck. By Misplaced Pages rules, this isn't a disagreement, it is reverting ]. You are not entitled to remove sourced text just because you do not like it and prefer to think that the Torah would support you. ] (]) 21:40, 1 September 2014 (UTC) | |||
For the second time Ilkali has violated 3RR. This time I am reporting him. | |||
::And you did not provide any evidence, as you have falsely claimed there, you are just pontificating about what the Bible is supposed to mean. ] (]) 21:47, 1 September 2014 (UTC) | |||
*00:10, 27 June 2008 | |||
*07:54, 27 June 2008 | |||
*01:15, 27 June 2008 | |||
:::My revert was strictly procedural: I felt the better option, as an administrator, was to revert ]' violation of ] rather than block him for the violation. —''']''' (]) 21:51, 1 September 2014 (UTC) | |||
Perhaps another user could do this for me, I am away at work for the next little while. ] (]) 22:48, 26 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
::::I am directly quoting you now; you just said, "'''Don't push your luck'''". Are you saying that it is "luck", or a privilege that you have granted me, to edit the public domain Encyclopedia, known as Misplaced Pages? How am I "''lucky''" to be engaging in this dispute? And how is it "''pushing my luck''" to list my disagreement on the Disagreement page? Is it that you see me as a '''lesser contributor''' because I have a view that seems to be opposed to yours? | |||
:You might want to reread the policy page, Alastair. If reverting three times in 24h constituted a violation, you'd be at least as guilty as I - you've reverted four times, although one of those was to a different version of the article. ] (]) 22:55, 26 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
::::In that case, where view clashes with view, we must let the authoritative source be the final arbiter. Which is precisely what I have done. I am not acting on '''luck'''; I have respected the rules of scholarly debate, and provided citations from the final source. | |||
:Not to mention that I didn't even violate 3RR the first time you're talking about. You're counting the following edits: (not a reversion or a removal), (first removal), (first reversion), (second reversion). That's half as many reversions as I'd need to violate the policy. ] (]) 07:51, 27 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
::::There is no luck involved here. If you ban me without due discussion and without carrying your '''burden of proof''' which you still have not done, it is not that I have been vanquished by a "higher being" who has poured out retribution upon me for daring to oppose its '''illogic'''. It is that a Misplaced Pages Moderator has disrespected protocol and the due process of dispute, and denigrated the dignity of Misplaced Pages's open platform for credible contribution to the body of knowledge through examination of '''authoritative souces'''. | |||
== Chronological order for religions == | |||
::::Your condescension and feelings of entitlement and high-handedness are showing. ] (]) 21:54, 1 September 2014 (UTC) | |||
I think the most neutral way to order religions is chronologically, clearly several depend on others. Islam depends on Christianity, and probably even more on Judaism. Sikhism is somewhat older than Mormonism, and Buddhism/Shinto may be added between Judaism and Christianity. Babylonian religions should precede Judaism. It's no big deal, just now, but if we follow what the books say, there will come a time where we will need to follow their order. Any comments? What do other people's sources say? ] (]) 14:54, 26 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
:::::<span class="template-ping">@]:</span> Part of "protocol and the due process of dispute" is the three revert rule, which you have broken. If we were to enforce that strictly, you would already be temporarily blocked. That aside, I suggest you focus here on discussion of ] surrounding your desired edit, paying particular not of Misplaced Pages guidelines' preference for secondary sources over primary. —''']''' (]) 21:57, 1 September 2014 (UTC) | |||
:I think it's sensible to adopt a neutral system of ordering as you suggest, but I would advocate leaving it until the article is more stable. There's no reason not to discuss it in the meantime though, so: In what sense is chronological ordering more neutral than, say, alphabetical? The former seems to have much more potential for controversy. ] (]) 15:24, 26 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
::::::For the record, I am new to contributing to Misplaced Pages, which is why you can clearly see at the very beginning of this dispute (and in the History Log for the article) that my contribution was done without a registered account. That is not an ''excuse'' or ''justification'' for me having broken the "3 Revert Rule", but it does help to remove the indirect accusation leveled at me, that I have not respected protocol. I was not aware that there was a "3 Revert Rule". In every other respect in as much as there exist basic rules for scholarly debate, I have been respectful of those common-knowledge rules. ] (]) 22:07, 1 September 2014 (UTC) | |||
::Chronological order for the religions has been stable for more than a year. Alphabetical listing would certainly be more neutral, however you are the first to propose it. Most texts consider religions chronologically, which is not only easier for a reader to follow, it allows conceptual development to be traced and hypotheses offered regarding cause and effect. | |||
:::::::{{ping|Nomnompuffs}} The first edit on the top of your ] is a warning about your edit warring. ] (]) 22:10, 1 September 2014 (UTC) | |||
::A strength of Alynna's reordering is that religions explicitly derived from Christianity are placed together. They are so closely related conceptually, that it may be appropriate. However, it raises issues of what should be done regarding ], who are far more numerous and older than Branch Davidians for example. ] (]) 22:14, 26 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
::::::::Nomnompuffs, if you are a newbie, you can be excused for not knowing the rules. But not acknowledging the rules after you have been repeatedly warned of breaking them is not wisdom. As I told you, your choice is to abide by the rules and become a productive editor or break them and be blocked. If we compare a reference based upon Coogan's work with your pontification about the Bible, it is comparing evidence with a mere whim. All editors have opinions and philosophers think that opinion is the lowest form of knowledge; that's why Misplaced Pages only renders reliable sources. ] (]) 22:17, 1 September 2014 (UTC) | |||
:::''"Most texts consider religions chronologically, which is not only easier for a reader to follow, it allows conceptual development to be traced and hypotheses offered regarding cause and effect"''. I have some doubts. While a chronological ordering ''might'' be easier to follow for someone reading each section in turn, start-to-finish, I'm not sure that's how people are most likely to approach the article. And at a glance, it doesn't seem like we currently offer any cause-and-effect hypotheses. | |||
:::My concern is that, with almost any ordering other than alphabetical, there's always room for suspecting ulterior motives in picking that scheme. Followers of old religions might prefer ascending chronological order, and argue that the parallels between positioning in the article and positioning in history make the progression clearer. Followers of large religions might prefer a descending size-based order, and argue that it makes more sense for the bigger religions to be listed first, since they're the ones people will be more interested in. And so on, and so on. | |||
:::On that ground, I think my preference would be for something alphabetical. But it's not something I feel strongly about, and if a chronological ordering is more prevalent in the literature (and I'm happy to accept your word for that) then it's probably just about neutral enough for our purposes. | |||
:::The matter of Jehovah's Witnesses could be tricky. My undiscriminating atheist eyes say they are unequivocally Christian, but I recognise that this classification is controversial in some quarters. I don't think we can put them anywhere in the hierarchy without asserting some POV or another. In the absence of any better options, I think I would favor classifying them based on self-identification. Would I be correct in thinking that they typically consider themselves Christians? ] (]) 22:47, 26 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::As I have already said: I was not attempting to excuse or justify the infraction. I was simply unaware. It is a statement not for vindication, but for disambiguation of motive. Your statement above here doesn't conflict with that. But I am sure that any reader who examines the statement will be rational enough to realize the redundancy of your statement and draw the same conclusion. ] (]) 22:24, 1 September 2014 (UTC) | |||
::::From the Jehovah's Witnesses article it appears they consider themselves Christians. I'd go with filing them under Christianity, for that reason. Not sure what order to put them in relative to Mormonism. The ordering of sub-sections should probably follow the same rule as the ordering of main sections. | |||
::::I can't find anything definitive on what Jehovah's Witnesses believe about the gender of God - can anyone else? --] (]) 22:58, 26 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::It remains a mystery to me how could you have remained unaware of the rules while the warning messages were delivered in real time. ] (]) 22:30, 1 September 2014 (UTC) | |||
:::::Good point Alynna. We can't place JWs under Christianity, since there are two POVs. JWs say they are, the Popes for more than a thousand years says they aren't. Wiki has the NPOV—JWs, since they don't believe in a Trinity, fall into a different logical class. Perhaps the way of ordering the religions should be neither chronological, nor alphabetical, but under the classifications of comparative religion—monotheistic, henotheistic, trinitarian, polytheistic, animist. Probably in the reverse order, since the literature proposes something of a historical development in that direction. Interestingly, the very classification raised in the mediation discussion provides a natural way of distinguishing between notable branches of a broadly defined Christianity—Catholics (and Protestants) are distinctly trinitarian, Mormons are henotheistic and JWs are monotheistic. Views of the gender of the HS are clearly different—Catholic and Protestants (maybe most Orthodox except the Syrians) have a tradition of a male HS, Mormons admit the possibility of a female HS, JWs deny a distinct HS altogether. ] (]) 02:00, 3 July 2008 (UTC) | |||
===3O=== | |||
Actually -- it's easier than that. JW's don't believe they are the same Christians as mainstream Christians. That is, they are ONLY Christians if Christians are not Christians. Christians themselves agree. JWs believe in a partnership of a lesser god (Jesus) with a higher supreme God (Jehovah). By Christian definition, belief in multiple deities is polytheistic. Both Christianity ahd Jehovah's Witnesses regard themselves as two mutually exclusive religions. Neither side would be satisfied being labelled together.] (]) 02:09, 3 July 2008 (UTC) | |||
Hi, I hope to be of some assistance in resolving the issue flagged on the 3O page. I have very limited familiarity with biblical scholarship, so I hope I can bring a relatively unbiased voice to the discussion. As I understand it, the question is whether there is a female component implied/embedded in the word "Elohim". Is that correct? If so, are there any WP:RS's which indicate this to be the case? Cheers, ] (]) 05:10, 2 September 2014 (UTC) | |||
:Well, there is a book by Michael Coogan, which is properly cited in the footnotes. Besides, if ] (see above), it intuitively makes sense: the image of God is male and female, the likeness of God is male and female, therefore God (or Elohim) is/are male and female (Elohim is a plural). ] (]) 15:40, 2 September 2014 (UTC) | |||
==To Avoid an Edit War== | |||
:In order to repeat myself, this wasn't a conflict between two scholarly views, presented by different reliable sources. It simply was removal of sourced information because the editor has ] and therefore does not like what the cited reliable source said (source written by a world-class authority on the Hebrew Bible). So it is basically a conflict between verifiable information and original research, and the user got blocked for not ceasing reverting. No editor is allowed to delete sourced information simply because he/she does not like it. Chaos would ensue if we would allow that to happen. So, it was a conflict between vandalism and reverting vandalism, regardless of how noble the reasons for vandalism were. ] (]) 15:59, 2 September 2014 (UTC) | |||
