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Rachelle Peterson's avatar

Another way to put the question is, if we're made body and spirit, in what sense are our spirits made male or female? We have biology to point to for bodily male and femaleness. The different versions of complementarity, unity, polarity posit different ways of our spirits being male or female.

Some camps think body and spirit can diverge (the transgender movement doesn't use the language of spirit, but it holds that something inside of you is your real gender, which supersedes biology). Some might say our spirits aren't sexed at all, but are ungendered beings attached to male or female bodies. Some versions of polarity and even complementarity definitely see the spirit as sexed, and then attempt to list the sex-specific traits (empathy, courage, risk-taking, etc.) that are presented as more than just the results of biology.

I think our spirits are in fact male or female, because humans are created by God as unified wholes. But I can't think of any special revelation that speaks to precisely in what sense our spirits might be male or female, hence we're mostly left to these philosophical discussions.

Scott Garbacz's avatar

I suppose it makes me deeply (maybe unfortunately) Protestant that I don't really have a strictly-bordered notion of masculinity. Like, I can point to Victor Glover or Mr. Rogers or Barak Obama or Dietrich Bonhoeffer as models of people who seem to be living well into their masculine vocations. But I can't point to one thing that every good healthy man has, that sets them apart from good healthy women.

I can point to elements of masculinity that I certainly have and embrace and model in healthy ways--and I think it's *especially* important to be open about the way we model healthy and God-honoring uses of "dangerous" masculine traits.

I think of aggression as one of those--I remember clearly when two women down the street came asking if we had any video footage of the people who had slashed their tires and poisoned their gas tank. I remember being in a quiet rage for the rest of the day--how dare someone do such unasked for evil even to my very neighbors! I don't think this is an exclusively male trait (at all!), but I do think it is a statistically male trait, and I think an important part of teaching boys to be men is teaching many of them to say, "yeah, I have a tendency to get very angry and feel protective when I see people near me being harmed, and while anger has its dangers, it also has its potential to be used for justice and kindness." But that doesn't mean that I see women asking that the folks behind "Rape Academy" be tortured to death and think they are less feminine for it! That's just, you know, being human (even if maybe not perfectly Christian). I'm also not going to say that Mr. Rogers was less masculine just because he was naturally calm! So, like, it's healthy to defend "virtues whose expression occur more commonly in men," but not as exclusively "masculine virtues." I'm very much against Chesterton here, sadly. Although not too sadly--I've always thought him the type who would rather you fight with him from time to time than servilely accept everything he said.)

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