A couple of weeks ago, I was watching an interview with
music artist, Pharrell. Known for his musical genius, he again was in the news with
the launch of his newest album, GIRL.
I have not heard the album, so I can’t speak to its content. But his comments about
the album struck me more than anything else. When asked why he felt the need to
do an entire album devoted solely to women, he remarked that he loves women.
Women are valuable. Women are great. And the fact that women face so much
inequality in the world, he felt it was the least he could do. I get that. I
was tracking with him there. But he went on. He talked about pay inequity and
limits on their ability to choose what they want to do with their own bodies.
He even put his crusade for women in the same category as gay and lesbian
rights. He essentially said that in 2014 America , we have no right to tell
people how they should live or who they should love, and women get the worst of
it in his opinion.
As I listened to his rant about equality and freedom, I kept
thinking that he spoke with such authority. No one else can be his authority,
or your authority, but even in his cry for independence he was speaking as one
with authority. I was struck by how we really are doing what is right in our
own eyes in 2014 America .
No one has the right to tell us how to live. No one has the right to say
anything is absolutely true. Your truth is your truth and my truth is my truth.
And that is why I
won’t stop talking about biblical womanhood. Why, you say? What does
Pharrell have to do with biblical womanhood? Because as long as the culture
feeds us an image of women that is contrary to God’s word, I will keep talking
about biblical womanhood. As long as
little boys and girls grow up thinking that it doesn’t matter if you are a boy
or a girl, I will keep talking about biblical womanhood. As long as women
(young and old) continue to believe that sex and flaunting their body is what
makes them valuable and attractive, I will keep talking about biblical
womanhood. As long as we continue to think that equality as image bearers means
sameness of roles, I will keep talking about biblical womanhood.
Because at the end of
the day it’s not about biblical womanhood at all. It is about the authority of
God’s word. Do we believe it to be true? Do we believe God has really
spoken and we can take him at his word? Or do we need a new interpretation or a
new vision for a new day? We can’t move on from God’s word. We can’t graduate
to something more compelling or culturally relevant. I have heard it said that
women need theology, not more teaching on gender roles. I get that. I really
do. Women need theology, that is absolutely certain. And more of it. But
understanding how God wants us to live in this broken, sin-cursed world is theology
in practice. It’s the theological legs to a body and head filled with
knowledge. Biblical womanhood is theology in practice.
It really isn’t a new notion to ask the question, “who has
the authority to tell us how to live?” We’ve been asking it since our first
parents believed those very words breathed out by the Enemy. The cultural
questioning of authority is really a questioning of God’s authority, asking if
God can really be trusted.
So I will not pack up
and go home on the biblical womanhood front. I know a lot of good friends
who aren’t willing to do so either. We are here for the long haul. It’s not
because I like a good fight. It’s not because I want to enter into endless
debates about the meaning of headship. I really don’t. It is precisely because
the world around us is telling a story about womanhood that is contrary to
God’s word. And we know a better way forward. Every day we encounter women who
are broken and battered by a world that is telling them lies about what it
means to be a woman, and we know the Great Physician who not only can heal them
of their sins, but also show them why they were created in the first place.
Every day we hear lies about God’s image and his rightful authority over his
creation, and we know the truth. These aren’t silly arguments that evangelicals
like to get into. They are eternal matters that tell a story about our creator,
God.
Pharrell is right. Women are good for society. But it is
precisely because they bear the image of the One who created them that they bring
value to this world. Women have value because they image Another. They point to
God and his glory displayed in his creation. And that, my friends, is why
womanhood matters.
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