I think the comparative religion section should be shortened and possibly moved, but not deleted. Can we EDIT this page instead of running over everyone? | |||
:So, the editor has abused the third opinion process. This was a conflict between something (verifiable information) and nothing (original research). A third opinion could only exist between something and something, not between something and nothing. ] (]) 16:14, 2 September 2014 (UTC) | |||
PS to Lisa -- thanks for the catch on the Messianic thing. I hadn't read that far.] (]) 16:15, 2 July 2008 (UTC) | |||
::Thanks for that Tgeorgescu, I guess you answered my question ;-) So there are WP:RS's which the article cited. Is that your understanding Nomnompuffs? Do you also have WP:RS's for the edit/s you wished to make? Cheers, ] (]) 01:01, 3 September 2014 (UTC) | |||
:::I cannot answer instead him/her, but ] states that the same theological opinion as Coogan's is part of the Judeo-Christian tradition (to put it bluntly, Gnostics were Christians). ] (]) 20:47, 3 September 2014 (UTC) | |||
:The section in question is so far unsupported by anyone other than the person who recently added it, so, pending conclusion of mediation, it should be kept out of the article. That's how Misplaced Pages works. When introduction of content is disputed, said content is held in reserve until the matter is properly discussed and consensus reached. Can either of you say you wouldn't cite this protocol for content you didn't like, added by someone else? | |||
:I'd be happy to review a (''radically'') shortened version of the section, but I can't promise that my opinion will change. I still think that Alastair's view of the article's scope is incompatible both with the title and with the opinions of other editors. It might not be useful to try and edit this content until the scoping issue has been fully discussed. ] (]) 19:19, 2 July 2008 (UTC) | |||
::::So I presume that if there are sources stating that Elohim is both male & female - it is likely they are responding to other sources which say this is not the case? Do any WP:RS's along those lines exist? Cheers, ] (]) 23:46, 3 September 2014 (UTC) | |||
:::"he section in question is so far unsupported by anyone other than the person who recently added it, so, pending conclusion of mediation, it should be kept out of the article. That's how Misplaced Pages works." | |||
:::::Pagels clearly states that God is mostly seen as male in the Judeo-Christian tradition (and that is what our Misplaced Pages article states, as abiding by ]), she also states that there are exceptions from this rule, one being an interpretation of Gen. 1:26-27. She is non-judgmental about this interpretation, she reports it as a fact about a notable theological opinion. Considering her whole article, she agrees with the idea that God was sometimes seen as female. ] (]) 06:52, 4 September 2014 (UTC) | |||
:::]. Per ] "Minority opinions typically reflect genuine concerns, and the logic may outweigh the logic of the majority". There is an ongoing dispute with no consensus met. Your reverts are '''precisely''' as unhelpful as his. Stop trying to garner support and please, instead, attempt to resolve this through ]. -] (]) 22:05, 2 July 2008 (UTC) | |||
:::::If there are sources which state that the image and likeness of God is male but not female, I frankly don't know, but interpreting the Bible literally this would be a bizarre position (even more bizarre that God is both male and female, since the later does not contradict the letter of the Bible). ] (]) 07:05, 4 September 2014 (UTC) | |||
::The question seems to be one of the Gender of God. The first thing that I noticed was that a definition of "gender" was being deleted along with the comparative religion section. Whenever edits eliminate a good deal of work by a known editor, the elimination is suspect. | |||
::"God" is a big concept. It's not limited to just a few religions, and religions do tend to follow certain archetypcal patterns. A comparative religion section is therefore in order. The work of Jung, and in particular Erich Neumann certainly plays a part here. The gender of God has historic, anthropological, and even archeological and psychological ramifications. To limit it to the patriarchal overlay of a few relatively recent religions fails to incorporate the substrata of the mother-goddess religions that lie underneath. Many of the patriarchal overlays in the Old Testament have matriarchal underpinnings from previous tellings of those same stories in earlier cultures. | |||
::Alastair has done a good deal of work on this subject separately, and I've found his work to be both thorough and credible by Misplaced Pages standards. Rather than an antagonistic deletion, Misplaced Pages thrives better on a cooperative editing process. That is, instead of working against each other to destroy, working together to create is much more productive.] (]) 19:39, 2 July 2008 (UTC) | |||
:::::So I understand that God being male and female is offending some religious sensibilities, but ]. The really offensive stance would be that the image and likeness of God is male but not female, since it would offend both religious sensibilities and human reason in general (which can examine what is written in the Bible regardless of the religious persuasion of the reader). ] (]) 07:20, 4 September 2014 (UTC) | |||
:::I agree with Tim about having a comparative section (size being arguable). But a definition of gender is really out of place in this article. A wikilink to the article ] should suffice. -] (]) 19:47, 2 July 2008 (UTC) | |||
::::::Thanks again Tgeorgescu. I guess I was just sounding out whether Nomnompuff's edit was indicative of a broader ''dispute'' which might warrant inclusion or explanation - as opposed to what happened (i.e. an unsourced WP:OR edit). Anyway, Nomnompuff doesn't seem particularly active on this talk page at the moment, so I'm happy to wait a bit longer to see if they want to chat/clarify things further, otherwise it looks reasonably straight forward from my perspective. Cheers, ] (]) 07:24, 4 September 2014 (UTC) | |||
:::''"The first thing that I noticed was that a definition of "gender" was being deleted along with the comparative religion section"''. For my part, that was unintentional. I intended only to remove the comparative religion section. | |||
:::''""God" is a big concept. It's not limited to just a few religions, and religions do tend to follow certain archetypcal patterns. A comparative religion section is therefore in order"''. All I can say is that it depends on the content. As long as every point is tightly bound to the gender of God, I don't have a problem with it. ] (]) 20:10, 2 July 2008 (UTC) | |||
:::::::On one hand Coogan's view smacks of propaganda for liberal Christianity (as fundamentalists see mainstream Biblical scholarship as a Satanic plot for propagating liberal Christianity); on the other hand its opposite stance cuts against the grain of the Bible. ] (]) 07:35, 4 September 2014 (UTC) | |||
Thanks Lisa! | |||
Ah - I just saw that ] has had a ban imposed, so that probably explains the lack of response. I'll keep an eye out over the next few days. Cheers, ] (]) 07:37, 4 September 2014 (UTC) | |||
I'd like to add that anything out of scope in one article (including gender) would be in scope for other articles. I'd suggest MOVING another editor's hard work to the best section (or best article) by a simple search and insertion -- with a quick link regarding the general subject matter. | |||
:Let's sort this out: the image and likeness of the Elohim are male ''and'' female. Who are then the Elohim? ] (definitely male) and ] (definitely female). You see, the Ancient Hebrews worshiped a god and a goddess (among a plurality of other gods whose existence they admitted), only later polytheism evolved into monolatry and then into monotheism. ] (]) 21:35, 18 July 2019 (UTC) | |||
This would be best for Misplaced Pages, because good work would go to the best location. | |||
=== Full disclosure === | |||
This would be good for the initial editor, since the best location for his hard work would be found. | |||
There was a sharp break between ancient Israelite religion and the Judaism of the Second Temple.{{sfn|Moore|Kelle|2011|p=449}} Pre-exilic Israel was ];{{sfn|Albertz|1994a|p=61}} ] was probably worshiped as Yahweh's consort, within his temples in Jerusalem, ], and Samaria, and a goddess called the ], probably a fusion of ] and the Mesopotamian goddess ], was also worshiped.{{sfn|Ackerman|2003|p=395}} ] and Yahweh coexisted in the early period, but were considered irreconcilable after the 9th century.{{sfn|Smith|2002|p=47}} The worship of Yahweh alone, the concern of a small party in the monarchic period, only gained ascendancy in the exilic and early post-exilic period,{{sfn|Albertz|1994a|p=61}} and it was only then that the very existence of other gods was denied.{{sfn|Betz|2000|p=917}} | |||
This would be good for those who would otherwise delete the article -- because it would save time, arguments, arbitration, and flat out wiki-warring. | |||
Copy/paste from ]. ] (]) 00:08, 19 July 2019 (UTC) | |||
:{{re|Tgeorgescu}} I think there's a problem here. According to our article: | |||
I'd like to ask all parties to discuss this in ]. This is simply to avoid two sets of consensus being reached, followed by lots of mud-slinging. :) -] (]) 22:05, 2 July 2008 (UTC) | |||
::{{tq|Genesis 1:26-27 says that the elohim were male and female, and humans were made in their image.}} | |||
:But Genesis 1:26-27 doesn't "say" that God/''elohim'' were male and female. At most this is an inference -- and a questionable one at best. | |||
:Wise words Rushyo. The mediation issue does need to be resolved, and comments relevant to that should be posted there. However, it could also be argued that all progress on the article should not be impeded by having to go through that process. My request for the mediation was specifically directed at the way I perceived only two editors to be behaving, and the request that personal attacks be stopped and removed. | |||
:I for one will be giving the mediation issue first priority, since I requested your assistance in the first place, and want to respect the time you've invested in this already. ] (]) 02:25, 3 July 2008 (UTC) | |||
:What Gen 1:27 actually ''says'' is "God/''elohim'' created (singular) the human in his (masculine singlular) image; in the image of God/''elohim'' he created (singular) him; male and female he created (singular) them". | |||
::Regarding the Gender section, extended treatment of the details is indeed already available at both ] and at ]. What I've included here is a bare minimum summary of material at those articles, which have been widely sourced and also effectively stable for more than a year since I expanded and sourced them. | |||
:Gen 1:26 is analysed in our article . | |||
::Cynthia Eller's ''Why an invented past won't give women a future'' is a classic recentish source that explains why "the search for matriarchy" might be misguided even were it verifiable (which current consensus says it isn't). However, reconstruction of the trajectory of the history of spiritual thought is potentially more fruitful. Patriarchal cultures with feminine dominated spirituality are not uncommon. Some would argue that Roman Catholicism approaches this in some cults of the Madonna officiated by celibate male priests. | |||
::Just where, or even if, such material should be included is not yet clear. I'm just outlining where a bibliography for adding such text may start, or what it will need to include. | |||
::Also, I'm noting that the '''Gender''' section is already compressed to three sentences, they are very general. Further detail probably needs to fall under each POV covered in the article, since their diversity is precisely the topic of the article. For example, in what sense is ] feminine, what does this imply about the gender of HaShem? That question doesn't make sense in a Qur'anic formulation. ] (]) 03:14, 3 July 2008 (UTC) | |||
:It's an interesting conjecture that Gen 1:26 may contain an echo of an earlier wider pantheon, but by no means a necessary one, and, I would submit, not a consensus view. ] (]) 15:27, 19 July 2019 (UTC) | |||
:: I agree, Genesis 1 does not "say" elohim were male and female (or that elohim is plural for that matter, the plural form is clearly used throughout the Hebrew Bible to refer to the one singular God); nor is Herzog's view that Yahweh and Asherah were the "most worshiped" gods a consensus view. I have removed the paragraph as not reflective of consensus, while discussion is under way here. ] (]) 16:30, 19 July 2019 (UTC) | |||
