One of the fascinating things about the Bible is its ability to 'change and move'. Ie. when the Spirit breathes on the words, they come alive, and a verse or passage that originally applied to one thing many years ago can suddenly apply to a contemporary situation. Ephesians 2:14-16 is one of many of such passages. It says:
"[Jesus] Himself is our peace, who has made the two one and has torn down the dividing wall of hostility by abolishing in His flesh the law of commandments and decrees. He did this to create in Himself one new man out of the two, thus making peace and reconciling both of them to God in one body through the cross, by which He extinguished their hostility."
Paul, in the context above, was talking about the invisible but middle wall of hostility between Jews and Gentiles, making it so that though they could coexist with each other, there was always a resentment and distrust brewing beneath the surface between them. However, that same passage also could rightly be applied to the invisible but middle wall of hostility between men and women.
Today, many men are scratching their heads when they interact with or observe some 'modern women' and the seemingly non-stop misandry or man-hating and feminism that comes from a lot of modern women. In college, where I learned nothing at all, unfortunately, and any time the topic comes up, men want to know how women think, and women want to know how men think. After trying to explain each side to the other in college but no one could understand what I was saying, it slowly began to dawn on me that there was 'a wall' between the sexes that prevents them from understanding each other. Furthermore, that wall makes them naturally (though latently) hostile or disagreeable toward each other.
I do see a lot of hostility between the sexes, sometimes overt hostility and other times covert or subtle. I figure that "nothing comes from nothing" and that if you resent or distrust someone who has not even wronged you, then it must come from something. I believe it began at the time of the Fall in Eden. At that time, many changes occurred one of which was this invisible but real wall of hostility that makes men and women innately and latently resentful and distrustful of each other. This thing, hiding way beneath, then is free to surface and begin causing problems in heterosexual relationships and marriages. Has anyone else noticed this?
"[Jesus] Himself is our peace, who has made the two one and has torn down the dividing wall of hostility by abolishing in His flesh the law of commandments and decrees. He did this to create in Himself one new man out of the two, thus making peace and reconciling both of them to God in one body through the cross, by which He extinguished their hostility."
Paul, in the context above, was talking about the invisible but middle wall of hostility between Jews and Gentiles, making it so that though they could coexist with each other, there was always a resentment and distrust brewing beneath the surface between them. However, that same passage also could rightly be applied to the invisible but middle wall of hostility between men and women.
Today, many men are scratching their heads when they interact with or observe some 'modern women' and the seemingly non-stop misandry or man-hating and feminism that comes from a lot of modern women. In college, where I learned nothing at all, unfortunately, and any time the topic comes up, men want to know how women think, and women want to know how men think. After trying to explain each side to the other in college but no one could understand what I was saying, it slowly began to dawn on me that there was 'a wall' between the sexes that prevents them from understanding each other. Furthermore, that wall makes them naturally (though latently) hostile or disagreeable toward each other.
I do see a lot of hostility between the sexes, sometimes overt hostility and other times covert or subtle. I figure that "nothing comes from nothing" and that if you resent or distrust someone who has not even wronged you, then it must come from something. I believe it began at the time of the Fall in Eden. At that time, many changes occurred one of which was this invisible but real wall of hostility that makes men and women innately and latently resentful and distrustful of each other. This thing, hiding way beneath, then is free to surface and begin causing problems in heterosexual relationships and marriages. Has anyone else noticed this?
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