The other day I found myself reflecting on three images of maleness which presented themselves on a day trip to London.
In the first I listened to a well known Christian speaker tell of his journey from a restrictive to an 'open' position on women in church leadership. He pleaded a background in single sex boarding schools and conservative evangelical Christianity, The latter had at least given him a love of the bible and a desire to share his faith with others. But it had brought with it a default position of believing that the New Testament prohibited women from teaching or leading in the church ('I permit not a woman to teach or usurp authority').
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiYSbSDyGnU4KewsS-jBpkJivo0ej-T3OE67U_Lp71bbGjt_Ed5aHDLpcWlADSu4itBMShLOtFn0F2BMGtAzY_wgIczOkONQdUAQwgHUskAzBmAajntNOM69G1iNc7vtIRpfFC4UFHXPPWj/s280/harold-camping.jpg)
Buoyed up by this vision I headed back to catch my train home and found myself sitting on a crowded commuter train with three business men of a certain age, suits and smart macs, who were reminiscing about their school days at Marlborough; the 'beaks', the Masters, the cricket and the rugby.They recalled a hapless House-master sacked for 'playing' with boys. Such a waste of a career, poor chap. I had my dog collar on. They eyed me suspiciously.
Sitting quietly behind the garrulous sixty-somethings was a young Franciscan in full brown habit, wearing open toed sandals on a cold January day. He looked steadily out of the window for the length of the journey and I took comfort from his stillness.
Three images of maleness: the egalitarian; the Old School and the man married to Christ. Perhaps it was a good reminder that despite our non-contextual hermeneutics, gendered language and Church's vexed history regarding women, God 'himself' is not a man.
(Thanks to Chris Alcock for the title of this post).
Sitting quietly behind the garrulous sixty-somethings was a young Franciscan in full brown habit, wearing open toed sandals on a cold January day. He looked steadily out of the window for the length of the journey and I took comfort from his stillness.
Three images of maleness: the egalitarian; the Old School and the man married to Christ. Perhaps it was a good reminder that despite our non-contextual hermeneutics, gendered language and Church's vexed history regarding women, God 'himself' is not a man.
(Thanks to Chris Alcock for the title of this post).
beautifully composed. Thank you Amanda (priest in London)
ReplyDelete