:::Well, both ] and ] agree there is something masculine and feminine about God in Gen 1:26. If it is not the consensus view, it could be attributed to them. Also, Gesenius is a 19th century scholar, while Pagels, Coogan and Herzog reached into the 21st century. Herzog does not deny that other gods were worshiped, but most germane were Yahweh and Asherah, perhaps not "most worshiped". Also, the view that the Hebrew Bible has conserved remnants of polytheistic myths is by no means ]. There is an edx.org course from Bar Ilan University which makes that clear. Initially, Elohim meant ] and his children (gods). Later, Yahweh had cannibalized El and Baal, but still had Asherah as his wife. ] (]) 17:53, 19 July 2019 (UTC) | |||
:Agreed -- the thing cannot be edited while it is invisible.] (]) 13:40, 3 July 2008 (UTC) | |||
<blockquote>It seems almost certain that the God of the Jews evolved gradually from the Canaanite El, who was in all likelihood the "God of Abraham"... If El was the high God of Abraham—Elohim, the prototype of Yahveh—Asherah was his wife, and there are archaeological indications that she was perceived as such before she was in effect "divorced" in the context of emerging Judaism of the 7th century BCE. (See {{bibleverse|2|Kings|23:15|HE}}.)<ref>{{cite book | |||
== Messianic Judaism - file under Judaism or Christianity? == | |||
| last = Leeming | |||
| first = David | |||
| authorlink = | |||
| year = 2005 | |||
| title = The Oxford Companion to World Mythology | |||
| publisher = ] | |||
| location = New York | |||
| pages = 118 | |||
| isbn = 978-0-19-515669-0 | |||
| oclc = 60492027 | |||
| lccn = 2005014216 | |||
| url = https://books.google.com/?id=kQFtlva3HaYC&pg=PA118 | |||
}}</ref></blockquote> | |||
:::Copy/paste from ]. So, arguing that a 19th century source trumps multiple ] from the 21st century is quite a weak argument, according to ]. What I would like to see are multiple ] Bible scholarship sources from the 21st century which deny Coogan's and Pagel's view. Of course, evangelical scholars will never agree with any theologically heterodox view, so I will discard such sources. If all they do is rubber-stamping biblical inerrancy, I don't think highly of such scholars and generally speaking they aren't mainstream, with the exception from . In their view, whatever Ivy Plus teach about the Bible is from the Devil. Evangelical scholars would say that Jews were (with certain partial lapses) monotheists since Abraham. Which, by our book, is a ] view. | |||
Content on ] was recently moved from the Judaism section to the Christianity section. According to the Messianic Judaism article, however, most Messianic Jews identify as Jewish. Should they not then be classified that way in this article? --] (]) 01:03, 3 July 2008 (UTC) | |||
: |
:::So, there were more gods that Yahweh and Asherah? Fine, I have no problem with that. ] (]) 21:02, 19 July 2019 (UTC) | ||
::::I would have thought the most relevant thing for this article is the plain meaning of Gen 1:27 -- that women as well as men were created ''b'tselem elohim'', in the image of God; so (according to the text) the characteristics of all humanity are reflections of God. | |||
Actually, "Messianic" is synonymous with "Christian" by Messianic Jews, without some things they consider to be "Gentile" (like Christmas). In any case, although their idea of the Trinity is not orthodox by Christian standards, they do fall under the loose category of "Christian" by Misplaced Pages standards. Their synagogues are sponsored by Christian denominations and are frequently held in Christian churches. They are not sponsored by mainstream Jewish movements and do not share buildings with mainstream Jewish synagogues. Giving them a third section is not necessary.] (]) 01:28, 3 July 2008 (UTC) | |||
::::It seems disingenuous to me to bracket Pagels together with Coogan in this discussion. Their theses are quite different. Pagels explores gnostic ideas of God "as a dyadic being, who consists of both masculine and feminine elements" -- a single entity, with aspects of maleness and aspects of femaleness. This is quite a contrast to Coogan's proposal of a specific god and goddess couple. | |||
::::A second question is what may be understood by the "image" of God. You seem determined to read it in physical terms. This is naive. After all, this is a text that talks of "the breath of God" moving over the face of the waters. The JPS Commentary on Genesis (Sarna, 1989) has an almost page-long discussion noting that the image/likeness language is a standard formula found in texts across Mesopotamia, Assyria, and Egypt where monarchs are described as being "the image" or "the likeness" of a god -- even gods of non-human form. It asserts a dominance and a mastery, a setting up above over the rest of creation, feeding straight into the next verse. "While he is not divine, his very existence bears withness to the activity of God in the world. This awareness inevitably entails an awesome responsibility and imposes a code of living that conforms with the consciousness of that fact." The difference in Genesis is that it is mankind that is being described as being the image of God, rather than a monarch. | |||
::::Similarly in the commentary by Plaut (2005) the words emphasise "the Torah's abiding wonder over our special status in Creation, over our unique intellectual capacity, which bears the imprint of the Creator. This likeness also describes our moral potential. Our nature is radically different from God's, but we are capable of approaching God's ''actions'': divine love, divine mercy, divine justice. Our likeness to the Divine has a third and most important meaning. It stresses the essential holiness, and, by implication, the dignity of all humanity, without distinction." | |||
::::It's also worth noting that the early chapters of Genesis, and Genesis 1 in particular, are often now argued to be late compositions, dating specifically from the Exilic period -- a period in which the Israelite conception of God had become much more universalist, less local; and more abstract, less corporeal. This would mitigate against Cooper's thesis of a strong Canaanite inheritance in the text. | |||
::::Finally I think we misrepresent Cooper in the previously current text. He doesn't say that "Genesis 1:26-27 says that the elohim were male and female", rather he says that he is presenting this as an alternative interpretation, at variance with the traditional translation. I don't have a problem with us presenting this as Cooper's suggestion, together if you like with his further suggestion that the model could "more likely" then be "Yahweh and his goddess companion", rather the whole pantheon. But it should not be presented as a consensus fact; indeed, per ], it should not be given more prominence than it has been received with in secondary and tertiary overviews. ] (]) 22:31, 19 July 2019 (UTC) | |||
:::::Ok, I have performed the change. Coogan does say that Asherah could mean (i) Yahweh's wife or (ii) Yahweh's ritual pole, but that all these available mainstream interpretations are equally heretical to the theological orthodoxy. ] (]) 02:54, 20 July 2019 (UTC) | |||
:This is a very good question. I'll stay neutral. Rushyo is absolutely spot on, categorising MJ as Jewish is "poking a hungry bear". As Tim notes, categorizing them as Christian is fine by most Christians, but implies a loss of Jewishness MJ, in their very name, themselves insist upon. | |||
:::::: I still think the "hint" is ] - the section is titled 'In the Hebrew and Christian Bible'. Why does this belong in this article and this section, which is not about the history of religion? ] (]) 08:04, 20 July 2019 (UTC) | |||
:This is a good question for us to consider, since it also bears on how we deal with JWs and Mormons. It is also not just a Judaeo-Christian issue, but would be relevant to ] and mysticism within several traditions—Judaism (], Hinduism, Buddhism and Islam no less than Christianity. Kabbalah especially is absolutely relevant to this article. | |||
:::::::Why do you think that God=god+goddess wouldn't be germane to this article? ] (]) 08:32, 22 July 2019 (UTC) | |||
:The wonderful thing about doing this from a world-wide perspective is that sectarian disputes within any particular tradition can be handled the same way across the whole article. A measure of objectivity is immediately available for us. | |||
::::::::I didn't make any comment about what I do and don't think is germane to the article as a whole. The section under discussion is about the Hebrew and Christian Bible (text), and the current inclusion is one scholar's view on what his interpretation of a word in that text "hints" at about the practice of religion in a particular era. That seems like a stretch to include in this particular section, whether or not it could or should be included anywhere else. ] (]) 02:30, 23 July 2019 (UTC) | |||
:The issues here are neither hopelessly complex, but nor are they unambiguously simple. Thankfully there are mountains of books addressing the topics quite neutrally. Many such resources are also available online. | |||
:::::::::Would you suggest another section? ] (]) 20:23, 24 July 2019 (UTC) | |||
:It's absolutely wonderful to see so many interested people gathering at the page. Thank you to all who are giving time to addressing the fascinating questions raised by this article. ] (]) 02:18, 3 July 2008 (UTC) | |||
=== References === | |||
::I'm staying out of this one. But seriously, guys, can we move this over to the mediation page? It's there for a reason and it's easier to follow the conversation. ]<font color="#838B8B">]</font>]</font></font> 02:27, 3 July 2008 (UTC) | |||
{{reflist talk}} | |||
== Gender of God or gods == | |||
:::Good for you L'Aquatique! The MJ thing really is a can of worms. But (imo) it has nothing to do with ''my'' appeal for mediation, so I'd prefer it not to clutter that discussion, if that's OK with you. It would also allow you to steer clear of it as, I think wisely, you say you desire. ] (]) 02:56, 3 July 2008 (UTC) | |||
I made an edit for the lead to begin: | |||
::::Seems fair enough to me. Carry on, then... ]<font color="#838B8B">]</font>]</font></font> 03:34, 3 July 2008 (UTC) | |||
:The '''gender of God''', or of gods, can be viewed as a literal or as an ] aspect of a ] or of deities. | |||
:::::Thanks L'Aquatique, I also appreciate the inclusion of WikiProject Judaism for this page. ] (]) 04:50, 3 July 2008 (UTC) | |||
This was on the basis that the lead continues: | |||
== Comparative religion - draft == | |||
What is understood by words for ''god'' varies across cultures and has sometimes changed dramatically at various times. ] challenged various ideas in ], the ] of ] challenged its ] neighbours, and in ] history, the ] officially adopted ] under ], later becoming its centre, but being challenged itself during the ]. | |||
A simple view of the history of religion as an evolutionary process was proposed in the 19th century— | |||
from ] to ] to ], with some believing ], ] or ] to be the most advanced approach. Such views are no longer widely current either in the study of religion,<ref> | |||
"Before us lies a literature rich in profound insights and immense with carefully collected and tested facts: a wealth of resources beyond the imaginings of those 19th century scholars who gave attention to religious questions." | |||
] and ], ''A Theory of Religion'', (], 1996), p. 12.</ref> | |||
nor in philosophy. ] widely considers speculative ] to be outside the reach of ] and scientific scrutiny.<ref> | |||
"One of the first to sceptically dismantle speculative metaphysics was French philosopher Pierre Bayle (1647-1706). The turning point, however, came after German philosopher Immanuel Kant in the 1780's expressed scepticism about the speculative metaphysical approach; it was not rational science and was not even real knowledge." | |||
Spencer Scoular, ''First Philosophy: The Theory of Everything'', (Universal-Publishers, 2007).</ref> | |||
Comparative religion notes distinctive idiosyncracies across major religions that are better explained by close historical scrutiny,<ref> | |||
"We try to specify in a relatively complete way why and how various aspects of religion occur and to do so through a structure of formal explanation." | |||
] and ], work cited, p. 11.</ref> | |||
rather than appeal to a simplistic theory.<ref> | |||
"Available 'theories' of religion remain largely the product of 19th century social thought and the tradition of 'grand theory' associated with the founding fathers of social science. But, as already suggested, close scrutiny reveals that these theories are not so grand." | |||
] and ], work cited, p. 11.</ref> | |||
Nonetheless, animist religions are common among preliterate societies, many of which still exist in the 21st century. Typically, natural forces and ] spiritual guides feature in these religions, rather than fully fledged personal divinities with established personalities. It is in polytheism that such deities are found, ] being the largest current polytheistic religion. Animist religions often, but not always, attribute gender to spirits considered to permeate the world and its events. Polytheistics religions, however, almost always attribute gender to their gods, though a few notable divinities are associated with various forms of ] characteristics—gods that manifest alternatingly as male and female, gods with one male and one female "face", and gods whose most distinctive characteristic is their unknown gender.<ref> | |||
