Bodies: Male and Female
The Christian faith is based on the doctrine of the Incarnation--God became a man in flesh and blood. This is necessary to death, burial, and resurrection. It is necessary for the period of the gospels. It is part of the rituals of the church--we are baptized (a bodily act, one that for Baptists involves the whole body) because He was; we commemorate the gospel in the physical act of eating at the communion table. We sing songs about the body and blood of Christ. The body we celebrate is a male body. It was the body of a stonemason (the real meaning of technon, or what we have always thought of as carpenter). It was a body that could survive beating and a 40-day fast. God came as a man, not a woman, for a lot of good reasons. It is not lost on me that the new paganhood, the occult, celebrates, or worships (maybe fears) the female body. The female body is likened to the physical earth, the planet, which births, produces, is fecund and fertile. It is receptive, passive, fertilized; i