Thank you.
Thank you for offering me the possibility to explain what I mean. I, too, agree, that the author of Ephesians might be a little shocked at this read.

I certainly agree he wouldn't
intend this. However, if you've followed me enough at this point, and throughout my time on NazNet, you'd know by now that the
intent of the author, while meaning much to me, is not in any way
necessarily authoritative. Instead, the authority of the text is derived from the canonization of that text and the reception of that text as Scripture by the Church, and the subsequent interpretation of that text by the Church.
Paul, on his own right, has zero authority. His letters are invested with authority by the Church canonizing and receiving his letters
as Scripture.
Thus, again, I agree. The author of Ephesians - whoever that is - would be a little surprised at my reading. HOwever, I think the author's own choice of imagery and metaphor subvert his own intention. This is a thoroughly postmodern hermeneutic. I am reading his text for what the words actually say, not for what he meant to say.
After all, it is the words, as they are, that are Scripture, not the words as the author intended them.
While I appreciate your input, I thoroughly disagree.
We are neither the author, nor Jewish.
Jesus and Paul both were humans, thoroughly imbeded in culture. I would not expect them to disagree, nor should we. They were people of their time. We should expect as much. For Paul and Jesus to radically disagree with the contemporary culture would raise red flags for me, and I would consider it immediately suspect.
As I've said before, the Bible
does not transcend time and culture. If it were to appear to do so, I would be immensely concerned.
I have attempted to use this caution by acknowledging that the decision is only possible because the text opens up the ground for us to make that move. Without which, we could not do so.
From there, 2,000 years is an infinity in scientific understanding. If it seems arrogant, so be it. I don't see it as such, I see it as natural. We know things they couldn't have known in their wildest dreams. Some day, 10,000 years from now, when jesus has still not returned, someone wil once again carry on the tradition of re-interpreting the law like Moses, in a new time, new place, new context, and what we knew today will look outmoded. This is the nature of knowledge. 2,000 years of learning is a looooooooong time. I expect 10,000 years to be even longer. I should expect we will ahve been wrong, and that those who come after us will know a little better.....
And so on, and so on, and so on.