
Home > Christian History & Biography > Reviews
 Christian History, July 21, 2000
How the Other Half Lived
By Elesha Coffman, associate editor of CHRISTIAN HISTORY
Early
church father Tertullian called women "the Devil's gateway
the first forsaker
of the divine law." Jerome, another early giant, wrote, "Is it not to women
that our Lord appeared after His Resurrection? Yes, and the men could then blush
for not having sought what the women had found." Obviously, Christian attitudes
toward women have been all over the map for a long time, and much recent scholarship
has taken on the task of tracking these attitudes, as well as pursuing pathways
never before explored. The resulting "new landscape" rounds out our understanding
of history, though sometimes we have to scramble over the scholars' ideological
berms to get a good view.
Christian ideas about women,
like Christian ideas about pretty much everything else, begin with Scripture.
Yet only between 5 and 8 percent of the people named in the Bible are female,
only two books (Ruth and Esther) are named for women, and, according to traditional
assessments of authorship, no portions of Scripture were written by women. But
this does not at all mean the Scriptures yield no information on the subject,
as evidenced by the breadth and heft of the recent book Women in Scripture:
A Dictionary of Named and Unnamed Women in the Hebrew Bible, the Apocryphal/Deuterocanonical
Books, and the New Testament (Houghton Mifflin; Carol Meyers, general editor).
The bulk of this book is
divided into three sections: "Named Women," "Unnamed Women," and "Female Deities
and Personifications." The first section, with 206 names, represents the most
extensive such list ever made. The second section includes close to 600 entries,
both for specific unnamed women (Wife of Noah, Woman Who Anoints Jesus) and,
predominantly, for groups of unnamed women (Israelite Wives, Women in Illicit
Sex, Wife of One's Youth). The entries in both sections are helpful for highlighting
characters who might otherwise be skipped over, for exploring the way translation
choices have influenced the way we see these women, and for explaining relevant
socio-cultural issues. For example, in the entry on Leah, we learn that she
might not have been "dull-eyed" (as rendered in the RSV, NEB, and elsewhere)
but "soft-eyed" or "cow-eyed" (possibly a positive reference to her fertility,
and a reinforcement of her name, which means "cow"). We also get an inside look
at polygamy and understand why, when Leah really wanted something, her best
bet was to team up with Rachel: "When co-wives unite in purpose, husbands must
comply."
For the most part, entries
in these two sections are light on agenda and long on explanations of ancient
marriage laws and customs, childbearing, property transferral, food provision,
and ideals of beautyconcepts that shaped the woman's world. Agenda looms larger
in entries on major figures like Eve and Mary; the author of the first suggests
that God's first human creation might have been androgynous, and the author
of the second argues that Luke's nativity narrative purposefully and maliciously
un-empowers Mary.
The third section, on deities
and personifications, is more charged as it questions why negative things like
enemy cities and wickedness are identified as female, describes how the Earth
functions as mother, and probes God's feminine side (though the author stops
short of suggesting that we call God "Mother" and also admits that "ancient
Israelites would have not understood our contemporary interest in the sex or
gender of God"). Overall, Women in Scripture greatly helps us see the
biblical era through women's eyes, though I got very tired of the persistent
hints that most Bible translators are closet misogynists.
Another recent book, Noble
Daughters: Unheralded Women in Western Christianity, 13th to 18th Centuries
(Greenwood Press), depicts a different world of womenone that seems about
as foreign and inscrutable as the biblical sphere. It wasn't hard for the author,
Marie A. Conn, to find "unheralded" women from those centuries, because most
Christian women from the time have attracted little attention (exceptions include
Catherine of Siena, Hildegaard of Bingen, and Julian of Norwich, none of which
are even listed in Conn's index). However, despite this seemingly narrow focus,
Conn still manages to assemble quite a varied group, which could have been a
positive feature had Conn not tried so hard to explain how they all "fit in."
Conn seeks to elevate four
often overlooked groups of women: thirteenth-century Belgian Beguines (women
who lived in convent-like settings outside the church's jurisdiction), Anabaptist
women martyrs (an interesting choice, I thought, for a Catholic scholar), victims
of the European witch craze, and the nuns at Port-Royal (a convent in Paris
known for its counter-Reformationist views). These women fit together, Conn
suggests, because "they envisioned a particular way of living a Christian life
and remained true to that vision in the face of daunting obstacles and opposition."
The "fit" seems loose to
me. The established church certainly opposed them all, but Conn doesn't prove
that the women burned as witches were Christians, let alone that they envisioned
a unique spirituality. Nor does she show how Anabaptist women differed significantly
from Anabaptist men. For independent spirit, unique vision, and a specifically
feminine experience, the Beguines and the nuns at Port-Royal are by far the
stronger choices. Chapters on the other two groups are more helpful for describing
broader historical contextthe Reformation as a whole and Europe's shift from
faith in magic to faith in science.
Unlike last week's featured
book, these two are not meant for historical newbies. But for those who are
already somewhat familiar with the historical landscape and have wondered, "Where
are the women?" Women in Scripture and Noble Daughters provide
some answers.
* For Christian History's
take on topics covered in these books, see issue 17: Women in the Early Church
and issue 30: Women in the Medieval Church (both available in the CH Store at
http://store.yahoo.com/cti/chrishis.html).
Elesha can be reached at
cheditor@ChristianityToday.com.
Copyright © 2000 by the author or Christianity Today International/Christian History magazine.
Click here for reprint information on Christian History.
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