"We are yet more strongly reminded by the two-fold nature of Phanes of the epicene god-heads, who occur frequently in the Babylonian pantheon." | |||
Gauranga Nath Banerjee, ''Hellenism in Ancient India'', (Read Books, 2007), p. 304.</ref> | |||
In the philosophies of several polytheistic traditions, a primal, "high" God is postulated as source of the lesser gods (and ]s) of the ]. In some religions, like ], such philosophising goes further, considering ultimate reality to transcend pantheons of gods, without proposing a high God in their place. Buddhism considers ] or ] to be ultimate reality, and the desire for existence to be the wrong-headed heart of human misery.<ref> | |||
"All that is essential to Buddhism is found in the four propositions which the faithful call the four noble truths. The first states the existence of suffering as the accompaniment to the perpetual change of things; the second shows the desire to be the cause of suffering; ..." Durkheim, work cited, p. 30. See also Oldenberg, ''Buddha'', translated by Hoey, p. 53.</ref> | |||
European ] since the 19th century may owe a debt to western thinkers discovering Buddhist ideas from that time of increased trade with the East. | |||
Nonetheless, a hegemonic western conception of metaphysics, influenced strongly by ] and ] is identifiable in European literature from Greek and Roman authors through to the present, such that English language betrays an inherent bias towards monotheistic thought. Where animist languages may not even have words for personal deities, but rather a nuanced vocabulary of spiritualism, and polytheistic cultures have lexis suited to articulating relationships between deities in a pantheon, some modern English speakers only recognize alternatives such as ''God'', ''gods'' or ''no God'', being unfamiliar with Buddhism and animism. | |||
When considering the literature of the world's religions and metaphysical philosophies, the diversity of the underlying conceptions of the spiritual realm is foundational to appreciating any points of comparison. Comparison of views of the gender of spiritual entities is no exception. Each religion or philosophy needs to be understood in its historical, social, linguistic and philosophical context. Thus, matters of gender do apply to animism, but not in the foundational way they do in polytheism and monotheism. Additionally, since animism is largely associated with preliterate societies, we are dependent on the ] of ] rather than documented scriptures.<ref> | |||
"These pose the opportunity to borrow some extremely powerful tools, and we have responded by ransacking the treasuries of economics, learning theory and cultural anthropology." | |||
] and ], work cited, p. 12.</ref> | |||
] is a notable exception. | |||
=== Notes === | |||
{{Reflist}} | |||
=== Comments === | |||
As I look at this, I'm reminded of how much is left out. It's still woefully biased towards western and modern views, yet leaves out New Age spirituality. Sufism, Kabbalah and other mysticisms aren't mentioned, it really is very general. Thanks, Tim, for placing it back here so we can build on it. | |||
:In ] religions, ''the gods'' are more likely to have literal sexual genders which would enable them to interact with each other, and even with humans, in a sexual way. | |||
I think what we're looking for is a framework, an organizing principle for the article. I really think animism would have interesting things to tell us. It would be nice if the article could tell a story, rather than simply being a "phone book" list of terse discriptions of various groups. | |||
And that a whole section is dedicated to: ] within which there are many gods. | |||
In fact, researching eastern religions would probably teach us a lot, 'cause they're more inclined to conflate religion with philosophy, attributing writings to wisdom rather than to the more presumptuous divine inspiration of western scriptures. The divine is "meditated upon" in the East, "revealed" in the West. ] (]) 16:02, 3 July 2008 (UTC) | |||
The edit was reverted by {{u|Jheald}} on the claim that "this article is specifically about monotheistic conceptions of God" which is not the case in regard to Hinduism. Is there a route to clarification? | |||
:There's also the problem of impersonality vs. personality. Ultimately, the origin of all life is the womb. In the womb there is darkness and water. The water is broken or divided, there is light, and the universe is born (as in Genesis 1). The earliest images children have of people, however, are neither male nor female (or rather both male and female). And the shape of this image is a circle. The immediate universal parent is the mother, but recognition of the father's role comes later in individual and historical human consciousness. First, the mother. Then only later the father acting on the mother. | |||
]] 13:06, 26 August 2015 (UTC) | |||
:The first religions, then were matriarchal and only later patriarchal. In most religions the separation of the world parents has the father representing the sky and the mother the earth below. But there are exceptions to this, in which the father is below and the mother above (I think Neumann said Egypt was this way). | |||
== in Islam - Allah Gender == | |||
:So then we have these categories: | |||
Dear Editors | |||
:#Female only (the most ancient and basic) | |||
this part is totally incorrect , God (Allah) is genderless and the reference to Him as He, is just the nature of Arabic, we refer to the moon as He and the sun as She, etc. the pronoun "Hiya" is not mentioned in Sura Ikhlas. <!-- Template:Unsigned --><small class="autosigned">— Preceding ] comment added by ] (] • ]) 10:52, 2 November 2020 (UTC)</small> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> | |||
:#Male only (later western overlays) | |||
:#Both male and female (certain kabbalistic aspects as a monotheistic example / and of course sexual pantheons in polytheistic systems) | |||
:#NEITHER male nor female (eastern religions) | |||
== Grammar == | |||
:I think that the breakdown should be categorized according to genders instead of according to religions -- but that's a total rewrite!] (]) 16:57, 3 July 2008 (UTC) | |||
Gender of God is ] (]) 15:39, 23 September 2022 (UTC) | |||
::Thanks Tim. You appear to know more about this than I do, which wouldn't be hard. If the Rgveda is anything to go by, the East also has a primal masculine creator. But the Vedas are not strictly East, rather they are possibly the source of some of the West. | |||
::Then there's the evidence for fertility cults based on feminine spirits, which is far more ancient than writing—tens of thousands of years of artifacts, rather than thousands of years of writing. I seem to recall even a Neanderthal artifact. | |||
::And the best evidence of all is the testimony of contemporary pre-literate cultures and their spiritual beliefs. | |||
::I think your idea of classifying by views of gender first, before classification according to religion is ideal for the article. It's a gender studies article more than a religious studies article, in a way. We just need to seek out the sources that make this classification for us. | |||
::If there is a God, and there's only one of Her. The religions that don't worship Her are constructed in the image of their host societies, so at least 90% of this article would be indirect sociological history, and indeed that is the tradition of the 19th century, with substantial quality revision in the last 30 years or so. ] (]) 11:00, 4 July 2008 (UTC) | |||
:Yes, the gender is generally referred to in the singular in the article. —''']''' (]) 16:36, 23 September 2022 (UTC) | |||
:Alastair -- I don't know if I know more, I think I just know a few different things. BTW, an interesting "writer" observation. According to Jung, humans have a collective psychological makeup that makes us different from other animals; an instinct. We do and see things in common ways. In a broader sense, there are instincts we have in common with other animals, as well, like caring for our young, etc. But just looking at what is common to humanity gives us (according to Jung) a handle on the "image of God." To Jung, the collective psyche IS the image of God. Individuals build their lives off of that image, and only poke their indivudual consciousness outside of that image in a limited way -- what Jung called "individuation." While that's way beyond the scope of the article, I wanted to point out a curious observation screenwriters have noticed: female audiences can empathize with both male and female characters on the screen, but in general male audiences can only fully empathize with male characters. They can sympathize with a female character, but they have trouble empathizing. There are exceptions, like Ripley in Alien, who BTW was originally scripted as a male character and only changed at the last minute to a female without rewriting the character's actions or dialogue. For some reason, males COULD empathize with Ripley. If there is some kind of distinctive male pattern in the collective psyche of our current cultures, then the deity we envision WOULD tend to be male.] (]) 13:02, 4 July 2008 (UTC) | |||
==Wiki Education assignment: Psychology of Gender== | |||
:I've not read much on this specifically, but Sarah Michelle Gellar in ''Buffy'' and Jennifer Garner in ''Alias'' and many other modern examples of sexy young women playing roles typical of masculine heroes have great attraction to young men. I know this has been documented informally at a large seminary here in Sydney. Lectures on the Church Fathers in the morning, history of liturgy in the afternoon, time in the library, community meal and then retire to watch shows like those above in the men's singles quarters. I'm not a conspiracy theorist, nor up on the ratings demographics, but I suspect some of these shows are actually supposed to appeal to young women with broader interests than traditional feminine gender roles. Retrospectively, perhaps it's not really surprising that men will watch Angelina Jolie or Jessica Alba, whether they conform to traditional gender roles or not. ;) | |||
{{dashboard.wikiedu.org assignment | course = Misplaced Pages:Wiki_Ed/Illinois_Institute_of_Technology/Psychology_of_Gender_(Spring_2024) | assignments = ] | start_date = 2024-01-08 | end_date = 2024-04-28 }} | |||
:My own suspicion is Sarah, Jennifer, Angelina and Jessica are skilled professionals, high priestesses of the cults of ], ], ] and many others that probably reflect a sexual fantacy shared in the male collective consciousness. But by collective consciousness, I neither claim formal equivalence with Jung's views, nor preclude the possibility of magnetic resonance imaging of the brain actually localising regions in "straight" men, that activate under the appropriate kind of stimulus. | |||
:If one leaves aside for a moment the political side of things—the noble crusade for equality of outcome in representation of women in coal mining, oil rig drilling, construction work and other high-risk low-pay occupations—gender is a fascinating topic, inadequately understood, and deeply significant. | |||
<span class="wikied-assignment" style="font-size:85%;">— Assignment last updated by ] (]) 02:33, 29 April 2024 (UTC)</span> | |||
:Behind goddess worship, how often may we read male sexual fantacy? So what if Shangri Lankans structure their pantheon under a mother fertility goddess, if this is, once more, simply a social structure that encourages women to be sexually available to men under pain of taboo? It's interesting watching self-corrections between branches of feminism on this. All that glitters is not gold. Cheryl Exum argues something like this regarding the Song of Songs. ] (]) 06:36, 5 July 2008 (UTC) | |||
::I'll remind you again that Misplaced Pages ], Alastair. ] (]) 07:28, 5 July 2008 (UTC) | |||
== Gender of God == | |||
:::Since at no point in pages of text have you actually addressed anything close to the subject matter of this article, nor ever provided a source, again I'll remind you your presence here needs to demonstrate a willingness to do both. | |||
:::You are currently in the middle of disciplinary action for obstruction and incivility. | |||
