Analysis of biblical messages
related to women and attitude towards them by Jesus.
Jesus chose twelve disciples
and all of them were men. What does this tell us about his attitude towards
women? Does it mean he discriminates against them?
Let me answer the question
with a question. God chose only one nation; Israel. Does this mean he
discriminates against other nations? Certainly not! In God’s economy, there is
no advantage to being first. Jesus’ kingdom dynamics says: “Many who are first
will be last, and the last first.” (Mark 10:31). In the ministry of Jesus, the
men were first but, more often than not, they came last.
Faithless men
The male disciples of Jesus
were inadequate. They lacked faith. Their self-appointed role was to prevent
children and the needy from getting to Jesus. They were carnal; vaingloriously
fighting for positions of authority. They were quarrelsome, vindictive and
judgmental. One of them betrayed Jesus. Another one denied him. All of them
deserted him. None of them believed the report of his resurrection. Although
not numbered among Jesus’ twelve disciples, many women were in his band of
travelling companions.
As a matter of fact, women
provided the financial backbone of Jesus’ ministry: “The twelve were with him,
and also some women who had been healed of evil spirits and sicknesses: Mary
who was called Magdalene, from whom seven demons had gone out, and Joanna the
wife of Chuza, Herod’s steward, and Susanna, and many others who were
contributing to their support out of their private means.” (Luke 8:1-3).
Exemplary women
Jesus often had cause to
express disappointment with his male disciples. He once said to Peter: “Get
behind me, Satan! You are a stumbling block to me; you do not have in mind the
things of God, but the things of men.” (Matthew 16:23).
He also rebuked the Zebedee
brothers for their vindictiveness: “You do not know what manner of spirit you
are of. For the Son of Man did not come to destroy men’s lives but to save
them.” (Luke 9:55-56). However, Jesus never had any word of rebuke for any
woman in the scriptures.
While he berated the men for
being part of “a faithless and perverse generation” (Matthew 17:17), and
accused them of having no faith (Mark 4:40); he extolled virtually all the
women for their exemplary faith. For example, he commended a poor widow who
gave all her livelihood as offering while the rich men only gave a fraction of
their wealth. (Mark 12:42-44). When a Canaanite woman required healing for her
daughter; Jesus’ disciples tried to get rid of her. But she refused to be
discouraged; even when Jesus tested her faith by calling her a dog. Therefore,
Jesus commended her: “O woman, great is your faith! Let it be to you as you
desire.” (Matthew 15:28).
While the men fled when Jesus
was arrested, the women faithfully followed him to the cross. (Matthew
27:55-56). In the Judean culture of the time, women could not be legal
witnesses. Josephus wrote: “from women let no evidence be accepted because of
the levity and temerity of their sex.”
Nevertheless, Jesus
distinguished women as the first witnesses of his resurrection.
Liberation
theology
Jesus’ doctrine is liberating.
According to his mission statement, he came: “to set at liberty those who are
oppressed.” (Luke 4:18). In biblical days, Jewish women were imprisoned by
different forms of male oppression. But Jesus came to set the captives free.
Therefore, he always treated women with dignity and respect.
Jesus also taught a Samaritan
woman he met at the well of Jacob. Indeed, his discourse with her is the
longest recorded discussion Jesus had with any single person in the scriptures.
While Jesus kept the fact that he is the long-awaited Messiah a secret, he
nevertheless dignified this woman by revealing this confidentiality to her. As
a result, she became one of Jesus’ first evangelists. (John 4:4–42).
Bondage-breaker
In the days of Jesus, women
were maliciously held responsible for all sexual sins. Jesus rejected this
malicious “sexism.” Instead, he proclaimed a dramatic indictment of men:
“anyone who looks at a woman lustfully has already committed adultery with her in
his heart.” (Matthew 5:28). When a horde of hypocritical men brought to him a
woman caught in adultery, determined to stone her to death while turning a
blind eye to her equally adulterous male lover, Jesus indicted them: “If any
one of you is without sin, let him be the first to throw a stone at her.” (John
8:7). According to Judean culture, a woman was considered unclean and
untouchable during her menses.
However, Jesus overruled this
bogus tradition by showing compassion to a woman with an issue of blood who
dared to touch the hem of his garment in hope of receiving healing. Instead of
taking offense that she “defiled” him, Jesus praised her and healed her,
saying: “Daughter, your faith has healed you. Go in peace and be freed from
your suffering.” (Mark 5:34).
Betrayal of Jesus
Jesus did not regard women as
a distinctive subordinate class of people. He did not infringe on their liberty
by imposing suffocating dos and don’ts exclusively for them. Instead, he
affirmed their equal status with men in Israel’s religious heritage by calling
them “the daughters of Abraham.” (Luke 13:16). Jesus would never proclaim a man
as the head of a woman: God is head of all.
He said to his disciples: “You
know that the rulers of the Gentiles lord it over them, and their high
officials exercise authority over them. But it shall not be so among you.”
(Matthew 20:25). Therefore, Jesus would not proclaim generalized male authority
over women.
It is a great indictment on
Christendom that, in many respects, there has been a falling away from Jesus’
elevation of women to the position of equality and dignity with men. One man is
largely responsible for the betrayal of the way, the truth and the life of
Jesus with regard to women. That man is Paul who exhibits in the bible
deep-seated hatred and contempt for women.
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