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Paperback Finally Feminist: A Pragmatic Christian Understanding of Gender Book

ISBN: 0801031303

ISBN13: 9780801031304

Finally Feminist: A Pragmatic Christian Understanding of Gender

(Part of the Acadia Studies in Bible and Theology Series)

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Book Overview

Discussions about gender continue in many Christian denominations. With good people and solid arguments on each side of the divide, there seems to be little hope for a synthesis or even constructive dialogue. In this brief book, John Stackhouse proposes a way forward.Stackhouse provides biblical, theological, and practical arguments for his own understanding of the issue: Equality is the biblical ideal, but patriarchy is allowed and regulated by a...

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Easy introduction to a sound theology of gender

This is an easy read for a layperson to introduce a theology of gender. It is NOT a hermeneutical study of biblical passages. If you are looking for in-depth exegesis, look for a different book. But if you are looking for a balanced, well-reasoned theology of gender, look no further. Logical, rational, well-tested, Stackhouses' theoretical paradigm stands well up to his own criticism, and, to put it simply, it makes sense.

One of the most fair and intelligent books on feminism I've read

I appreciated this book so much. As a woman raised in a complementarian (and sometimes downright patriarchal in the most negative sense) Christian environment, being a woman with a reflective brain, it made no sense to me that women were not able to lead. So I swung a little wide over time, through a lot of anger into a feminism that gave me a place where I at least felt validated. This book, Finally Feminist, really put both feet in both camps to bring understanding, not angry justifications for feelings alone. He spoke with no alarmist tone, no divisive or blaming kind of attitude, just pointed out that there are parts of the Bible we cannot just ignore because they don't fit our paradigm. But he says it for BOTH sides, that feminists can't ignore the patriarchal stories/ideas in the Bible, and that complementarians/patriarchalists can't ignore that women are indeed used as leaders in the Bible and that it does assert "there is no male or female." So which is it? (He addresses this at length of course) As a feminist, I appreciate that both sides were heard instead of both sides being made characatures of. If you are on the fence, or ever thought about feminism in light of Christianity, or wondered maybe "what those crazy feminists are yammering about," try checking this book out, because you won't get a silly portrait of egalitarians, as if they are all about ball-busting men and giving women big muscles and power to make up for lost time or something, and he doesn't paint the complementarians as awful woman haters who like to keep women down at any cost. He points out the good reasoning (and bad) in BOTH sides, which I have never seen done so well in another book, Christian or secular. Definitely worth a read!!

I say just go for it.

Finally Feminist is an easy read - only 129 pages. Here are things that I liked about the book: 1. He calls himself a feminist. That is refreshing. I have heard quite a few egalitarians deny that they are feminists. If I were egalitarian, I would admit to my feminism, as he did. I commend him for that honesty. I think that egalitarians should follow his good example in that regard. 2. He calls the complementarian position patriarchy. That is also a correct assessment. Many complementarians want to downplay the patriarchal nature of our position. We need to get over that, and admit that we see the Bible to be promoting a form of patriarchy. Let's be honest about that, ourselves. 3. He correctly points out that the patriarchs of the OT were not always living up to patriarchal ideals. He is correct on that score, too. 4. He correctly points out that those "difficult passages" in the NT - esp. the ones written by Paul - support the complementarian interpretations. It was a relief not to be drug through the tortured explanations that I have heard from other egalitarians. I thank him for sparing us that pain. 6. I especially appreciate the fact that he did not drag the Trinity into it, and came down solidly on the side of orthodoxy. He did try to make it out as if the comps started that line of reasoning, when it was really the comps responding to egal twisted theology on that subject that started it. :-) Who cares at this point, right? 5. He has a nice writing style. There is more, but those are the main things that I liked about his presentation. What didn't I like? 1. He decided that patriarchy itself is evil by nature, and that God does not like patriarchy. God may think that, but how does Stackhouse know for sure? It would help his case if God had pronounced clearly that He hates patriarchy; it would help the case for feminism if God quit setting up social structres - such as the church and the home - along patriarchal lines. 2. He decided that feminism is good, and is the structure that God is setting up in His kingdom - in the church, the home, and in society. Yes, it is Christian feminism that he is talking about, not secular feminism - even though he does not seem to see the great weaknesses in feminism, including how hard it is to keep women out of the home and in the workplace. 3. It would help his arguments if feminism - at least as practiced and promoted for the last 50 years - did not have such a checkered past. It would be easier to believe that feminism is what God is doing in the world if feminism weren't so evil itself. 4. He stated that patriarchy enslaves women, and feminism sets them free, but from what? I know what the Maoist and Leninist forms of egalitarianism were meant to set women free from, but what about biblical feminsm? Does God really want women to put their children in daycare, or hire other women - servants, they would be - to care for their children? How unegal

A scholarly and serious-minded evaluation of scriptural text

The latest volume in the Acadia Studies in Bible and Theology series, Finally Feminist: A Pragmatic Christian Understanding of Gender is a thoughtful examination of evangelical Christian perspectives on gender. With an evenhanded eye for detail, theology professor John Stackhouse, Jr. reveals why "both sides are right" - the Bible is both feminist and patriarchal. Extensively researched, Finally Feminist seeks to outline both the egalitarian and complementarian elements of biblical text in its search for a balanced and accurate paradigm to better understand what the Bible has to say about women. A scholarly and serious-minded evaluation of scriptural text.

From Plymouth Brethern to Finally Feminist

John G. Stackhouse has created a beautifully crafted book: smart, clearly written, informative, insightful and challenging. Developing an assessment of gender roles in the church derived from his own experience raised in the Plymouth Brethern (where my own grandfather, William Chawner, was a prominent lay preacher), Stackhouse develops arguments in biblical interpretation and social analysis that are bound to inform many, offend some, and engage all. His sensitive, informed, and clear explanation of how authoritative texts should be interpreted has cross-over value in many fields within and outside Christian theology. This book is a "must read" for people interested in the issues.
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