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http://www.alternet.org/reproductivejustice/121603/women%27s_%27liberation%27_through_submission%3A_an_evangelical_anti-feminism_is_born_/

Women's 'Liberation' Through Submission: An Evangelical Anti-Feminism Is Born

By Kathryn Joyce, Religion Dispatches
Posted on January 22, 2009, Printed on February 11, 2009
http://www.alternet.org/story/121603/



This October, more than 6,000 women gathered in Chicago for the True
Woman Conference '08: a stadium-style event to promote what its
proponents call "biblical womanhood," "complementarianism," or -- most
bluntly -- "the patriarchy movement."

Women gathering to support the patriarchy movement? It's evangelical
counterculture at its most contrarian.

The Associated Baptist Press explains the relationship of biblical
womanhood to feminism, highlighting an ambitious initiative that arose
from the meeting: a signature drive seeking 100,000 women to endorse
its "True Woman Manifesto," which, the ABP writes, aims "at sparking a
counterrevolution to the feminist movement of the 1960s."

To outside observers of the patriarchy movement, the starkness of the
calls for gender hierarchy often seem amusingly outdated (not to
mention historically misleading: feminist blogs Feministing and
Pandagon have deftly dismantled some of the speakers' Leave it to
Beaver idealizations of the 1950s as a time when women were
universally protected).

Though only just under 3,000 women have actually signed the document
since its unveiling on October 11, the fact that it exists, and the
campaign to gather such a large showing of public support, reveals
something important about this movement: that its followers don't view
themselves simply as a remnant of polite, churchy women, holding out
against a crass culture, but rather as a revolutionary body waging
"countercultural" rebellion against what they see as the feminist
status quo.

"We are believing God for a movement of reformation and revival in the
hearts and homes of Christian women all around this world," one
organizer, Nancy Leigh DeMoss, said at the close of the conference. "I
just believe there is a massive women's movement of true women in
those millions of women who are able to capture all kinds of
battlefronts for Christ."

The terms of the manifesto (downloadable here) serve as a good
shorthand description of the aims and principles of the submission and
patriarchy movement. Signers affirm their belief that women and men
were designed to reflect God in "complementary and distinct ways";
that today's culture has gone astray distinctly because of its
egalitarian approach to gender (and that it's "experiencing the
consequences of abandoning God's design for men and women"); and that
while men and women are equally valuable in the eyes of God, here on
earth they are relegated to separate spheres at home and in the
church.

The "countercultural" attitudes that signers support include the idea
that women are called to affirm and encourage godly masculinity, and
honor the God-ordained male headship of their husbands and pastors;
that wifely submission to male leadership in the home and church
reflects Christ's submission to God, His Father; that "selfish
insistence on personal rights is contrary to the spirit of Christ";
and, in a pronatalist turn of phrase that recalls the rhetoric of the
Quiverfull conviction, their willingness to "receive children as a
blessing from the Lord."

Finally, in a reference to the importance of woman-to-woman mentoring
within the conservative church, they affirmed that "mature Christian
women" are obliged to disciple the next generation of Christian wives,
training them in matters of submission and headship, in order to
provide a legacy of "fruitful femininity."

The speakers at the conference were the A-list of complementarian
celebrities: Pastor John Piper, Christian radio personality Nancy
Leigh DeMoss, Southern Baptist Theological Seminary professor and
antifeminist author Mary Kassian, J. Ligon Duncan III, chairman of the
board for the Council for Biblical Manhood & Womanhood (CBMW), Susan
Hunt, an author and consultant to the Presbyterian Church in America's
Women in the Church Ministry, and others. The conference was organized
by DeMoss' St. Louis-based ministry (and eponymous twice-daily radio
program), Revive Our Hearts, a women's ministry that stresses
submission as a militant discipline that will alter the culture.

DeMoss' fellow speakers shared her faith. Striding to the stage to the
soundtrack of Helen Reddy's "I Am Woman," Mary Kassian riffed on a
common biblical womanhood theme: that the queasy unhealthiness of the
vintage Virginia Slims slogan, "You've Come a Long Way, Baby," was
representative of feminism's unhealthy promises to women: appealing to
women's desire for independence, but selling a dangerous product.
Kassian's premise -- that feminism took women a "long way" in the
wrong direction -- echoed that of Mary Pride, submission and headship
advocate and author of the homeschooling mother's cult classic book,
The Way Home: Away from Feminism, Back to Reality, published some
twenty years earlier.

