The Forgotten Women of the Bible begins with the retelling of the Gospel account of the multiplication of the loaves and fishes, the miracle most familiar to Christians. Mark's account adds a phrase that changes the whole story. "Five thousand men were fed, not counting women and children." This is where this book takes off. Page after page presents us with the incredible fact that women throughout scripture and church history went unnamed and unnoticed. But the women are there in incredible numbers in the Old and New Testament, in miracle accounts, in stories of bravery and wisdom. They are teachers, prophets, judges, healers, deacons. Yet the passages proclaiming them are either excised from the lectionary or left out altogether. It is time that they are named and proclaimed.
The Forgotten Women of the Bible: Naming and Proclaiming the Forgotten Women in Scripture and Church Law
The Forgotten Women of the Bible begins with the retelling of the Gospel account of the multiplication of the loaves and fishes, the miracle most familiar to Christians. Mark's account adds a phrase that changes the whole story. "Five thousand men were fed, not counting women and children." This is where this book takes off. Page after page presents us with the incredible fact that women throughout scripture and church history went unnamed and unnoticed. But the women are there in incredible numbers in the Old and New Testament, in miracle accounts, in stories of bravery and wisdom. They are teachers, prophets, judges, healers, deacons. Yet the passages proclaiming them are either excised from the lectionary or left out altogether. It is time that they are named and proclaimed.