Third, I've almost never heard the words "beauty" and "beautiful" being used on men/males. Too, the personification of beauty in all cultures seem to be women/females. For men/males, the correct adjective is handsome. — TheMadFool
Fourth, this suggests, if not implies, that the universe has a feminine character - the universe is beautiful (womanly) and not handsome (manly). — TheMadFool
is the fact that all/most works of beauty are the work of men indicate that women are aesthetically-challenged etc. — TheMadFool
Is God a male or a female? Why? — TheMadFool
When the bible was written (primarily by men I am told) the predominant pronoun would have been masculine, not because the deity is masculine but because the writers were. — Book273
gender of the divine — Book273
God knows what I said about the matter at hand; I don't remember. Hopefully it was nice — Bitter Crank
It's not the "correct" adjective, it's merely the current adjective. "Beauty" certainly can be ascribed to males in an entirely masculine way, and "handsome" can be applied to a very attractive woman. — Bitter Crank
The universe is awesome (in its formal meaning). Beautiful, sure, but not in a sexed way. It is fearsome, too. Ineffable. Manly or womanly are just too small terms to bother with. — Bitter Crank
Men may just be more visually oriented than women -- the male gaze, and all that. Camille Paglia pointed out that middle class/upper class women have long had access to arts education -- which they have made use of -- without producing a whole lot of great works. — Bitter Crank
J. B. Phillips wrote a book in 1952 by the title of "Your God is Too Small": too limited, too anthropomorphized, too domesticated. He asked believers to think bigger. — Bitter Crank
As for the "fearsome" bit, it muddies the waters - how could someone being decapitated or having faer chest crushed in a vehicular accident be beautiful? — TheMadFool
You said something important! Damn my memory! It had to do with the masculine pronoun "he" and the word for god - "father" - not implying that god is male. — TheMadFool
God is a He because he wears the pants in His household. Or, his wife "fell down a set of stairs" after her kids were born and this has been kept a secret. — Nils Loc
The kids still wonder, if God is like a man, why did he make women? Are they the less favored of the natural binary? — Nils Loc
Maybe that "he" is the English default for person. He, mankind, men — Bitter Crank
less and less inflected, so it became simplified — Bitter Crank
Anything further you might want to add? — TheMadFool
[reply="Sir2u;481215"
I think that the idea being conveyed is that God is not limited to the restrictions of a physical body and its pleasures, but if (God exists at all), is way beyond our limitations of male and female, and bodies. — Jack Cummins
Our need for gender identification is to define their role based on their physical abilities. — Rxspence
Without physical advantages or restrictions we eliminate judgement, pain, pride, etc. — Rxspence
It also makes it nearly impossible to explain what comes after the bright light. — Rxspence
although it could be asked what kind of bodies do human beings have in heaven too? — Jack Cummins
No, gender has been used to decide roles in societies, but not based on physical abilities but the needs of the society. Strong women would have been warriors and wimpy men would have been maids if only the physical abilities had been taken into account — Sir2u
Pain and pride are things that cannot be eliminated because they serve a very important part of life. — Sir2u
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