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Aaron Hann's avatar

I really love what you’re doing here Anna. By enfolding Gen 3:16 into these grand redemptive movements, you show me that our attempts to fit that verse into doctrine about gender roles suffers from an impoverished imagination. I feel the same in my study of gender in the Gospel of John. Significantly, John develops these grand redemptive movements: creation / new creation (1:1-5, 20:1-18), exitus / reditus centered in the Son of Man (1:51), the union of God with humanity not on a mountain but in the missions of the Spirit and the Son (ie “in Spirit and in truth,” 4:21-24), the turning of woman toward the new Adam before his return to the Father (20:14-17), etc. Significantly, a) John cannot make these theological moves apart from both men and women, and b) women are, imo, highlighted more than men in these typological developments. This fits your description of woman as “the glory creature.” Thanks for helping me think through this, very timely post! Also, have you read The Trinitarian Theology of St Thomas Aquinas by Gilles Emery? I need to check out Tipton’s work, but Emery is a superb guide into Aquinas on the Trinity.

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The Female Seminarian's avatar

Your observation that God is dynamic was incredibly helpful. I’m amazed at the way your brain works. Do you see negative parallels in God’s conversation with Cain in Genesis 4 regarding sin and its desire to rule over him? Almost an “anti-reditus”? Or the worst kind of exitus?

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