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February 9, 2010
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Home > 2009 > February (Web-only)Christianity Today, February (Web-only), 2009  |   |  
Deconstructing the Quiver
A review of Quiverfull: Inside the Christian Patriarchy Movement.



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Quiverfull: Inside the Christian Patriarchy Movement
by Kathryn Joyce
Beacon Press, March 2009
272 pp., $25.95

It's a Monday night. Two back-to-back episodes of Jon & Kate Plus 8 are on TLC. Tomorrow night the network will run Kids by the Dozen at 7 p.m., followed by four episodes of 17 Kids and Counting during its 8-10 p.m. slot, followed in turn by another round of 17 Kids from 11 to midnight. After that — if you're still awake — you can catch a few more rounds of Jon & Kate.

Looks like someone at TLC thinks big families might just equal big bucks in its current programming lineup.

Tie all that in with the media flurry about Nadya Suleman, the single mother in California who gave birth to octuplets conceived by in vitro fertilization in January, bringing her total number of children to 14, and suddenly we have — a trend? A fad? What's with all the large families? Or perhaps the real question is, what's with all of us who are watching them?

Why are we so interested in large families? Families like the Gosselins (Jon & Kate), the Duggers (17 Kids), and the Sulemans are sparking heated discussions among observers, including Christians. Outsider interest in how many children a woman has is nothing new, yet among considerations of failing Social Security and environmental concerns, this interest seems to be intensifying toward apprehension, even alarm. Women of childbearing age are used to fielding questions from family, friends, and complete strangers about their fertility: How many children do you have? How many children do you want? But these questions pale in light of the larger, more philosophical question at their base: How many children should you have?

That simple question implicates wide-ranging issues, including contraception, fertility treatments, human sexuality, gender roles, the purpose of marriage and procreation — issues that, in short, touch at the very core of our identities. Perhaps that's one of the reasons we are so fascinated by larger families: we're not just interested in what life is like for them, we're also questioning the implications for our own lives.

Kathryn Joyce addresses issues such as these in her new book, Quiverfull: Inside the Christian Patriarchy Movement. Joyce is specifically looking at the "Quiverfull" movement, whose origin is often credited to the 1985 publication of Mary Pride's The Way Home: Beyond Feminism, Back to Reality. Quiverfull adherents, along with other Christian families who eschew the name yet follow the principles, do not believe in using any form of birth control, including natural family planning, and for some, apparently, lactational amenorrhea, the suppression of ovulation that naturally results from breastfeeding. Simply put, as Joyce writes in her book, adherents believe in "babies, lots of them, for God." It's a movement that has drawn some attention as of late, including mention in a New York Times Fashion & Style article earlier this month.

In Quiverfull, Joyce turns a keen journalistic eye to the inner workings of the movement. She dedicates the first section of her book, entitled "Wives," to the concept of wifely submission, and makes the argument that it is the "antifeminist" practice of submission that paves the way for ideologies like Quiverfull to burgeon. From there, Joyce moves on to the heart of her book, "Mothers," and a discussion of the Quiverfull movement. It isn't a large movement; she writes, "The number of families who have committed themselves wholly to the Quiverfull path doesn't represent any pollster's idea of a key demographic." But their aims are nonetheless big. Quoting David Bentley Hart, an Eastern Orthodox theologian, "It would not be difficult, surely, for the devout to accomplish — in no more than a generation or two — a demographic revolution."

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 24 comments.See all comments
Rita   Posted: February 26, 2009 4:46 PM
The author's question, "How many children should we have?" must be answered on biblical grounds. I believe she fails to do that. Whatever name you want to give to it, our decision to trust God for our family size is based upon the scriptural truth that one of the purposes of marriage is procreation, or as it says in Malachi 2, that God has given a wife as a companion in covenant for the purpose of seeking a godly seed. God made the two one that the man might have a helper. He meant for us to enjoy our sexuality, but not to separate it from procreation. This author gives no scriptural support for her assertions that we should limit our family, but rather appeals to a vague understanding of "common sense." Rather than attacking Christians who have the faith to raise godly children in a corrupt world, she should be noting that the Muslims are obeying the dominion mandate much better than we are. They are the ones we should be observing for a "takeover" of our society. We should trust God.

JVK   Posted: February 25, 2009 11:09 AM
The article seems to treat as ethically equivalent 3 very different cases: 1. married couples who have babies through a series of natural conceptions and deliveries; 2. married couples who use reproductive technology to have a bunch of babies all at once; and 3. a single woman who uses that technology to have a bunch of babies all at once. In Case #1, the only ethical concerns are whether the mother is being coerced (physically or ideologically) into bearing lots of babies; whether the family has the means to support the children; and whether the couple imposes their decision as a divine mandate on all believers. In Case #2, there's a further issue of whether it's right to use a technology that risks either the lives of the babies (through "selective reduction") or the health of the mother (through carrying to term more babies than the womb was designed for). In Case #3, there's yet a further ethical problem: whether a single woman should be birthing children at all.

Sandy   Posted: February 25, 2009 9:30 AM
This article is a poor representation of the thinking of quiverful as evidenced by the person saying it's no one's business telling how many to have. The concept is to accept God's will for your family size, even if that will is ZERO children. We're quick to want God's blessing on the temporal money but think that God's blessing of children is somehow a curse despite the potential for them being eternal beings. We wouldn't tell God to give us no more money please, but we think we know better than him how many is good and right. In my experience, children don't cost near as much as society tells us, and God provides in ways we couldn't comprehend. We have 8 children, 3 are in college now. We have no debt except our home and we live comfortably yet frugally. Unlike many with 2 or 3 who say they couldn't stand being with them all the time, we enjoy all of being together immensely!! So the idea is do you trust God to help you live well with many or accept if his plan is very few?

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