About the gender of God. I was looking at something else on the internet and I came across this topic that whoever is in charge of Misplaced Pages is wrong! God is not a female he was never a mother! Deuteronomy 32:18 says of the Rock who begot you, you are unmindful and have forgotten the God who fathered you. That's what Deuteronomy 32:18 says! It does not say he is as a mother in that verse according to the words of Misplaced Pages! I have studied the Bible since 2006 and I continue to study it twice daily, every day and I have been a Christian for 18 years and I attend my church on a regular basis, but God was never a mother he is always a father, a male not a female! Just thought I clear that up for everybody! So do not mistaken God as a female or as a mother he is all three Trinities of the person within him; in other words he is God the Father, he is Jesus Christ as Son, and is the Holy Spirit all in one person! But he was never a mother or even acted as a mother! He is all male through and through! ] (]) 14:56, 27 April 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::I'm in no rush, but apologies remain outstanding. | |||
:::Engage with the subject, cite sources or be silent. ] (]) 07:55, 5 July 2008 (UTC) | |||
: |
:Being a Christian and studying the Bible does not give you special editing rights. Unless you read the Bible in Koine Greek, Hebrew, Latin, Coptic, Syriac and know your Aramaic, you're not in the same league with the Bible professors we ] in this article. ] (]) 16:55, 27 April 2024 (UTC) | ||
:::::Ilkali, correcting your approach to editing is not merely what I think is the issue, it is specified in my rationale for the mediation I called for. | |||
:::::You are incorrect about "enforcement", very rarely indeed does enforcement happen at Wiki, that's the whole point! | |||
:::::It is precisely your misunderstanding of this that I've had to appeal to the processes to address. | |||
:::::It's a slow process that seeks to avoid enforcing anything. That's the concept of consensus. ] (]) 01:12, 6 July 2008 (UTC) |
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Philosophy
I have removed the following sentences (and corresponding references) from the "Evolutionary Process" section as it gives the false impression that metaphysics is somehow "over" in analytic philosophy and philosophy in general, arguably glossing over and/or ignoring the work done in the past few decades done by Kripke, Putnam, Lewis, Armstrong and many others. They read:
- ...nor in philosophy. Analytic philosophy widely considers speculative metaphysics to be outside the reach of epistemology and scientific scrutiny. — Preceding unsigned comment added by T of Locri (talk • contribs) 08:35, 31 March 2011 (UTC)
Son of God
The issue of "son of God" or "Son of God" is barely relevant to the article, but since Jeffro has raised it again, and the issues do have some circumstantial relationship to the article, I'll make a second brief response here. I trust Jeffro would not argue that "Jesus Christ, son of God" must be correct. In 99% of uses, son is appositional, an atheist describing Christian belief would write, "Jesus Christ, Son of God". It would be possible, though I'd love to see a source attesting it, to say "Jesus Christ, son of God", just as one might say "Adam, son of God" or "David, son of God". Here the intent is "Adam, son of God", the lower case is shorthand for a non-unique representative of a class (I believe Discourse Representation Theory suggests an implicit quantifier is introduced along with a new discourse variable in such constructions). In the same way, the capital is merely shorthand for the definite article in the case of Jesus, who some contend is the unique Son of God (while also being truly a son of God simultaneously). One thing that decieves people in cases like this is English possessive constructions. In Greek and Hebrew (the languages on which theories about Jesus are ultimately dependent), there are different ways of forming the constructions, which make the issue easier to see. Hebrew (typical of Semitic languages generally) uses a construct state in which a chain of modifiers precede a noun in the absolute state. Long chains are possible—"the children of the wives of the advisors of the king" (the last is absolute, the modifiers are construct). Where the absolute noun is definite, the whole chain is definite. B'n Elohim or the Son of God is definite because Elohim God is definite. Circumlocutions make it possible to avoid the implication of definiteness if required. Greek has multiple ways of saying "Son of God" again with different nuances of definiteness—ho tou theou quios (literally, the of-God Son) is a very natural Greek construction, it would use an indefinite particle were it to wish to avoid definiteness in regard to such statements.
I'd be very interested if Jeffro could provide some sources that show usage of Jesus being describe as "son of God" with a lower case "s". Otherwise, whatever he is suggesting regarding English syntax, might be true and I'm just missing his point, but is not particularly relevant, because it is hypothetical. Sources secular or devotional all use the capital, so even if I agreed with Jeffro, we'd be best off dropping it, because no consensus would form in opposition to the strong precedent of sources. What do you say Jeffro? Let sleeping dogs lie? Alastair Haines (talk) 01:46, 4 December 2008 (UTC)
- I "raised it again" purely because it seemed to be the only thing that might remotely resemble a basis for your claim that I had argued with the OED (which remains unclear). Insofar as your statement that atheists would capitalise (I've determined that you're also Australian so I'll drop the US spelling here) 'Son of God', I think they would be the least likely to do so.
- To clarify my position on this so there is no doubt... if using the phrase as a title (' Son of God'), it would indeed properly be capitalised. In a statement such as 'Jesus was the son of God' in the same manner as 'Albert Einstein was the son of Hermann Einstein', it would be proper to use 'son', though 'Jesus was the Son of God' would be correct in the manner of 'Charles is the Prince of Wales'. No statement herein should be inferred as any opinion as to the existence of a god, gods, God, or to any progeny of such entities of any gender, or no gender.--Jeffro77 (talk) 02:38, 4 December 2008 (UTC)
- You're Australian! He he, drat. Work hard while I'm away mate, 'cause Tim and I are serious about scrutinising things when we return. Hmmm, you're Aussie, that does make it harder to tell you what I really think. ;) Don't drink and drive over the silly season and avagoodweekend! Alastair Haines (talk) 15:53, 4 December 2008 (UTC)
The Bible states (using theism) that God created man in his image, this man being exactly that: a man, only after the men was asleep and a rib was removed was a woman created. Since god created a woman for the man and man was created first, God must be a man, since he created the first being in his image.--72.74.114.109 (talk) 03:12, 9 December 2009 (UTC)
polytheism/pantheism
I don't really have any input on the JCI issues. However, I did notice that the "Polytheism" section sort of describes a form of pantheism. In a nutshell, Polytheism is the belief in many distinct gods, of various genders (including neutral or hermaphroditic - the Norse Loki does gender switching IIRC). They may or may not source from (or really be part of) one older god. Pantheism is the belief that many gods are worshiped separately, but are actually all one. (The reason I haven't stuffed this into the article is that I haven't gone and dug up sources yet.)
But the polytheistic stuff seems somewhat out of place here. Polytheists don't have to ask what gender Thor is, or Diana, or Artemis. Do the non-JCI religions even belong here, or is the article really about "The gender of God in the Judeo-Christian-Islamic traditions"?
--RavanAsteris (talk) 02:55, 29 January 2010 (UTC)
Yes, I know I reopened a can of worms, but the way the article reads the non-JCI sections are just after-thoughts or bolt-ons.
--RavanAsteris (talk) 03:20, 29 January 2010 (UTC)
- The polytheism section doesn't contain any material about gender at all, so I'm going to be bold and remove it. --Alynna (talk) 12:18, 1 February 2010 (UTC)
- Ah, that's what else was bothering me about it - the section as written had nothing to do with the topic! Thanks for the sanity check. --RavanAsteris (talk) 03:46, 2 February 2010 (UTC)
The Shack
Hello, all. Just wanted to point out that in the (bestselling?) book, "The Shack", God appears as a woman for most of the book (despite the name "Papa"). Shall I add that to the "Pop Culture" section? Or is a novel not considered Pop Culture? Bpenguin17 (talk) 22:32, 28 March 2010 (UTC)
- Excellent work of fiction for sure which was quite poplar and was also made in to a movie . . . I would answer your 2010 question as yes, it should go in to Pop Culture . . . just a note on the author's view that God is a black woman . . . Jesus depicted as a country type hick, no disrespect, and the Holy Spirit as a woman . . . i loved it . . . when I read God's word, the Bible, when i look at the Greek and the Hebrew and the Aramaic i too see God (Father Son Holy Spirit) a lot differently given studying the languages . . . CharleneHios (talk) 19:22, 17 November 2023 (UTC)
Orphaned references in Gender of God
I check pages listed in Category:Pages with incorrect ref formatting to try to fix reference errors. One of the things I do is look for content for orphaned references in wikilinked articles. I have found content for some of Gender of God's orphans, the problem is that I found more than one version. I can't determine which (if any) is correct for this article, so I am asking for a sentient editor to look it over and copy the correct ref content into this article.
Reference named "britannica":
- From Supreme Being: Britannica 1992 harvnb error: no target: CITEREFBritannica1992 (help)
- From God in the Bahá'í Faith: "The Bahá'í Faith". Britannica Book of the Year. Chicago: Encyclopaedia Britannica. 1988. ISBN 0852294867.
- From Manifestation of God: "The Bahá'í Faith". Britannica Book of the Year. Chicago: Encyclopaedia Britannica. 1988. ISBN 0-85229-486-7.
I apologize if any of the above are effectively identical; I am just a simple computer program, so I can't determine whether minor differences are significant or not. AnomieBOT⚡ 23:05, 28 March 2010 (UTC)
Indo European root from the American Heritage Dictionary
the AHD's indo european roots appendix states that the root for God is Gheu (ə) -. The root means: To call, invoke. I find it interesting that the other english word from this root is "giddy", as in insane or possessed. So god may be considered more of a verb than a noun, and genderless. hey, its not my research.Mercurywoodrose (talk) 03:57, 11 January 2011 (UTC)
Candidate for deletion?
Is it really necessary to have an article about the gender of an imaginary being, where gender is not a relevant concept anyway? 51kwad (talk) 12:09, 24 January 2011 (UTC)
Even if you're right about God being imaginary, WP has numerous articles about imaginary beings, including Mickey Mouse. Would you like to get rid of all of those articles? As for the relevance of concepts of gender to God, that is a topic of serious discussion among people who write about God, as well as those who worship God. Kalidasa 777 (talk) 07:20, 13 March 2011 (UTC)
Does God need a gender?
Is this topic still in discussion? God created male and female within material creation for the purpose of reproduction. Because humans are social beings sex and gender have relationship and social aspects for us. But since God is Spirit there is no need for gender. The use of He in referring to God is a condition of human language. "It" would be inappropriate. In Judaism and Christianity (O.T. and N.T.) God is sometimes called Father as an indication of a profoundly intimate and caring concern for us and our lives. God is above gender.--Margaret9mary (talk) 20:59, 4 August 2012 (UTC)
- That may be your belief. Other believers are equally adamant for theirs. Frex:
- Henkel, Mark, God is NOT Female
- Graham, Ike, As I, Myself, KNOW the Spirit, I KNOW that God is NOT "Female"
- Vaniquotes: God is not female
- It seems that if God exists, it has chosen not to resolve this dispute. So its gender, for those who care about it, shall remain an issue. ~ Robin Lionheart (talk) 21:37, 4 August 2012 (UTC)
- I certainly didn't bring up the subject of God as female--however to clarify. Many languages do not have a pronoun especially for God. So the question is--what pronoun to use? So "He" for God (both capitalized) is often used.
- For humans the pronouns used are "he" and "she." "It" is used usually for objects in English, or with pejorative intent (Latin-based languages are different). For a number of centuries references to humans used the terms "man," "men" and "mankind" with the unspoken implication that they included womenkind--their use certainly didn't exclude women. These usages involve the real limitations of human languages.
- But the use of He for God doesn't mean that God is a superhuman male. Genesis 1:27 says "God created man in His image....male and female He created them"
- Since God is Spirit, does it mean that God created us with souls? The Bible doesn't clarify the point. However Jesus, the Son of God was certainly male in his physical body.