Pride made the case in the late '80s for submission as a revolutionary
calling, and Kassian's evocation of Reddy's old feminist fight song
was as deliberate a declaration that the "True Woman" movement was as
revolutionary as feminism had been. "I'm praying that God is going to
raise up a counterrevolution of women," she told the crowd, "women who
hold the knowledge of our times in one hand and the truth and the
clarity and the charity of the Word of God the other; women whose
hearts are broken over the gender confusion and the spiritual and
emotional and relational carnage of our day and who, like those men of
old, know what to do."

DeMoss has collaborated with a number of her fellow speakers before.
In 2002, she edited a compilation of essays on submission and headship
entitled Biblical Womanhood in the Home, which drew contributions from
Kassian, Hunt, and other complementarian matriarchs, such as Dorothy
Kelley Patterson, who with her husband, Paige Patterson, created the
homemaking degree and curriculum introduced at Southwestern Baptist
Theological Seminary in 2007 and P. Bunny Wilson, author of
anti-feminist Christian books such as Liberated Through Submission. In
her introduction to the collection, DeMoss wrote of her
culture-transforming ambitions:

I began to wonder what might happen in our day if even a small number
of devoted, intentional women would begin to pray and believe God for
a revolution of a different kind -- a counterrevolution -- within the
evangelical world… Unlike most revolutions, this counterrevolution
does not require that we march in the streets or send letters to
Congress or join yet another organization. It does not require us to
leave our homes; in fact, for many women, it calls them back into
their homes. It requires only that we humble ourselves, that we learn,
affirm, and live out the biblical pattern of womanhood, and that we
teach the ways of God to the next generation.

To that end, DeMoss has worked with the CBMW, Campus Crusade for
Christ's Family Life, the Moody media empire, Moms In Touch
International, and other organizations -- pushing not just the
familiar list of Christian right demands, but a more subtle, and more
thorough, transformation of Christian family life and structure, from
which to wage a more effective culture war.

The imperative of such a return to "biblical" gender roles is even
farther- reaching though, as Kassian explained. Feminism, she argued,
in a paraphrase of the argument in her book The Feminist Mistake: The
Radical Impact of Feminism on Church and Culture, is a multistage
process that begins with feminism's insistence on self-definition and
self-determination, and ends with feminism's declaration that women
can interpret and decide for themselves who or what God is: a
statement of theological relativity that threatens to undermine
biblical literalism completely. In The Feminist Mistake, Kassian
explained this slide more thoroughly:

Feminism begins with a deconstruction of a Judeo-Christian view of
womanhood (the right to name self); progressed to the deconstruction
of manhood, gender relationships, family/societal structures, and a
Judeo-Christian worldview (the right to name the world); and concluded
with the concept of a metaphysical pluralism, self-deification, and
the rejection of the Judeo-Christian deity (the right to name God).

To the age-old question of "who is God," Kassian complained, feminism
answers, it's up to you. And this, to Kassian, is a blasphemous
statement of authority in and of itself, and even a sign of
self-worship. "According to feminism, women decide, and ultimately,
that means that they themselves are God."

This is the charge of complementarian's biggest advocates. The
Southern Baptist seminary where Kassian teaches is also the location
of the SBC-affiliated CBMW, the preeminent institution of
complementarianism and publisher of the most authoritative book on the
subject, Recovering Biblical Manhood and Womanhood, co-edited by
theologians John Piper and Wayne Grudem.

"Wimpy theology makes wimpy women," Piper told the audience.
Reinforcing a common message that biblical womanhood, true womanhood,
may look meek, but is actually fierce, Piper, who spreads the
complementarian message not just through his writing and affiliation
with the CBMW, but also through his church-planting Desiring God
ministry, explained, "Wimpy theology does not give a woman a God big
enough, strong enough, wise enough, good enough to handle the
realities of life in a way that enables her to magnify Him and His Son
all the time… Wimpy theology doesn't have a granite foundation of
God's sovereignty underneath." Non-wimpy theology gives women both a
God strong enough to see them through the worst of life, Piper
continued, and also a set of non-negotiable mandates for life. Namely
that submission is a wife's divine calling, and truest form of power.
"I distinguish between authority and influence," he said. "A woman on
her knees sways more in this nation than a thousand three-piece suited
Wall Street jerks. There is massive power in this room, so I do not
take lightly this moment."

Neither should observers, however laughably retrograde the True Woman
prescriptions and manifesto might seem. What a conference of this size
means -- along with the publicly-declared ambition to gather
exponentially more women -- is that the biblical womanhood movement is
getting organized.



Kathryn Joyce is the author of Quiverfull: Inside the Christian
Patriarchy Movement, a study of conservative Christian women's
movements forthcoming from Beacon Press in Feb. 2009. Her articles
have appeared in The Nation, Mother Jones, Newsweek, and other
publications.
(c) 2009 Religion Dispatches All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/121603/


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