• Home
  • News
  • Entertainment
  • LAD Originals

U OK M8?
Free To Be
Extinct
Citizen Reef

To make sure you never miss out on your favourite NEW stories, we're happy to send you some reminders

Click 'OK' then 'Allow' to enable notifications

Not now
OK
Advert
Advert
Advert

Archbishop Of Canterbury Says God Is Gender-Neutral

Rachael Grealish

Published 
| Last updated 

Archbishop Of Canterbury Says God Is Gender-Neutral

One of the biggest religious debates has an answer - according to the Archbishop of Canterbury God is gender-neutral, even though God is often referred to as a 'he'.

Speaking at St Martin-in-the-Fields in Trafalgar Square, the reverend Justin Welby said: "All human language about God is inadequate and to some degree metaphorical.

"God is not a father in exactly the same way as a human being is a father. God is not male or female. God is not definable."

The reverend - who married Prince Harry and Meghan Markle in May - spoke of the importance of remembering 'who god is'.

Advert
Credit: PA
Credit: PA

"It is extraordinarily important as Christians that we remember that the definitive revelation of who God is was not in words, but in the word of God who we call Jesus Christ. We can't pin God down," Rev Welby said.

"God is not a father in exactly the same way as a human being is a father. God is not male or female. God is not definable. It is extraordinarily important as Christians that we remember that the definitive revelation of who God is was not in words, but in the word of God who we call Jesus Christ. We can't pin God down."

Loading…

Advert

What may come as a shock to some but this isn't a newly formed concept, in 1992 in a Catechism of the Catholic Church number 239 laid down by Pope John Paul said absolutely that "God is neither man nor woman: he is God."

Diarmaid MacCulloch, a professor of Christian history told The Times: "The reason God has been seen as male is simply the patriarchal assumptions of those societies.

Credit: PA
Credit: PA

"They reached for male terms as the people with power in that Greco-Roman world were male, so we use words like lord and king. The world is now different and we have to show that our view of God is wider than that."

Advert

Even with this statement in a YouGov poll it said 36 percent of British Christians view God as a man, but 41 percent believe God does not have a gender.

There are three percent of Brits believe God has a 'different human gender identity', while 19 percent say they're not sure at all.

Featured Image Credit: PA

Topics: religion, World News, UK News

Rachael Grealish
More like this
Advert
Advert
Advert

Chosen for YouChosen for You

Community

Man with six wives plans to have baby with each of them because he doesn't want to choose one

an hour ago

Most Read StoriesMost Read

Andrew Tate to remain in custody after bail is denied again

17 hours ago