This is a question I’ve been thinking about a lot lately. And it’s a good one, especially when we see so many references to G♡d as “Father” or “He” in the Bible. If G♡d is called “Father,” does that mean G♡d is male?
The short answer is: no. But let me explain why.
Masculine Language doesn’t mean G♡d is a Man
In the Bible, G♡d is often described using male words and images. G♡d is called Father, King, Shepherd, and even Warrior. The Greek word theos, which means “God,” is also grammatically masculine.
But that doesn’t mean G♡d is a man. These words come from a time and place where men had more power in society. So, it made sense for people in ancient Israel to describe G♡d using the strongest and most respected roles they knew, and those roles happened to be male ones.
Still, even back then, people didn’t think of G♡d as a man with a body or with male sexuality. G♡d wasn’t thought of as a human being. G♡d is Spirit – not male or female. Things like gender and sex are part of the world G♡d made, not part of G♡d’s own nature.
G♡d is also described like a Mother
Even though the Bible mostly uses male images for G♡d, it also includes some beautiful pictures of G♡d that sound a lot more like a mother:
- In Deuteronomy 32:18, G♡d is described as the one who gave birth to Israel.
- In Isaiah 66, G♡d is like a woman in labour and a mother comforting her child.
- In Exodus 16:4, G♡d feeds and provides like a mother cooking bread for her family.
So even though male language is more common, the Bible also uses female imagery to help people understand who G♡d is. G♡d is strong and protective like a father, but also gentle and nurturing like a mother.
G♡d is beyond Gender
Here’s something that helps me: G♡d made humans in G♡d’s image – male and female. That means both men and women reflect something of who G♡d is. But G♡d is not limited to either one.
When the Bible says G♡d is “Father,” it’s not talking about biology. It’s talking about a kind of relationship. Just like a good father provides, guides, and loves, G♡d cares for us in those ways too. But G♡d can also be imagined as a mother who holds, feeds, and comforts us when we’re scared.
A theologian named Wolfhart Pannenberg once said that even though the Bible often calls G♡d “Father,” that doesn’t mean G♡d is a man. The Bible also uses motherly images to describe the same love and care.
And another theologian, Sallie McFague, reminds us that when we call G♡d “Mother” or “Father,” we’re using metaphors, not exact facts. These are pictures that help us understand something deep and mysterious. They aren’t the whole truth, but they point us toward it.
G♡d is not a woman. G♡d is not a man. G♡d is G♡d.
So what does this mean for us?
Here’s what I’m sitting with:
- The Bible mostly uses male words for G♡d, but that’s because of the culture at the time; not because G♡d is male.
- G♡d is not a human being with a body or gender. G♡d is Spirit, and G♡d is beyond all the categories we use to describe people.
- “Father” is about love and care and relationship, not gender.
- G♡d is described both as a father and a mother, because both can show us something true about how G♡d loves.
- The words we use for G♡d are helpful, but not perfect. That’s okay. The important thing is to know that G♡d is loving, close, and always bigger than we can fully imagine.
If you’ve ever felt like the word “Father” for G♡d was hard, especially because of your own experiences, you’re not alone. It’s okay to wrestle with that. I’m still learning how to hold these metaphors gently, trusting that G♡d is bigger than any one name.
And maybe, just maybe, we can begin to see G♡d not through the limits of gender, but through the wideness of love.