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Rebekka 78F
3209 posts
2/7/2006 2:58 pm

Last Read:
3/5/2006 9:29 pm

Jesus and Feminism

I thought you women might be interested in this:

Feminist perspectives: Jesus was an
advocate of feminism and women's rights.

by Marilyn Adamson

Feminist perspectives have often criticized various religions for their treatment of women. They are absolutely right. Illustrations of religious abuse of females can be pointed out in the United States and internationally. What many feminist perspectives don't take into account is that Jesus would have been one of feminism's greatest allies.

Look at the culture in the Middle East where Jesus lived. Jewish rabbis began every temple meeting with the words, "Blessed art thou, O Lord, for thou has not made me a woman." Women were excluded from religious life and rarely taught the Torah in privacy. Yet Jesus publically included many women as his disciples, infuriating the religious leaders. He taught crowds of men and women and healed and performed miracles for women as readily as for men.

Jesus also challenged their sexist social laws. At that time there was a law allowing a husband to divorce his wife over anything, for example, dinner not being prepared on time. Imagine the insecurity and cruelty that this law brought to women. And, as you might expect, a wife could never divorce her husband. Jesus however announced that both woman and man had the right to divorce the other, but only on the grounds of adultery, and even then divorce was certainly outside of how God designed marriage to be.

Another law of their day required stoning to death any woman or man caught in adultery. Often the law was disregarded and the man had no penalty, just the woman. They wanted to know how Jesus would respond to a woman caught in adultery. So one day several men dragged a woman before Jesus, whom they had caught in bed with a man, probably with a friend of theirs. And they challenged Jesus to consent to her stoning. They knew they had Jesus in a no-win situation. If He gave her mercy, He was a wimp and an enemy of their law. If Jesus stoned her, then so much for His uniquely respectful treatment of women, and His teaching about mercy and forgiveness.

Jesus responded by saying that the person in the crowd who had never sinned should be the first one to throw a stone at her. It was probably Jesus' statement, but also His presence that affected the crowd. One by one they walked away. Jesus turned to the woman who was repentent and totally forgave her, as only God could.

Author Philip Yancey comments, "For women and other oppressed people, Jesus turned upside down the accepted wisdom of His day. According to biblical scholar Walter Wink, Jesus violated the mores of His time in every single encounter with women recorded in the four Gospels."

It makes sense that it was women who loved Him and stood at the cross of Jesus, when most of the male disciples fled for their lives. And it was women to whom Jesus first appeared after rising from the dead after His crucifixion. This is remarkable. Jesus' resurrection was proof of all of Jesus' statements in which He identified Himself as equal to God. Though women had little standing in that culture, and no religious authority as spokespersons, Jesus gave them the role of informing others of His resurrection. Why? Maybe Jesus wanted to solidify that it was for the sins of women and for men that He came to die. Maybe Jesus wanted women and men to know that He offers them complete forgiveness and can give them direction, peace, and eternal life.

[To read for yourself how Jesus interacted with women and what He said about eternal life, read "John" chapter 11 in the Bible.]

Be blessed in Jesus name.



Elizabeth


Dundeal
(William Watson)
68M
18097 posts
2/7/2006 10:08 pm

thanks for sharing sister, cheers

May the Lord bless you and keep you


dale1960 65M

2/7/2006 11:20 pm

Great post Rebekka! Some of my greatest revelations have come from women teachers! I hope many will see that there was equality of the sexes before the fall and this was restored by Jesus as well!
Blessings,
Dale


Sex4Holly
(holly )
43F

2/8/2006 5:49 pm

i LOVE this piece! thanks!

the second to last church i was at in my last town was really progressive. women could do all sorts of things...as long as that included working with kids downstairs or anything to do with food or drink.

education committee was a place i wanted to be, i want to be a teacher. i could teach non-teen kids school, but i couldn't sit on that committee. even though they knew i wanted to be a teacher, one WOMAN asked, "why did i want to sit on the committee though?"

all these things may be true about Jesus, but our culture is still patriarchal and in denial about gender equality. you'd think the church would be the most progressive place on the planet for liberating the oppressed.

no so much.


Rebekka 78F

2/9/2006 7:07 am

Thank you for your comments. I love you.

Elizabeth