Here We Stand - Beverly Stratton
Here We Stand - Beverly Stratton
Feminists observe that most biblical characters are men, that God is imaged primarily in masculine terms, that women in the
Bible are usually portrayed in stereotypically
feminine roles, and that some women are
literally torn limb from limb to serve the
interests of male characters or editors
(Judges 19). We know that the cultures that
lie behind biblical texts are patriarchal, being ruled by male heads of household. Feminists note that not only have translations
and interpretations over the centuries reinforced male interests, but the biblical text
itself is androcentric, focusing on men's
experiences from men's perspectives and
expecting readers to read as men. Feminist
biblical interpreters accuse some portions
of Scripture of "textual harassment"4 and
find others "irredeemably oppressive."5 At
the same time, we also find ourselves drawn
to the Scriptures, shaped by them, renewed
and liberated by the Word of God we hear
14
Elisabeth Schssler Fiorenza, Bread
Not Stone: The Challenge of Feminist Biblical
Interpretation (Boston: Beacon, 1984), 13.
15
Gerhard O. Forde, "The Normative
Character of Scripture for Matters of Faith and
Life: Human Sexuality in Light of Romans
1:16-32," Word & World 14 (1994):307.
16
Tolbert, "Protestant Feminists," 16.
17
Ralph A. Bohlmann, "Confessional
Biblical Interpretation: Some Basic Principles," in Studies in Lutheran Hermeneutics,
200.
18
Karlfried Froehlich, "Problems of
Lutheran Hermeneutics," in Studies in
Lutheran Hermeneutics, 134.
19
Forde, "Normative," 306 n. 2.
20
Forde, "Normative," 307.
21
Duane A. Priebe, 'Theology and
Hermeneutics," in Studies in Lutheran
Hermeneutics, 296.
"Tiede, "Methods of Historical Inquiry,"
292.
23
The title for a 1992 session of the
Society of Biblical Literature's Feminist
Theological Hermeneutics of the Bible Group.
of life to shape and determine biblical religions, feminist theology attempts to reconceptualize the act of scriptural interpretation as a moment in the global praxis for
liberation."31 Feminists insist that Christians come to terms with the evils that
biblical texts and our interpretations of Scripture have allowed and encouraged. We
must respond to challenges of the kind that
Katie Geneva Cannon poses:
Where was the Church and the Christian
believers when Black women and Black
men, Black boys and Black girls, were
being raped, sexually abused, lynched,
assassinated, castrated and physically
oppressed? What kind of Christianity
24
interpreters sometimes approach texts creatively, personally identifying and imagining with biblical characters and contexts.
Feminists engage in careful textual criticism and translation; they seek out female
voices in biblical texts and in the history of
interpretation. Feminist scholars investigate the socio-historical situation of
women's lives behind the text, recognizing
that the Bible's interest in primarily official
public matters often left women's activities
marginalized.36 They reconstruct women's
history by using a hermeneutics of suspicion which recognizes that Scripture both
describes and reinscribes men's views of
women.37
Some feminists have attempted to redeem what others consider potentially "irredeemable" texts. My own attempts at
he Bible's inter
est in primarily
official public matters
often left women's
activities marginalized.
matters central to feminists, and "matters
which we may discuss with learned and
sensible men, or even among ourselves."43
Lutherans and feminists both take the
Bible seriously and agree that the canonical
biblical text of die Old and New Testaments
has functioned authoritatively in the church.
We acknowledge that commitments affect
our interpretations and recognize that some
principles, text(s), or definitive theological
center will shape our reading of scripture
and may authorize some texts or interpreta
tions while judging others. Feminists and
Lutherans participate in the world and are
concerned that our listeners hear the gospel
38
Beverly J. Stratton, "Eve Through
Several Lenses: Truth in 1 Timothy 2.8-15," in
A Feminist Companion to the Hebrew Bible in
the New Testament, ed. Athalya Brenner, 25873 (The Feminist Companion to the Bible, no.
10; Sheffield: Sheffield Academic Press,
1996).
39
The terms come from Judith Fetterley,
The Resisting Reader: A Feminist Approach to
American Fiction (Bloomington: Indiana
University Press, 1978).
^Kwok Pui-lan, Discovering the Bible, 3.
41
Ada Mara Isasi-Daz, 4iThe Word of
God in Us," in Searching the Scriptures, 87.
42
Kwok Pui-lan, Discovering the Bible,
31.
43
"Formula of Concord," Book of
Concord, 302.
criptural texts
and interpretations that oppress or
demean women must
be challenged...
feminist agreements with Lutherans depend
on whether Lutherans allow modern historical consciousness to affect their understanding of Scripture.
Feminists agree with some Lutherans
but not with others that the Bible describes
and allows God's revelation but is not itself
divinely authored. We recognize that the
Bible's unity arises through the uniform
love and justice of God that suffuse its
pages rather than because of inerrant, inspired transmission of the text. We affirm
that the finite is capable of the infinitethat
God has spoken and continues to speak
through the Scripture as a human product.
WTiile Luther insisted on condemning
certain church practices and refused to give
up or compromise articles that pertain to
justification by faith, feminists hold central
the full humanity of all women.44 Scriptural
texts and interpretations that oppress or
demean women must bechallenged in terms
of how the Word of God is revealed in or
through them.
There are several matters that would
benefit from further discussion among Lutherans and feminists.
Darrell Jodock argues that an interpretation producing a similar effect on a contemporary audience constitutes a successful
recontextualization of a biblical text. See The
Church's Bible, 133.
48
Gerhard O. Forde, "Law and Gospel in
Luther's Hermeneutic," Int 37 (1983):240-52.
49
Joseph A. Burgess argues that "Where
the text, after being carefully examined, does
not stand for sola gratia, something radical
must take place. The text must be either
reinterpreted or preached against or omitted."
See his "Confessional Propria," 265.
50
Reading "against the grain" is David J.
A. Clines' term for interpreting a text through
a lens different than that which the text would
like us to assume. Clines contends that such
reading need not be seen as a sign of disrespect.
See 'Images of Yahweh: God in the Pentateuch," in Studies in Old Testament Theology,
ed. Robert L. Hubbard, Jr., Robert K. Johnston,
and Robert P. Meye (Dallas: Word Publishing,
1992), 82, or the more recent version of this
from God, may interpreters perform biblical texts like a musical score?52
J. Scripture interprets itself, audience,
church, and multiple meanings. Lutherans
and feminists both acknowledge that interpretation and exegesis are communal enterprises. If interpretation is for proclamation,
then it must challenge or serve the needs of
the church. When exegesis is done among
a community of scholars, readings are reviewed and corrected by others. Part of the
communal nature of the biblical interpretation involves acknowledging that texts do
not have single, permanent, eternal meanings but that once an author pens a text,
meaning subsequently emerges in the encounters between text and readers. After
the linguistic turn, we can no longer maintain that understanding precedes significance. Rather understanding and interpretation happen together as words and texts
are read.53 The different histories and social
locations of interpreters, then, shape the
Conclusion
The Lutheran Confessions were able to
presume the authority of Scripture without
explicitly stating it as dogma. For Scripture
to continue to function authoritatively in the
twenty-first century for a church informed
by feminist scholarship, Lutheran Christians will need to clarify our understandings
of the nature of Scripture and the role of
interpretation. We should consider whether
Sola Scriptura can be maintained in view of
the Enlightenment's insistence on reason.
^ s
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