Sexism Is a Superpower for Mediocre Men
How selective readings of the Bible function as a flattering horoscope — and what healthy masculinity actually looks like
There’s a certain kind of man who, upon learning he’s a Scorpio, feels a deep sense of recognition. Intense. Powerful. Built for dominance. He carries this with him. It explains the hard edges, the need for control, the way he talks over people at dinner. It isn’t a flaw — it’s cosmically ordained.
Now meet his evangelical cousin. He has discovered, through careful study of the New Testament, that God designed men to lead, to take dominion, to be strong where women are soft, aggressive where they are gentle, authoritative where they are submissive. He carries this too. It explains the hard edges, the need for control, the way he talks over people at dinner. It isn’t a flaw — it’s scripturally ordained.
The comparison has limits — and it’s worth naming them upfront. A complementarian theologian engaging ancient texts in a two-thousand-year tradition is doing something more substantive than consulting a horoscope. The question isn’t whether the texts are real. They are. The question is what happens when a reading of those texts consistently produces exactly the conclusions the reader started with — when scripture functions not as a challenge to the self but as a validation of it.




































