We bought into the feminist promise that woman would find happiness and fulfillment when she defined her own identity and decided for herself what life as a woman was all about. How very wrong we were. For ultimately, our identity is a matter decided not by us, but by the One who in the beginning created us male and female.
It’s obvious that the “Leave it to Beaver” model of womanhood—having a husband, a station-wagon full of kids, a house in the ‘burbs, and every possible modern appliance—didn’t bring woman the happiness she desired. As an old, archived 1972 Time magazine article lamented:
"By all rights, the American woman today should be the happiest in history. She is healthier than U.S. women have ever been, better educated, more affluent, better dressed, more comfortable, wooed by advertisers, pampered by gadgets. But there is a worm in the apple. She is restless in her familiar familial role, no longer quite content with the homemaker-wife-mother part in which her society has cast her."
Two years ago, Time magazine devoted an entire issue to “The State of the American Woman.” Writers were confounded by the evidence, tracked by numerous surveys, that as women have gained more education, more economic independence, more power, and more freedom, they have become less and less happy. Ironically, they are unhappier now than when the Feminist movement set about to solve the problem of woman’s unhappiness. The modern ideal for womanhood is even less fulfilling than the one it replaced.
So, should we try to rewind the tape and try to squeeze every woman back into the “Leave it to Beaver” mold? No. We can’t hope to get womanhood right until we understand the ultimate object to which it points. When God created male and female, He provided an object lesson - a parable, as it were - of His entire redemptive plan. Men are to reflect the strength, love and self-sacrifice of Christ. Women are to reflect the character, grace and beauty of the Bride He redeemed. Ultimately, womanhood exists to help display the masterpiece of God.
The implications are staggering. This places womanhood at the center of God’s ultimate purpose. It endows it with supernatural significance and meaning. It provides woman with a framework to understand what her life is all about, what she should value, and how to make choices that align. Time, culture, and circumstances change, but the Bible provides an enduring model for womanhood that goes far beyond a stereotyped, cookie-cutter list of behaviors.
History proves that woman’s happiness is not found in pursuing the current cultural ideal. But that doesn’t mean it’s an elusive goal. My “woman’s history” - and the history of a multitude of sisters who have loved Christ - testifies to the fact that happiness (of the deep, lasting kind) can be found in pursuing the One to whom true womanhood points.
2 comments:
Daughter Deer,
*grins* I think I know which book you're reading...
This sounds like you were at Bright Lights last night. Except, of course, I didn't go into feminism as much... I just mentioned that people are asking the wrong questions: instead of "who am I?" we should be asking "WHOSE am I?" :)
Very good post! I might use it at BL sometimes... hehe.
Love,
Mother Hen
Amen!!! It's so refreshing to see that other young women realize that the farther we stray from God's plan for women, it's very obvious that we are going to be discontent. The thing is, it wasn't the fact that women were the "homemaker-wife-mother" that made them unhappy pre-femenism, they were unhappy because they envied men. Envy is going to lead to discontentment but giving women what they thought they wanted only made it worse! I just pray that gradually, women of God realize their position through God and come to a realization that when you do what God made you to do, happiness abounds. Its when we try to "take" what isn't ours, that the whole system gets turned upside down. Eve stepped out of her role [not to be mistaken as inferior] and women have struggled since. If we trace our problems back to the root problem, and strive to do the opposite, maybe we can find enjoyment in God's BEAUTIFUL plan for men and women.
Praise God, He has everything weaved together so tightly so that we don't have to wonder what His plan and purpose is.
Thanks for posting this, it was a great refreshment and reminder of where we have come from as women and the neverending discontenment that has come from it.
I know that there are young women all over who are very aware of their God-given roles and love them very much [as do I, and can't wait to apply them to whatever future God has for me]. Stick to it! "Shine like lights in the universe"! God Bless, your Sister in Christ :)
Post a Comment