Originally posted by UtahDan
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1. He was lazy and just grabbed a bunch of guys nearby
2. He simply didn't think it was important enough in this particular instance to set the perfect example by broadening his demographics to ensure he set the proper tone for future generations of church members
3. He had good reasons for keeping it limited to male Jews, which are not particularly clear to anyone
I'm sure you could conjure up a bunch of other potential reasons. But it appears to me that Christ was being exclusive.
It may very well be the modern church has done and said a bunch of things that Christ didn't do and say during his mortal ministry, but that has absolutely no bearing on who he ordained as his apostles -- Christ is the sole owner of that particular item.
Christ was a revolutionary that set aside the Mosaic Law, claimed he was the Son of God, established a new, higher law and took on the religious establishment. He wasn't exactly shrinking from controversy or adversity because of the things he did and said, so why didn't he go the extra step during his life to include others besides male Jews as part of his priesthood leadership?
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