The nation of Israel was a patriarchal nation. It was probably better to perceive things from that aspect.
2007-02-11 00:25:49
·
answer #1
·
answered by Tori M 4
·
0⤊
1⤋
God certainly does exist and is certainly genderless. The creator of all life, all matter, all existence can not have one absolute gender, but rather whatever gender this creator so happens to choose to appear as. Apparently those who wrote the bible, and/or those who interpreted the bible, saw God as a man. God is of course neither man nor woman nor child. God is God. And that is that. Call God the Father if you wish, or Allah, or Jehovah, or Buddha, or whatever you so wish to call God. A God by any other name is still just GOD. You can argue about it sideways, frontways, backways, any way you want to. But the fact is that we were all created by the same God, no matter what your particular beliefs are! Before the creation of all, there was no gender. There was only God. Gender is a creation OF God, and therefore God cannot be confined to the restraints of one or the other. God is not transsexual, or asexual. God is NOT sexual, that is to say God is not a sexual being, and therefore has no need for gender. Gender is for reproduction and procreation, and God is a creator, NOT a PROcreator.
2007-02-11 00:21:17
·
answer #2
·
answered by . 3
·
0⤊
0⤋
I think God is looked at as a male figure, especially in the Bible, but I think he's beyond our gender. Both genders were made in his image, and he is God, being God goes beyond gender. I don't think God's a women, and God isn't exactly a man, but Jesus was a man and part of God. Also, the Bible talks about the church being the bride of Christ, so the church (that is the Christian people, not the building) will work together as one body, and when we are united with Jesus when the New Jerusalem comes (the final stage of Heaven), we will be married in some since. I know that sounds wierd, but it's in Revelation, and I believe it.
2007-02-11 00:16:42
·
answer #3
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋
Because that's all we know. Here on earth, we are very limited to His world. We have no concept of eternity and God created us so we have called Him Father since the very beginning. God created Adam after Himself. Eve came later. That alone is why we call God Father. Adam was a man and was created first and was created in God's image.
2007-02-11 00:14:10
·
answer #4
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋
God is not genderless. After he created the earth he said now we will make man in our image. God is male. He is Father and is the Father of Jesus.
2007-02-11 00:50:27
·
answer #5
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
1⤋
Particularly within the New Testament, in every translation that I've ever read of the Bible, God refers to Himself as the Father. Jesus Christ is the Son, and He refers to God as His and our Father (see the Scriptures below). The Holy Spirit, or the Holy Ghost, is God as well. I do not recall God ever referring to Himself in a feminine sense, and I'm certainly not going to argue with Him over pronouns.
God bless.
2007-02-11 00:13:39
·
answer #6
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋
i'm extremely sorry I have been given here so previous due for this question! i'm particularly inspired with the eloquence with which you have controlled to summarize that which seems to have maximum of of the honest puzzled previous reason (yeah, I understand I merely used "reason" in the comparable sentence as "the honest"; I have confidence you will forgive that transgression). I continuously appreciate it while there's a reaction to something like this to the top results of: "look on the international around you and you will discover evidence of god's existence".... we are observing the international around us; that's exactly because of the fact we glance heavily at our international that we've come to doubt any team that asserts it became all "poofed" into existence by using the want of a few all efficient creature. There are completely sound medical factors to all organic phenomenon with no need to invoke fairy memories. i think of my admired quote on the problem comes from Douglas Adams: “Isn’t it sufficient to be certain that a backyard is gorgeous with no need to have confidence that there are fairies on the backside of it too?” the burden of evidence does lie with those making the declare, no longer with those denying that declare. i can purely coach gods inexistence to the comparable volume that i can coach the inexistence of Santa Claus, the Easter Bunny, or Humpty Dumpty. faith could have served a purpose at one element in our early historic previous, yet we now no longer ask your self on the source of lightning; all of us understand greater effective than to aim and appease a volcano..... faith is little greater now than a divider of the human race; a final haven for the bigoted, the delusional, and the hateful.
2016-10-01 23:11:47
·
answer #7
·
answered by mclelland 4
·
0⤊
0⤋
Not all Christa ins call God father. However it is just a paternal thing synonymous with a father being the head of a family, provider, etc. I would not place too much relevance on it. You can call god Mother if you wish. He/she will not care.
2007-02-11 00:14:02
·
answer #8
·
answered by jimmiv 4
·
0⤊
0⤋
The bible is pretty clear that God is male so Christians can't call him anything other than father.
2007-02-11 00:12:17
·
answer #9
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋
The word " Father" for god was concocted by the bible writers(who had no direct contact with Jesus during his lifetime) to appease to the Christians. (well the word Christians was also concocted by them as there is no mentioned of the word "Christian" in the bible).
2007-02-11 00:34:20
·
answer #10
·
answered by halo 3
·
0⤊
0⤋
i'm a christian and i don't think that God is genderless. a lot of people do think that "whomever" is genderless but i believe that God is Jesus father and Mary had Jesus. but that's just me. i could be wrong. we all could be.
2007-02-11 00:12:03
·
answer #11
·
answered by somebody's a mom!! 7
·
2⤊
1⤋