She was beautiful.
She was bright.
And she was mad at God.
I sat across the lunch table picking at a salad and trying to digest Jan’s words. Her startlingly teal eyes were tinted with frustration at God, primarily because of how she perceived He felt about women.
“I don’t understand God. It seems like He is against women. He’s set us up to fail. Even our bodies are weaker and that just invites men to abuse us. All through the Bible I see how God used men in mighty ways.
Abraham, Moses, David, you name it; it is always the men. And polygamy. How could God allow that? Today, there’s so much abuse toward women,” she continued. “Where’s God in all that? There are so many inequalities and injustices between how men are treated and how women are treated. What kind of God does that? I think the bottom line is that God just doesn’t like women.”
Jan knew her Bible. She grew up in the church, had loving Christian parents, and accepted Christ when she was eight years old. She continued growing in her little girl faith and even felt a call to ministry when she was in the eighth grade. But all during her growing up years, Jan felt she wasn’t good enough. She saw herself as inferior to her younger brother, and always felt as though her parents favored him over her.
As is often the case with children, Jan’s perception of her earthly father colored her perception of her heavenly Father, and the idea of male favoritism became the sieve through which her spiritual interpretations passed.
So, What Does God Really Think about Women?
For far too long I had looked at women in the Bible through the wrong end of the telescope, making them appear far too small beside their male counterparts. But God was needling me to be a good student and take a closer look. I asked God how He really felt about women and He showed me through the life of His Son.
When Philip asked Jesus to show him the Father, Jesus answered, “Anyone who has seen me has seen the Father” (
As I studied, I was struck by Jesus’ radical relationship with the women whose lives intersected with his during those thirty-three years he walked on this earth.
He crossed man-made social, political, racial, and gender boundaries and addressed women with the respect due co-image bearers of God. The God-made man broke the man-made rules to set women free.
Jesus Broke All the Rules
Every time Jesus encountered a woman, he broke one of the societal rules of his day.
Women were created as co-image bearers of God. But between the Garden of Eden and Garden of Gethsemane, a lot changed. By the time Jesus made his first cry in Bethlehem, women lived in the shadows. For example:
- If a woman commit adultery, her husband could kill her because she was his property.
- Women were not allowed to speak to men in public. If she did, it was assumed she was having a relationship with the man and grounds for divorce.
- A Rabbi did not speak even to his own wife or daughter in public.
- Rabbis woke each morning and said a little prayer: “Thank God I am neither a Gentile, woman nor slave.” How would you like that for a “Good morning, dear?”
Women were not allowed to:
- Testify in court, as they were seen as unreliable witnesses.
- Mingle with men in social gatherings
- Eat with men at a social gathering.
- Be educated in the Torah with the men.
- Sit under a Rabbi’s teaching.
- Worship with men. They were relegated to a lower level in Herod’s Temple and behind a partition in local synagogues.
Women were not counted as people (i.e. the feeding of the 5,000 men).
Women were divorced on a whim. If she didn’t satisfy him or burnt the bread, her husband could write her a letter of divorce.
Women were considered the dregs of society and inferior in every way.
But Jesus came to change all that. He didn’t speak out about the injustice; He simply went about His ministry ignoring it.
Jesus Proved How Valuable Women Are
He taught in places where women would be present: on a hillside, along the streets, in the marketplace, by a river, beside a well, and in the women’s area of the temple.
His longest recorded conversation in the entire New Testament was with a woman. And as we saw through the lives of several of the New Testament’s leading ladies, some of his best students and most daring disciples were women.
- Jesus spoke to the Samaritan woman at the well. It was the longest recorded conversation he had with any one person. She was the first person He told that He was the Messiah.
- Jesus welcomed Mary of Bethany into the ‘classroom’ to sit at His feet to learn.
- Jesus invited Mary Magdalene to join His ministry team.
- Jesus encourage the woman healed from 12 years of bleeding to testify in the presence of all the people what God had done for her.
- Jesus welcomed the sinful woman into a room full of men as she anointed his head with perfume.
- Jesus called the woman with the crippled back from behind a partition to receive her healing.
Jesus entrusted the most important message in all of history to Mary Magdalene and told her to go and tell that He had risen from the dead.
Jesus was willing to risk his reputation to save theirs. He was willing to go against the grain of religious leaders to liberate women from centuries of oppressive pious tradition.
He delivered women from diseases and set them free from spiritual darkness. He took the fearful and forgotten and transformed them into the faithful and forever remembered. “I tell you the truth,” he said, “wherever this gospel is preached throughout the world, what she has done will also be told, in memory of her.”
And now that brings me to you and to me.
Never, dear one, doubt your value to as a woman. You were God’s grand finale of all creation—His workmanship whom He loves. And Jesus was willing to break the rules to prove it.
Sharon Jaynes is the author of 23 books including, How Jesus Broke the Rules to Set You Free. Visit SharonJaynes.com for more information.
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