@johnpauldickson@HollandGreig@jchasedavis Yes. But husbands are still men and wives are still women. And so are men, whom are married, morally required to act in this way to weaker vessels in a way which women, whom are married, are not?
@johnpauldickson@HollandGreig@jchasedavis You’re making assertions and constantly asking us to prove things. Now let’s reverse it. You prove your assertions. Why isn’t 1 Peter about men and women? You don’t agree that women are weaker vessels?
@johnpauldickson@HollandGreig@jchasedavis But you’ve been given many. You keep dodging. 1 Peter 3:7 tells husbands to be understanding because women are weaker vessels. It’s part of nature. 1 Tim 5:8 that men deny the faith if they don’t provide for their house. Nothing about women denying the faith for the same reason
@johnpauldickson@HollandGreig@jchasedavis You’ve been shown plenty. A woman is called to submit and a man is called to lay down his life in Eph 5. Therefore if the men get on the lifeboat and let the women go down they have sinned greatly. But I’m not a biblicist. This is revealed in natural law and implicit texts.
@johnpauldickson@HollandGreig@jchasedavis But it is taught in scripture as so many people have showed you. You have a presupposition that it cannot possibly be the case, and therefore you explain away each example. It would be sin to let your wife deal with a robber. An abdication of responsibility.
@johnpauldickson@HollandGreig@jchasedavis Come on man. How can you not accept that. It’s not only biblical law, but natural law. Would you expect the men to go on the lifeboats while the women and children drown on the titanic? Or do the men have a moral responsibility that is in keeping with their being men?
@HwsEleutheroi Hi James. You may not see this. I never use X. But wondering if you’d come on my YouTube channel to talk about icon veneration (my stuff is Protestant apologetics and I’ve critiqued icon veneration recently).
@TheOrthoEnsign@LizzieMarbach But the other views encapsulate Christ taking our penalty though. Just not that he was punished. They would say the penalty was death, not wrath (I’m speaking as someone who unashamedly believes psa).
@haymes_joshua Yeah I agree with you it’s a fail not to mention it at all. I’m on holiday atm, but had I been in the pulpit I would have given a short homily on the topic before the pastoral prayer and then still cracked on with my main sermon series.