Incarnation Factor - dignity and equality of women


THE BIBLICAL FOUNDATIONS OF MARRIAGE

STUDY SEVEN: AFFIRMATION OF THE DIGNITY & EQUALITY OF WOMEN

Copyright © Rosemary Bardsley 2004

In his incarnation Jesus Christ also affirmed the essential dignity and equality of women, and in doing so intervened in this area of the curse that has, in the hands of sinners, caused immeasurable pain and suffering.

In the culture of his day women were relegated to the 'women's court' in the temple; girls were generally excluded from education in the synagogue schools, where the great bulk of learning was the law of God; Jewish men were forbidden to speak with women, even their own relatives, on the street; the Jewish Talmud stated that it would be better for the words of the law to be burned than to be entrusted to a woman. Quite apart from any inferior social status, the prevailing attitude to women excluded them from the more significant levels of worship of God and knowledge of God, and denied them immediate access to the Word of God, assuming a lesser intelligence, a lesser spirituality, and a lesser responsibility.

Jesus, in an extremely radical way, broke through these traditional attitudes and boundaries.

A. THE CONCEPTION AND BIRTH OF JESUS AFFIRMS WOMEN

Discuss the Scriptures below. In what way do they lift the status of women?

Galatians 4:4

 

 

Luke 1:28, 30

 

 

Luke 1:35

 

 

Luke 1:42-45

 

 

Luke 1:46-55

 

 

These Scriptures portray a woman as:

Although God did not ask Mary if she was willing to be his instrument for the incarnation of Jesus, the Gospel records give no impression that God treated her without respect to her personal being. God didn't simply use her. God communicated with her; God recognized her valid fears; God explained the frightening details to her, in highly theological terms that assumed she knew both the Scriptures and God; God sought, and gained, the humble, trusting co-operation from her that he had anticipated. Later, having been greeted and blessed by Elizabeth, Mary burst into a song in praise of God, a song that reveals both her faith in God and her knowledge of God and his word.

God treated a woman this way: what does this teach us about how men ought to treat women and how women ought to view themselves? What kinds of male dominance are banned by God's attitudes here?

 

 

 

 

 B. JESUS' TEACHING ABOUT WOMEN CONFERS THEM WITH EQUALITY AND DIGNITY

Read the passage. Discuss the comment. How does this teach equality & dignity and outlaw superiority?

Matthew 10:35-36

 

Here Jesus assumes that both men and women will be following him; that both men and women will be debating his claims; and both men and women will suffer for him.

 

Matthew 10:37

Mothers are mentioned alongside fathers, and daughters alongside sons, as vying for a person's allegiance ahead of Christ.

 

Matthew 12:49-50

 

Jesus claims believing women as his 'sister' and 'mother'.

 

Matthew 24:41

 

Jesus clearly knows that there are women who have understood, believed and obeyed.

 

Matthew 25:1-13 Lk 15:8-10; 18:1-8

Women are used as the focus of these parables.

 

C. JESUS' ATTITUDE TO WOMEN RADICALLY REJECTS SOCIAL AND RELIGIOUS INEQUALITY

Mark 12:41-44

 

A poor widow [even more despised than the average woman] is praised by Jesus.

 

Mark 14:6-9

 

Jesus accepts, commends and immortalizes a woman's costly act of love, rejecting the criticisms men made about her.

 

Luke 7:13,15

 

Jesus' compassion for a widow causes him to raise her son from the dead.

 

Luke 7:36-50

 

Jesus, exposing a man's lack of faith and love, affirms the faith & love of a repentant prostitute.

 

Luke 8:1-3

Matthew 27:55

Jesus accepted the ministry of the many women who accompanied him and the Twelve. [These women had control of their own finances.]

 

Luke 8:43-48

When a ritually unclean woman touched him, Jesus ignored social and religious laws, spoke to her, and commended her faith.

 

Luke 10:38-42

 

Jesus affirmed the rightness of a woman learning spiritual truths.

 

Luke 13:10-17

Jesus made a woman's well-being more important than the men's interpretation of the Sabbath Law; for the woman's sake he humiliated men; and he also called the woman 'a daughter of Abraham', identifying her faith.

 

Luke 21:23

Luke 23:27-31

Jesus expressed deep anguish for women during the days of judgement.

 

John 2:1-11

Although Mary over-stepped her position, Jesus responded to her request.

 

John 4:1-42

Jesus has a deep theological conversation with a sinful Samaritan woman, revealing his identity to her. She told the men of the town about him, and they believed.

 

John 8:1-11

Jesus, refusing to enforce the letter of the law, acted with compassion and forgiveness towards a woman caught in adultery; at the same time he exposed the sinfulness of the men who accused her.

 

John 11:23-27

Jesus told Martha deep and ultimate truth about himself; she believed and understood that this truth was based on another deeper truth, and expressed also her belief in his divine identity.

 

John 11:32-35

Jesus was deeply moved by and shared in Mary's grief.

 

Matt 28:1-10

Women are first witnesses and messengers of Jesus' resurrection.

 

HOMEWORK TASK: During the week: Women: live with joy in the dignity that Jesus conferred on you and your service. Men: rejoice that Jesus has set you free to treat your wife with the same compassion and respect that he showed to women. Both: Watch for ways to live this truth.