For a set of varied reasons. One, Christianity -- here I mean the religion that developed in Europe which is termed Greco-Christianity -- is an amalgamation of many different views, speculations, theories, projections, philosophical ideas and mythological phantasies that were common in the 1st century. The religious philosophy that became Christianity coalesced around that time. It is therefore (to express it in one way) a 'confusion of ideas' and an attempt to bridge all of them by including all of them in one degree or another. I am pretty certain that none of this is of interest to you but you did ask.Harbal wrote: ↑Tue Jan 23, 2024 2:19 pmWhy do you say that?Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Tue Jan 23, 2024 12:20 pm Christianity is, in many ways, a child’s and a woman’s religion.
My impression, when I have studied the origins of Christianity, is that in one sense it could be seen as a bold, masculine set of choices. By 'masculine' I mean determined by decisiveness, by deep considered thought, by an analysis of the situation and the setting of the will to follow a given course because it is best (if not necessarily the easiest). It has seemed to me, when reviewing the early days, that to *take the Christian cure* and to submit oneself to a rigorous self-purification process, within a larger, surrounding community, could be seen as a 'masculine choice'. However, Christianity was a movement that thrived among the lower classes. And these are not *thinking people* nor the class that thinks. And later, when Christianity developed into a social and cultural form, it effected itself through seeking and demanding *submission* to it. In this sense it *sought women* who, instead perhaps of thinking things through themselves (to the degree that people then could do so), surrendered their will to a more powerful will of a group movement.
The idea of a man *surrendering himself* to this figure named Jesus is, also, an idea that I regard as suspect. It is one thing to conceive of a heroic figure (heroic in the classical sense) whom you emulate but another thing to surrender your will to that entity. It is a feminine trait to surrender to a superior will. A man does not, or should not, ask surrender of any man. I do not deny hierarchy but in a *real hierarchy*, and one in a close-knit community, it is improper that a strong man ask a weaker man to debase himself. If anything a man should realize the superiority of an idea (or some behavior) and choose to embrace it -- in his way and according to his lights.
I suppose it is because the early Christian groups were extended families that, naturally, women (and children) had to be incorporated. In a sense the religion was adapted to the family-unit. But in some sense the entity of the Church demands that all disciples, all followers, behave like women: bowing their heads, kneeling, giving signs of submission. It also should not be put to the side that one of the principal iconographies of the (early) Church (Catholicism) is that of Mary and the baby Jesus. So in that sense it is, literally, *the mother and child religion*.
The figure of Jesus Christ is in no sense a *capable man of the world*. He is not a warrior, a soldier, an organizer, nor even really a leader. I mean not in any of that sense related to *affairs of the world*. The figure of Jesus does not combine with any terrestrial, masculine role that I can think of except, naturally, a priest or possibly a teacher. And because he never had anything to do with woman -- no wife, no lover (that I am aware of) -- he is, again, outside of the real affairs of this world. He is in many senses more womanly than manly.
Naturally, I am speaking of two different *Jesuses*: one being the real historical figure, if indeed there was one, who actually lived and breathed. But the other is the Jesus of religious invention: the contrived figure, the necessary Jesus. The figure that has been created in man's imagination and over historical time. This is not a truly masculine figure (in my view).
Well, there you have a few ideas. To sum it up the Jesus figure, as such, is not very relevant as a prototype of what I myself can emulate. If you have read much or any of what I write you would know that my critical position has proceeded farther. If I had myself to visualize or invent an avataric figure (Jesus is an "avatar of God") for our present time I am not sure how I'd go about it. In a weird sense I see Nietzsche, for all his failings and foibles, as embodying manliness that I can emulate. He was, of course, a somewhat sick weakling, but he definitely seemed to be on the right track in so many ways.