- I don't think God is female; the Bible says "God created... male and female." (is this limited to material creation?)--Margaret9mary (talk) 00:29, 7 August 2012 (UTC)
- God is male, because, in the bible, it states that he created man 'in his own image', and this man just happened to be Adam, a male. If he created a person in his own image, and made the person male, that means the God himself is male as well, no?
- Just to clear out any confusion, God created Eve because there was no suitable partner for Adam. In other words, Eve was NOT created in God's own image. 112.165.73.185 (talk) 15:48, 20 July 2024 (UTC)
- The initial gender of Adam is debatable, in Juddaism, Adam was androgynos, while others claim the woman that was created before Eve was Lilith. Because when God created Adam, he created a man-woman or a man and a woman, depending on the translation or wording. Web-julio (talk) 18:00, 20 July 2024 (UTC)
- I certainly didn't bring up the subject of God as female--however to clarify. Many languages do not have a pronoun especially for God. So the question is--what pronoun to use? So "He" for God (both capitalized) is often used.
To give a more NPOV this is true only in monotheistic religions--and the article as it stands says this. I think what is frustrating for many women today is that men tend to assume that God is male like them, feel threatened by the idea that God is not male like a human male and shut out any spiritual insights women might have. Jesus listened to women and responded to them (See the Marriage at Cana, Mary and Martha, Mary Magdalene as the first witness to the Resurrection). It's something the early Christian church accepted at first, then soon began to abandon. Why can't men follow Jesus? (I wish I didn't have to express this POV, but men often express a purely masculine POV and eliminate any insights women can contribute.)--Margaret9mary (talk) 01:01, 7 August 2012 (UTC)
- Not all your Bible's authors favored listening to and responding to women. Frex, 1 Corinthians 14:34-35: "Let your women keep silence in the churches: for it is not permitted unto them to speak; but they are commanded to be under obedience as also saith the law. And if they will learn any thing, let them ask their husbands at home: for it is a shame for women to speak in the church." Is it any wonder why so many Christian men are male chauvinists? ~ Robin Lionheart (talk) 11:10, 27 August 2012 (UTC)
- The idea is: Misplaced Pages does not decide if God has a gender. Misplaced Pages simply makes an inventory of the notable opinions thereupon, the most notable and widespread being that God is male (whatever male could mean for God/a spirit). We don't take sides in this matter, all such notable opinions are worthy of being mentioned. Tgeorgescu (talk) 23:00, 10 September 2012 (UTC)
Comparative Religion - Role of language
I would like to see some examples and citations to flesh out this potentially interesting point. Sadly, I'm not the person to add this information, but as an interested reader, I'd say it lacks clarity and credibility in it's current state. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Cspooner (talk • contribs) 18:04, 23 April 2011 (UTC)
carm.org
This website aims to show that the Catholic Church and the Islam are heresies. Therefore it is not a reliable source anyway one would look at it. It is a highly polemic source instead of being academically descriptive. I have reverted edits based upon carm.org propaganda. Tgeorgescu (talk) 22:39, 10 July 2013 (UTC)
- In a historical, anthropological and sociological sense Christian are the persons/churches who define themselves as Christian. Tgeorgescu (talk) 22:43, 10 July 2013 (UTC)
Genesis 1:26-27:
In the article, in the section, "In the Hebrew and Christian Bible" (http://en.wikipedia.org/Gender_of_God#In_the_Hebrew_and_Christian_Bible), the claim is made that Elohim was male and female, and they made man in their image.
On the contrary, nowhere in Genesis is a female identity assigned to YHWH the Father, or to Ha Mashiach the son. In addition, if there was any doubt about the gender of the son, (because we can easily confirm the gender of the Father), we can check John 1:1-4:
"In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with YHWH, and the Word was Elohim. The same was in the beginning with YHWH." This shows that this "Word" (the second entity in Elohim, also known as the Messiah) was the same individual who was conversing with the Father in Genesis 1:26-27, since it says clearly that "The same was in the beginning with YHWH".
And what gender was this "Word", that was with the Father during the creation? We can continue reading at John 1:3-4: "All things were made by HIM, and without HIM was not anything made that was made. In HIM was life, and the life was the light of all men."
I have taken the liberty to remove the false statement that Genesis 1:26-27 speak of a female Messiah who was with the Father. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 190.59.15.18 (talk) 18:27, 1 September 2014 (UTC)
- That is original research based upon primary sources, does not beat verifiable information from reliable sources. Tgeorgescu (talk) 18:41, 1 September 2014 (UTC)
- It is not "original research". It is quoting directly from the Bible itself. All other research is "original research", based on the Bible. Quoting from the Scripture is not "research"; it is citation. Saying that citing the Bible is "original research" is the same as saying that citing the constitution is "original research". Calling a secondary article "verifiable information" that has more credibility than the Bible itself is the same as saying that a Law student's thesis is more "verifiable information" than the constitution itself. That is flawed logic. Nomnompuffs (talk) 19:36, 1 September 2014 (UTC)
- What I just told you is well-established Misplaced Pages practice. We don't perform original research upon the Bible, Koran, Vedas, etc., but instead we trust scholars to perform this analysis for us. Coogan is a top of the food chain Bible scholar. See also WP:RNPOV. Tgeorgescu (talk) 19:55, 1 September 2014 (UTC)
- Torah isn't a reliable source. Tgeorgescu (talk) 20:00, 1 September 2014 (UTC)
- Re: Your second revert: I noticed that after I replied, you weaseled in another revert, even though there is a very pronounced time between my response and your revert; i.e, it looks as if you would have seen my response here on the talk page, and then chosen to sneakily revert anyway. I'd like to ask you to respect the discussion process, and the entire purpose of the "Talk page" dialogue system, and engage in due dialogue when disputing changes. I have a right to contribute to the body of knowledge, and to remove factual inaccuracies, as does every other editor of the Wiki.
- In addition, the name of the section is "In the Hebrew and Christian Bible", so the only logical and standing final authority on this particular section is the Hebrew and Christian bible. My citations are from this very text, the Hebrew and Christian Bible. I have done nothing but correct a factual misattribution which misquotes the Hebrew and Christian Bible.
- Please show where or how my edit is not consistent with the Hebrew and Christian Bible, or else please refrain from further vandalization and opinionated reverts. Torah is a reliable source when the very section being edited is specifically describing the contents of the Torah section of the Hebrew and Christian Bible. Nomnompuffs (talk) 20:03, 1 September 2014 (UTC)
- No, Torah isn't a reliable source for anything on Misplaced Pages. You may want to read WP:SOURCES and WP:PRIMARY. Then read WP:RNPOV. Tgeorgescu (talk) 20:05, 1 September 2014 (UTC)
- See also Template:Religious text primary which acknowledges this. Tgeorgescu (talk) 20:09, 1 September 2014 (UTC)
- Translating the Bible is a highly contentious process. Interpreting the Bible is a highly contentious process. That's why Misplaced Pages only trusts scholars to render the viewpoints of the Bible, and does not allow for original research based upon the Bible. Tgeorgescu (talk) 20:12, 1 September 2014 (UTC)
- The section in question is asking, "What does the Hebrew and Christian Bible have to say on the Gender of God". I have not interpreted anything. I cited the source. The view follows naturally. I did not need to interpret anything. It flowed naturally from the letter of the text.
- Again, since the section being edited is a section on the view of "God" in the Hebrew and Christian Bible, and the originally disputed quotation is from Genesis 1:26-27, which is a Torah verse, the Torah is clearly the only final authority on anything written in this section. As a corollary of this, I ask you to prove that, from the Hebrew and Christian Bibles, the "Elohim" spoken of in Genesis 1:26-27 had a Female component.
- The burden of proof now lies with you. I have already proven, from the Hebrew and Christian Bible that it does not say this. In order for you to argue the opposite and perform any further reverts, it is left to you to prove, from the Hebrew and Christian Bible, that is does indeed say that there is a female component to Elohim the Creator, described in Genesis 1:26-27. I have again taken the liberty to revert your reversion.
- Please stop vandalizing the article, and respect the due process of burden of evidence. I have already, from the final authority on the section, given evidence.
- The only possible source of evidence for an analysis of the Hebrew and Christian Bible is the Hebrew and Christian Bible. This is basic logic. The section is asking, "What does the Hebrew and Christian Bible say?". Nomnompuffs (talk) 20:16, 1 September 2014 (UTC)
- You either play by the Misplaced Pages rules or leave. The choice is yours. The burden of proof has been satisfied according to WP:VER through citing a reliable source. The Torah isn't an authority upon the Torah. You are not a reliable source and neither is Torah. Tgeorgescu (talk) 20:21, 1 September 2014 (UTC)
- I am now very confident that the next step you will take is to ban me from further edits, so before you do this, I will take the liberty to point out the insanity in the reasoning that you are using to justify your reverts:
- You just said, in your own words, and I quote: "The Torah isn't an authority upon the Torah.".
- Let the record bear that this person who is acting in the name and the authority of Misplaced Pages is being headstrong, and denying the very basic logical premise that the contents of a book written as they appear, are the final authority on the content of that book. It follows naturally that a copy of Macbeth is the final authority on what is written in the book, Macbeth.
- It also follows then, that the contents of the book, the Bible, are the final authority on the contents of the Bible. I am again, about to take the liberty to revert your revert, if you have done it again, since again, the burden of proof remains with you, as I have already provided, from the final authority, evidence to support my original change.
- I will also again, for the record, ask that you respect and follow the due process of burden of proof and provide proof for a female component of "Elohim", as described in Genesis 1:26-27, which is the very text that is disputed by this entire discussion. Nomnompuffs (talk) 20:31, 1 September 2014 (UTC)
- Torah isn't an academic treatise about the Torah. In respect to analyzing the Torah, Misplaced Pages only trusts scholars, who publish peer-reviewed research and books edited by academic publishing houses (scientific/scholarly publishers). Tgeorgescu (talk) 20:40, 1 September 2014 (UTC)
- That is flawed logic, irrational and insanity.
- The situation is this: the original content of the article before I came here were inconsistent with the text of the Bible. I corrected this, and gave relevant citations. At this point, regardless of how you look at it, you have no right to intervene as a moderating influence. Your closest right to intervene is in the capacity of an independent editor, because I have not broken protocol or caused discord. I have disputed the content of the article, and provided relevant citations, as any editor should.
- Your intervention in the capacity of a Moderator is an abuse of privileges. At most you should be presenting proof of a Female component in the Genesis account, as any other editor is obliged to do. I reject your current actions in the capacity of a moderator in this matter, on the basis of your flawed logic, your inability to prove that the Hebrew and Christian Bible describes a female component to Elohim, and your disrespect, and high-handed abuse of the due process of dispute.
