Sharks and Apostles

There are sharks in the water. For the third day in a week, some New Jersey beaches have restricted access to the ocean because of sharks. As a particularly hot July trundles along, this is not really welcome news. Also yesterday, the Vatican codified revisions to its clergy sexual abuse crisis. According to an Associated Press article in the New Jersey Star-Ledger, women’s ordination groups are angry because sexual abuse and the ordination of women are classed together as crimes against the church.

Venus of Willendorf

Even before civilization began, it seems, religion and sexual dimorphism were tied together. Beginning back 35,000 years ago Paleolithic humans carved female figurines. In a hunter-gatherer society where struggle for survival was the best paying job available, the execution of such objets d’art in a brutish, hostile environment reveals religious sensitivities. Stone Age humans knew something that organized Christianity forgot within its first century: sexuality is never far from religion. The Bible itself, particularly the Christian Scriptures, emphasize that celibacy is a putative gift, not something that can be learned or forced on someone. In typical Roman fashion, however, the church quickly mandated celibacy as the norm and ruled that women were the source of evil.

Nothing could be further from the indications of both Paleolithic remains and scientific thinking. Women, long the source of spirituality, were now cast aside in an arrogant aberration of earlier practice. Largely based on the angry writings of one man, the church decided that men alone should determine the eternal fates of others. Masculine men who knew self-control and who could turn off millennia of evolutionary pressures by a sheer act of will. Centuries later, and the Vatican with its own Pontifical Academy of Sciences, the church still can’t get beyond basic reproduction and sexuality issues. I would go to the beach to try to think this one out, but there are sharks in the water.

4 thoughts on “Sharks and Apostles

  1. Henk van der Gaast

    Its very similar to one of my album presentations. Patriarchalism grew as awareness of patrialinearism grew. They component that is described as celibacy (to me) arises with politicism of the church beyond the empire..

    Femininity in service had long been abandoned by that stage.

    In a world where social fairness supports all nihilisms, it doesn’t matter and sadly (in some way) the church will disappear first.

    sadly? yes, I would despair for the end of mythology..

    I thought you said that beyond 200 CE was your limit Steve.. what gives? Its only fair to ask what you think of islams fleeting reference to asherah….

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  2. rey

    “sadly? yes, I would despair for the end of mythology..”

    Women are the ones pushing religion on men, not the other way around, so apparently they mostly want a religion that puts them “in their place”–they’re the ones in control of what religion a man is. Men put up with this abomination for them.

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