Tag Archives: Patriarchy

The Gleanings Project: Jesus Feminist: An Invitation to Revisit the Bible’s View of Women

“Walking on Water” 11″ x 14″, Acrylic on Paper, DS

Bessey, Sarah. Jesus Feminist: An Invitation to Revisit the Bible’s View of Women. New York: NY, Simon & Schuster, Inc., 2013.

492 words

“Let us be women who love.” (McVicker in Bessey, xvii)

“Let us rise the questions of our time.” ( “ , xviii)

“Let’s head outside. I want us to sit around a fire pit ringed with stones and watch the moon move over the Pacific. I want us to drink good red wine . . . I want us to talk about this –– really talk about womanhood, church, the labels, and where we go from here . . . we are wounded, we are wounding.” (Bessey, 1)

“Let us discover how we can disagree beautifully.” (2)

“Let’s be done lobbying for a seat at the Table.” (3)

“I want to be outside with the misfits . . . the ones rejected by the Table . . . Aslan is on the move.” (4)

“Years ago, I practiced anger and cynicism, like a pianist practices scales, over and over.” (5)

“This night, by the bonfire, I want to wrap us up in the warmth of good stories, of strong love, of prophetic callings.” (8)

“Jesus made a feminist of me.” (11)

“It might surprise antifeminists and anti-Christians equally to know that feminism has its roots tangled up with the strong Christian women’s commitment to the temperance movement, suffragists movements, and in America and England in particular, the abolitionist movements of the nineteenth century.” (12)

“At the core, feminism simply consists of the radical notion that women are people, too.” (13)

“I’ll say that again, louder, and I’ll stand up beside our small bonfire and shout it out loud. I’ll scare the starfish and the powerful alike: patriarchy is not God’s dream for humanity. It never was, it never will be.” (14)

“[Jesus] love us. On our own terms. He treats us as equals to the men around him; he listens; he does not belittle; he honors us; he teaches us; he includes us ­–– calls us all beloved.” (17)

“Jesus subverted the social norms dictating how a rabbi spoke to women.” (18)

“When Mary of Bethany sat at his feet, she was in the posture of a rabbinical student.” (19)

“The lack of women among the twelve disciples isn’t prescriptive or a precedent for exclusion of women and more than the choice of twelve Jewish men excludes Gentile men from leadership.” (22)

“Jesus would teach or quote a portion of the Law and then move us forward from our current places toward God’s original intent.” (27)

“God’s dream for humanity is clearly not slavery.” (28)

“All this battling to eradicate human trafficking happens despite the fact that there is actually no specific verse in Scripture that prohibits the buying and selling of human beings . . .  because we understand God’s creative purpose for humanity.” (29)

“In addition to slavery, the Church has, in general, dismissed polygamy, the buying and selling of daughters, stonings . . .  and many other culturally accepted practices. God is still moving, still active, in our world today.” (30)

Meandering Through the Writings of Others: A Good House

“The Bridge from the Gallery” DS

I paint and collage from life! In this unexpected extended time of pandemic upheaval, thoughts of the Dada Movement in art history have informed a series of responses to novels read during lockdown, isolation, truncation of social living. It is becoming a period of incubation and formation towards an unknown ahead; a navigating and pivoting that edges on improvisation and experimentation. In my art I explore and express traversing genres and forms, collaging them into configurations that fit contemporary living in a changing world. The series of writings under 1,000 words each are fieldnotes on free reading from my bookshelf. Dr. Bonnie Henry announced this week that we may be nearing the end of the pandemic; perhaps in the summer. Here are the explorations this time:

Burnard, Bonnie. A Good House. 1999.

870 words

Setting, historical era, culture, narrator looking back, trauma, economy, backstory, wide to narrow, general to specific *** Lilacs and honeysuckle *** horse chestnut, one pussy willow *** Heavy front door that was permanently locked, except . . . *** It was a good house. *** family history of shopkeepers, graphic detail *** weather, patriarchy, disability language, pushback *** Lived with healthy old maples whose massive branches had long before intermingled overhead to form a nearly perfect summer arch of trees. *** view widens again to town structure and buildings *** costuming, inside buildings, celebrations, culture *** Clothes off the line. *** Porkchops and apple jelly . . .  *** Story in Latin. *** Removed her apron to sit down with them. *** Where were you when the siren went off? *** The worst that could happen was a dog bite  or a bee sting . . .  *** Wide toboggan run. *** It was not unusual for the kids to learn something important from the carelessness of adults. *** eavesdropped *** Movie theater *** Taylor’s Fine China and The Legion . . .  *** There were tough kids and kids not nearly tough enough . . . *** Held together mostly by their skill with mockery. *** The girls . . .  this could be their chance to shine. *** People slipped them quarters to get in. *** The baby stared up into his white clown face and oversized red lips calmly as if these were just one more thing to learn. *** She could see as soon as she heard it that she had terrified her father. *** Distraction was more often than not a good thing. *** what a woman had to do *** In spite of their clowning they soaked it up, believed what their mother told them, took the words . . .  *** Dark red velveteen *** Encouraged, and contradicted, and interrupted . . .  *** Couched cliches carefully aimed to miss their mark. *** show over tell *** a strong grandmother *** Pink Kleenex and toilet paper. *** This drug might alter her nature a bit. *** Noxzema *** Careful to keep a respectful distance between them. *** Straight A’s government scholarship *** What she didn’t sell she stored in the basement. *** Margaret tried not to disturb things. *** Gradually her kindness began to work its magic. *** A big pop cooler, . . .  Coke, or Canada Dry, or Orange Crush . . . *** Upstairs, the hardwood dance floor was surrounded by a wrap-around balcony . . . *** There was no booze, not inside anyway, not that they could see. *** slow feminist *** list *** cultural authority for parents *** grade thirteen *** tension, lack of boundaries, cultural details, how healing love works *** Got herself through the winter imagining this month at the lake . . .  *** His wife moved into town. *** Wear full crinoline-skirted pink lace. *** list, list *** [the children] were passed around and across the table like treasures . . .  *** Chair beside the bed … Sitz bath . . .  *** Black and white striped beach chairs . . .  *** And her body knew her mind. *** Second-hand confidence *** Lilacs back near the garage *** Paint he garage door a dark cherry red to set off the roses, which would be white . . .  *** She had a chest you might like. I think its walnut . . .  It has about a hundred drawers. *** Canadian *** A low male laugh, the kind women get to hear only by mistake . . .  *** We choose our own words . . .  We make what we say. We own what we say . . .  *** She wants my kid with her while she’s doing it. *** Style didn’t require a lot of time or even a lot of money. *** One firmly decided you just kept on. *** Their won undeserved wounds. *** If she stopped to take care of herself . . .  *** And no questions please. *** Give her someone to grow up with. *** She was just a relaxed little girl, easy inside her own skin. *** At nine-thirty out of the blue, the women decided to make some freezer jam. *** Simply preferred the luxury of being in the dark . . .  they were spared, excused from the full cost of realizing what was actually going on in the world. *** New plaid wallpaper. *** ridicule *** He might be surprised to find out that I can win an argument, but we know I am, don’t we? *** It was that everlasting split second when there was nothing she could do to save herself . . .  moved out to a bungalow in town near the golf course. *** There were worse things than listening to a smart woman. *** She can make a life for herself there. *** [She] never exaggerated, never betrayed a confidence, . . .  *** They crawled into an empty place where no love existed, created it ever new and me from nothing but themselves . . .  *** They are wonderful in themselves.