- Additionally, calling your logic "insanity" is not calling you "insane", and there is a difference between the two. The former is an attack on your epistemology. The latter is an attack on your person. You seem to be very intent on building a case to use to silence and censor me on this matter, by finding an excuse to ban me. I will again revert any revert you have made, pending proof from you, or anyone else that there is a Female component to Elohim, as described in the Hebrew and Christian Bible. Nomnompuffs (talk) 20:56, 1 September 2014 (UTC)
Your words, images and ideas are not suppressed, simply not being promulgated on the website of a private charity. You are free to post your words, images and ideas on your own website, blog, newspaper, podcast, tshirt, bumper sticker or other form of free speech. There is a handy essay here, WP:Alternative outlets. Perhaps your website will be of such quality that millions will turn to it for information. There are quite a few places to start a blog free of charge....
— MrBill3 (talk) 01:59, 31 August 2014 (UTC)
Quoted by Tgeorgescu (talk) 21:32, 1 September 2014 (UTC)
- I have listed this discussion on the Active Disagreements, awaiting a 3rd opinion. Let the record show that two moderators, Jim1138 and C.Fred have reverted changes without even appearing once on the talk page, and have therefore violated due process of discussion. Nomnompuffs (talk) 21:34, 1 September 2014 (UTC)
- Don't push your luck. By Misplaced Pages rules, this isn't a disagreement, it is reverting vandalism. You are not entitled to remove sourced text just because you do not like it and prefer to think that the Torah would support you. Tgeorgescu (talk) 21:40, 1 September 2014 (UTC)
- And you did not provide any evidence, as you have falsely claimed there, you are just pontificating about what the Bible is supposed to mean. Tgeorgescu (talk) 21:47, 1 September 2014 (UTC)
- My revert was strictly procedural: I felt the better option, as an administrator, was to revert Nomnompuffs' violation of WP:3RR rather than block him for the violation. —C.Fred (talk) 21:51, 1 September 2014 (UTC)
- I am directly quoting you now; you just said, "Don't push your luck". Are you saying that it is "luck", or a privilege that you have granted me, to edit the public domain Encyclopedia, known as Misplaced Pages? How am I "lucky" to be engaging in this dispute? And how is it "pushing my luck" to list my disagreement on the Disagreement page? Is it that you see me as a lesser contributor because I have a view that seems to be opposed to yours?
- In that case, where view clashes with view, we must let the authoritative source be the final arbiter. Which is precisely what I have done. I am not acting on luck; I have respected the rules of scholarly debate, and provided citations from the final source.
- There is no luck involved here. If you ban me without due discussion and without carrying your burden of proof which you still have not done, it is not that I have been vanquished by a "higher being" who has poured out retribution upon me for daring to oppose its illogic. It is that a Misplaced Pages Moderator has disrespected protocol and the due process of dispute, and denigrated the dignity of Misplaced Pages's open platform for credible contribution to the body of knowledge through examination of authoritative souces.
- Your condescension and feelings of entitlement and high-handedness are showing. Nomnompuffs (talk) 21:54, 1 September 2014 (UTC)
- @Nomnompuffs: Part of "protocol and the due process of dispute" is the three revert rule, which you have broken. If we were to enforce that strictly, you would already be temporarily blocked. That aside, I suggest you focus here on discussion of reliable sources surrounding your desired edit, paying particular not of Misplaced Pages guidelines' preference for secondary sources over primary. —C.Fred (talk) 21:57, 1 September 2014 (UTC)
- For the record, I am new to contributing to Misplaced Pages, which is why you can clearly see at the very beginning of this dispute (and in the History Log for the article) that my contribution was done without a registered account. That is not an excuse or justification for me having broken the "3 Revert Rule", but it does help to remove the indirect accusation leveled at me, that I have not respected protocol. I was not aware that there was a "3 Revert Rule". In every other respect in as much as there exist basic rules for scholarly debate, I have been respectful of those common-knowledge rules. Nomnompuffs (talk) 22:07, 1 September 2014 (UTC)
- @Nomnompuffs: The first edit on the top of your talk page is a warning about your edit warring. Jim1138 (talk) 22:10, 1 September 2014 (UTC)
- For the record, I am new to contributing to Misplaced Pages, which is why you can clearly see at the very beginning of this dispute (and in the History Log for the article) that my contribution was done without a registered account. That is not an excuse or justification for me having broken the "3 Revert Rule", but it does help to remove the indirect accusation leveled at me, that I have not respected protocol. I was not aware that there was a "3 Revert Rule". In every other respect in as much as there exist basic rules for scholarly debate, I have been respectful of those common-knowledge rules. Nomnompuffs (talk) 22:07, 1 September 2014 (UTC)
- Nomnompuffs, if you are a newbie, you can be excused for not knowing the rules. But not acknowledging the rules after you have been repeatedly warned of breaking them is not wisdom. As I told you, your choice is to abide by the rules and become a productive editor or break them and be blocked. If we compare a reference based upon Coogan's work with your pontification about the Bible, it is comparing evidence with a mere whim. All editors have opinions and philosophers think that opinion is the lowest form of knowledge; that's why Misplaced Pages only renders reliable sources. Tgeorgescu (talk) 22:17, 1 September 2014 (UTC)
- As I have already said: I was not attempting to excuse or justify the infraction. I was simply unaware. It is a statement not for vindication, but for disambiguation of motive. Your statement above here doesn't conflict with that. But I am sure that any reader who examines the statement will be rational enough to realize the redundancy of your statement and draw the same conclusion. Nomnompuffs (talk) 22:24, 1 September 2014 (UTC)
- It remains a mystery to me how could you have remained unaware of the rules while the warning messages were delivered in real time. Tgeorgescu (talk) 22:30, 1 September 2014 (UTC)
3O
Hi, I hope to be of some assistance in resolving the issue flagged on the 3O page. I have very limited familiarity with biblical scholarship, so I hope I can bring a relatively unbiased voice to the discussion. As I understand it, the question is whether there is a female component implied/embedded in the word "Elohim". Is that correct? If so, are there any WP:RS's which indicate this to be the case? Cheers, Blippy (talk) 05:10, 2 September 2014 (UTC)
- Well, there is a book by Michael Coogan, which is properly cited in the footnotes. Besides, if we are to pontificate about the Bible (see above), it intuitively makes sense: the image of God is male and female, the likeness of God is male and female, therefore God (or Elohim) is/are male and female (Elohim is a plural). Tgeorgescu (talk) 15:40, 2 September 2014 (UTC)
- In order to repeat myself, this wasn't a conflict between two scholarly views, presented by different reliable sources. It simply was removal of sourced information because the editor has his/her own interpretation of the Torah and therefore does not like what the cited reliable source said (source written by a world-class authority on the Hebrew Bible). So it is basically a conflict between verifiable information and original research, and the user got blocked for not ceasing reverting. No editor is allowed to delete sourced information simply because he/she does not like it. Chaos would ensue if we would allow that to happen. So, it was a conflict between vandalism and reverting vandalism, regardless of how noble the reasons for vandalism were. Tgeorgescu (talk) 15:59, 2 September 2014 (UTC)
- So, the editor has abused the third opinion process. This was a conflict between something (verifiable information) and nothing (original research). A third opinion could only exist between something and something, not between something and nothing. Tgeorgescu (talk) 16:14, 2 September 2014 (UTC)
- Thanks for that Tgeorgescu, I guess you answered my question ;-) So there are WP:RS's which the article cited. Is that your understanding Nomnompuffs? Do you also have WP:RS's for the edit/s you wished to make? Cheers, Blippy (talk) 01:01, 3 September 2014 (UTC)
- I cannot answer instead him/her, but Elaine Pagels states that the same theological opinion as Coogan's is part of the Judeo-Christian tradition (to put it bluntly, Gnostics were Christians). Tgeorgescu (talk) 20:47, 3 September 2014 (UTC)
- So I presume that if there are sources stating that Elohim is both male & female - it is likely they are responding to other sources which say this is not the case? Do any WP:RS's along those lines exist? Cheers, Blippy (talk) 23:46, 3 September 2014 (UTC)
- Pagels clearly states that God is mostly seen as male in the Judeo-Christian tradition (and that is what our Misplaced Pages article states, as abiding by WP:DUE), she also states that there are exceptions from this rule, one being an interpretation of Gen. 1:26-27. She is non-judgmental about this interpretation, she reports it as a fact about a notable theological opinion. Considering her whole article, she agrees with the idea that God was sometimes seen as female. Tgeorgescu (talk) 06:52, 4 September 2014 (UTC)
- If there are sources which state that the image and likeness of God is male but not female, I frankly don't know, but interpreting the Bible literally this would be a bizarre position (even more bizarre that God is both male and female, since the later does not contradict the letter of the Bible). Tgeorgescu (talk) 07:05, 4 September 2014 (UTC)
- So I understand that God being male and female is offending some religious sensibilities, but we are not censored for their protection. The really offensive stance would be that the image and likeness of God is male but not female, since it would offend both religious sensibilities and human reason in general (which can examine what is written in the Bible regardless of the religious persuasion of the reader). Tgeorgescu (talk) 07:20, 4 September 2014 (UTC)
- Thanks again Tgeorgescu. I guess I was just sounding out whether Nomnompuff's edit was indicative of a broader dispute which might warrant inclusion or explanation - as opposed to what happened (i.e. an unsourced WP:OR edit). Anyway, Nomnompuff doesn't seem particularly active on this talk page at the moment, so I'm happy to wait a bit longer to see if they want to chat/clarify things further, otherwise it looks reasonably straight forward from my perspective. Cheers, Blippy (talk) 07:24, 4 September 2014 (UTC)
- On one hand Coogan's view smacks of propaganda for liberal Christianity (as fundamentalists see mainstream Biblical scholarship as a Satanic plot for propagating liberal Christianity); on the other hand its opposite stance cuts against the grain of the Bible. Tgeorgescu (talk) 07:35, 4 September 2014 (UTC)
Ah - I just saw that Nomnompuffs has had a ban imposed, so that probably explains the lack of response. I'll keep an eye out over the next few days. Cheers, Blippy (talk) 07:37, 4 September 2014 (UTC)
- Let's sort this out: the image and likeness of the Elohim are male and female. Who are then the Elohim? Yahweh (definitely male) and Asherah (definitely female). You see, the Ancient Hebrews worshiped a god and a goddess (among a plurality of other gods whose existence they admitted), only later polytheism evolved into monolatry and then into monotheism. Tgeorgescu (talk) 21:35, 18 July 2019 (UTC)
Full disclosure
There was a sharp break between ancient Israelite religion and the Judaism of the Second Temple. Pre-exilic Israel was polytheistic; Asherah was probably worshiped as Yahweh's consort, within his temples in Jerusalem, Bethel, and Samaria, and a goddess called the Queen of Heaven, probably a fusion of Astarte and the Mesopotamian goddess Ishtar, was also worshiped. Baal and Yahweh coexisted in the early period, but were considered irreconcilable after the 9th century. The worship of Yahweh alone, the concern of a small party in the monarchic period, only gained ascendancy in the exilic and early post-exilic period, and it was only then that the very existence of other gods was denied.
Copy/paste from Second Temple Judaism. Tgeorgescu (talk) 00:08, 19 July 2019 (UTC)
- @Tgeorgescu: I think there's a problem here. According to our article:
Genesis 1:26-27 says that the elohim were male and female, and humans were made in their image.
- But Genesis 1:26-27 doesn't "say" that God/elohim were male and female. At most this is an inference -- and a questionable one at best.
- What Gen 1:27 actually says is "God/elohim created (singular) the human in his (masculine singlular) image; in the image of God/elohim he created (singular) him; male and female he created (singular) them".
- Gen 1:26 is analysed in our article Elohim.
- It's an interesting conjecture that Gen 1:26 may contain an echo of an earlier wider pantheon, but by no means a necessary one, and, I would submit, not a consensus view. Jheald (talk) 15:27, 19 July 2019 (UTC)
- I agree, Genesis 1 does not "say" elohim were male and female (or that elohim is plural for that matter, the plural form is clearly used throughout the Hebrew Bible to refer to the one singular God); nor is Herzog's view that Yahweh and Asherah were the "most worshiped" gods a consensus view. I have removed the paragraph as not reflective of consensus, while discussion is under way here. Melcous (talk) 16:30, 19 July 2019 (UTC)
- Well, both Elaine Pagels and Michael Coogan agree there is something masculine and feminine about God in Gen 1:26. If it is not the consensus view, it could be attributed to them. Also, Gesenius is a 19th century scholar, while Pagels, Coogan and Herzog reached into the 21st century. Herzog does not deny that other gods were worshiped, but most germane were Yahweh and Asherah, perhaps not "most worshiped". Also, the view that the Hebrew Bible has conserved remnants of polytheistic myths is by no means WP:FRINGE. There is an edx.org course from Bar Ilan University which makes that clear. Initially, Elohim meant El (god) and his children (gods). Later, Yahweh had cannibalized El and Baal, but still had Asherah as his wife. Tgeorgescu (talk) 17:53, 19 July 2019 (UTC)
It seems almost certain that the God of the Jews evolved gradually from the Canaanite El, who was in all likelihood the "God of Abraham"... If El was the high God of Abraham—Elohim, the prototype of Yahveh—Asherah was his wife, and there are archaeological indications that she was perceived as such before she was in effect "divorced" in the context of emerging Judaism of the 7th century BCE. (See 2 Kings 23:15.)
- Copy/paste from El (deity). So, arguing that a 19th century source trumps multiple WP:RS from the 21st century is quite a weak argument, according to WP:RULES. What I would like to see are multiple WP:MAINSTREAM Bible scholarship sources from the 21st century which deny Coogan's and Pagel's view. Of course, evangelical scholars will never agree with any theologically heterodox view, so I will discard such sources. If all they do is rubber-stamping biblical inerrancy, I don't think highly of such scholars and generally speaking they aren't mainstream, with the exception from . In their view, whatever Ivy Plus teach about the Bible is from the Devil. Evangelical scholars would say that Jews were (with certain partial lapses) monotheists since Abraham. Which, by our book, is a WP:FRINGE view.
- So, there were more gods that Yahweh and Asherah? Fine, I have no problem with that. Tgeorgescu (talk) 21:02, 19 July 2019 (UTC)
- I would have thought the most relevant thing for this article is the plain meaning of Gen 1:27 -- that women as well as men were created b'tselem elohim, in the image of God; so (according to the text) the characteristics of all humanity are reflections of God.
- It seems disingenuous to me to bracket Pagels together with Coogan in this discussion. Their theses are quite different. Pagels explores gnostic ideas of God "as a dyadic being, who consists of both masculine and feminine elements" -- a single entity, with aspects of maleness and aspects of femaleness. This is quite a contrast to Coogan's proposal of a specific god and goddess couple.
- A second question is what may be understood by the "image" of God. You seem determined to read it in physical terms. This is naive. After all, this is a text that talks of "the breath of God" moving over the face of the waters. The JPS Commentary on Genesis (Sarna, 1989) has an almost page-long discussion noting that the image/likeness language is a standard formula found in texts across Mesopotamia, Assyria, and Egypt where monarchs are described as being "the image" or "the likeness" of a god -- even gods of non-human form. It asserts a dominance and a mastery, a setting up above over the rest of creation, feeding straight into the next verse. "While he is not divine, his very existence bears withness to the activity of God in the world. This awareness inevitably entails an awesome responsibility and imposes a code of living that conforms with the consciousness of that fact." The difference in Genesis is that it is mankind that is being described as being the image of God, rather than a monarch.
- Similarly in the commentary by Plaut (2005) the words emphasise "the Torah's abiding wonder over our special status in Creation, over our unique intellectual capacity, which bears the imprint of the Creator. This likeness also describes our moral potential. Our nature is radically different from God's, but we are capable of approaching God's actions: divine love, divine mercy, divine justice. Our likeness to the Divine has a third and most important meaning. It stresses the essential holiness, and, by implication, the dignity of all humanity, without distinction."
- It's also worth noting that the early chapters of Genesis, and Genesis 1 in particular, are often now argued to be late compositions, dating specifically from the Exilic period -- a period in which the Israelite conception of God had become much more universalist, less local; and more abstract, less corporeal. This would mitigate against Cooper's thesis of a strong Canaanite inheritance in the text.
- Finally I think we misrepresent Cooper in the previously current text. He doesn't say that "Genesis 1:26-27 says that the elohim were male and female", rather he says that he is presenting this as an alternative interpretation, at variance with the traditional translation. I don't have a problem with us presenting this as Cooper's suggestion, together if you like with his further suggestion that the model could "more likely" then be "Yahweh and his goddess companion", rather the whole pantheon. But it should not be presented as a consensus fact; indeed, per WP:DUE, it should not be given more prominence than it has been received with in secondary and tertiary overviews. Jheald (talk) 22:31, 19 July 2019 (UTC)
- Ok, I have performed the change. Coogan does say that Asherah could mean (i) Yahweh's wife or (ii) Yahweh's ritual pole, but that all these available mainstream interpretations are equally heretical to the theological orthodoxy. Tgeorgescu (talk) 02:54, 20 July 2019 (UTC)
- I still think the "hint" is WP:UNDUE - the section is titled 'In the Hebrew and Christian Bible'. Why does this belong in this article and this section, which is not about the history of religion? Melcous (talk) 08:04, 20 July 2019 (UTC)
- Why do you think that God=god+goddess wouldn't be germane to this article? Tgeorgescu (talk) 08:32, 22 July 2019 (UTC)
- I didn't make any comment about what I do and don't think is germane to the article as a whole. The section under discussion is about the Hebrew and Christian Bible (text), and the current inclusion is one scholar's view on what his interpretation of a word in that text "hints" at about the practice of religion in a particular era. That seems like a stretch to include in this particular section, whether or not it could or should be included anywhere else. Melcous (talk) 02:30, 23 July 2019 (UTC)
- Would you suggest another section? Tgeorgescu (talk) 20:23, 24 July 2019 (UTC)
- I didn't make any comment about what I do and don't think is germane to the article as a whole. The section under discussion is about the Hebrew and Christian Bible (text), and the current inclusion is one scholar's view on what his interpretation of a word in that text "hints" at about the practice of religion in a particular era. That seems like a stretch to include in this particular section, whether or not it could or should be included anywhere else. Melcous (talk) 02:30, 23 July 2019 (UTC)
- Why do you think that God=god+goddess wouldn't be germane to this article? Tgeorgescu (talk) 08:32, 22 July 2019 (UTC)
- I still think the "hint" is WP:UNDUE - the section is titled 'In the Hebrew and Christian Bible'. Why does this belong in this article and this section, which is not about the history of religion? Melcous (talk) 08:04, 20 July 2019 (UTC)
- Ok, I have performed the change. Coogan does say that Asherah could mean (i) Yahweh's wife or (ii) Yahweh's ritual pole, but that all these available mainstream interpretations are equally heretical to the theological orthodoxy. Tgeorgescu (talk) 02:54, 20 July 2019 (UTC)
References
References
- Moore & Kelle 2011, p. 449. sfn error: no target: CITEREFMooreKelle2011 (help)
- ^ Albertz 1994a, p. 61. sfn error: no target: CITEREFAlbertz1994a (help)
- Ackerman 2003, p. 395. sfn error: no target: CITEREFAckerman2003 (help)
- Smith 2002, p. 47. sfn error: no target: CITEREFSmith2002 (help)
- Betz 2000, p. 917. sfn error: no target: CITEREFBetz2000 (help)
- Leeming, David (2005). The Oxford Companion to World Mythology. New York: Oxford University Press. p. 118. ISBN 978-0-19-515669-0. LCCN 2005014216. OCLC 60492027.
Gender of God or gods
I made an edit here for the lead to begin:
- The gender of God, or of gods, can be viewed as a literal or as an allegorical aspect of a deity or of deities.
This was on the basis that the lead continues:
- In polytheistic religions, the gods are more likely to have literal sexual genders which would enable them to interact with each other, and even with humans, in a sexual way.
And that a whole section is dedicated to: Gender_of_God#Hinduism within which there are many gods.
The edit was reverted by Jheald on the claim that "this article is specifically about monotheistic conceptions of God" which is not the case in regard to Hinduism. Is there a route to clarification?
GregKaye 13:06, 26 August 2015 (UTC)
in Islam - Allah Gender
Dear Editors this part is totally incorrect , God (Allah) is genderless and the reference to Him as He, is just the nature of Arabic, we refer to the moon as He and the sun as She, etc. the pronoun "Hiya" is not mentioned in Sura Ikhlas. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Abu aamir (talk • contribs) 10:52, 2 November 2020 (UTC)
Grammar
Gender of God is 2401:4900:3B20:C612:EA08:3DA2:8157:1657 (talk) 15:39, 23 September 2022 (UTC)
- Yes, the gender is generally referred to in the singular in the article. —C.Fred (talk) 16:36, 23 September 2022 (UTC)
Wiki Education assignment: Psychology of Gender
This article was the subject of a Wiki Education Foundation-supported course assignment, between 8 January 2024 and 28 April 2024. Further details are available on the course page. Student editor(s): Marsbell (article contribs).
— Assignment last updated by Zisha68 (talk) 02:33, 29 April 2024 (UTC)
Gender of God
About the gender of God. I was looking at something else on the internet and I came across this topic that whoever is in charge of Misplaced Pages is wrong! God is not a female he was never a mother! Deuteronomy 32:18 says of the Rock who begot you, you are unmindful and have forgotten the God who fathered you. That's what Deuteronomy 32:18 says! It does not say he is as a mother in that verse according to the words of Misplaced Pages! I have studied the Bible since 2006 and I continue to study it twice daily, every day and I have been a Christian for 18 years and I attend my church on a regular basis, but God was never a mother he is always a father, a male not a female! Just thought I clear that up for everybody! So do not mistaken God as a female or as a mother he is all three Trinities of the person within him; in other words he is God the Father, he is Jesus Christ as Son, and is the Holy Spirit all in one person! But he was never a mother or even acted as a mother! He is all male through and through! 73.177.183.196 (talk) 14:56, 27 April 2024 (UTC)
- Being a Christian and studying the Bible does not give you special editing rights. Unless you read the Bible in Koine Greek, Hebrew, Latin, Coptic, Syriac and know your Aramaic, you're not in the same league with the Bible professors we WP:CITE in this article. tgeorgescu (talk) 16:55, 27 April 2024 (UTC)
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