Vol. 26, No. 3 |
Fall
(October-December)
2002 |
Holy Boldness: Women
Preachers'
Autobiographies and the Sanctified Self
by Susie C. Stanley
Knoxville: The University of Tennessee Press, 2002
268 pp. hardback, $35.00
The author of Hebrews reminds us that "we
are surrounded by so great a cloud of witnesses."
Susie C. Stanley tells us who some of them
are. Susie was an early member of EEWC, serving on the very first
ad hoc council, right after the very first EEWC conference in
1974. With a Ph.D. in church history from Iliff School of Theology
in Denver, she is now professor of historical theology and
occupies the C. N. Hostetter Jr. Chair of Religious Studies at
Messiah College. Her first book was Feminist Pillar of Fire:
The Life of Alma White (Pilgrim Press, 1993). She is also the
founder of Wesleyan/Holiness Women Clergy, a group that holds
regular conferences.
In
this volume Stanley analyzes the spiritual autobiographies of
thirty-four American Wesleyan/Holiness women preachers published
between 1850 and 1950. Some are already quite well-known: African
American evangelist Jarena Lee; Phoebe Palmer, the founder of
American Wesleyan Holiness; Hannah Whitall Smith, author of The
Christian's Secret of a Happy Life and founder of Keswick
Holiness, and African American Holiness singer and preacher Amanda
Berry Smith. Others are quite obscure: Sarah A. Cooke who shared
her Holiness testimony with D. L. Moody; Dora A. Dudley, who ran a
healing home in Grand Rapids, Michigan; Almira Losee, a New York
Methodist preacher; South Carolina evangelist Mattie E. Perry;
Emma M. Whittemore, who worked with prostitutes.
Most of the vast theoretical literature about
the writing of autobiography has focused on women writers --
novelists, poets, playwrights. By focusing on religious women,
especially preachers, Stanley is breaking new ground.
Stanley begins by outlining Wesleyan and
Holiness theologies and autobiographical theory. For background
she looks at the lives of Madame Guyon, Mary Bosanquet Fletcher,
and Hester Ann Roe Rogers -- all of whose lives and writings
inspired American Holiness women and men. Wesleyan Holiness, of
course, grows out of the teachings of Methodist founder John
Wesley, who wrote A Plain Account of Christian Perfection.
In the United States Phoebe Palmer outlined what she called
"a shorter way" to achieve sanctification or
"holiness" in a book titled The Way of Holiness.
She talked about making a decision to "lay one's all upon the
altar" and claiming the holiness God promised in Scripture.
This act put to death one's sinful nature, and empowered one to
live a holy life. Keswick or Reformed Holiness, as taught by
Hannah Smith stressed entire consecration and argued only that
one's sinful nature was suppressed, not eradicated. Sanctification
was seen as more of a process than an experience.
Using the insights of modern critical work on
autobiography as a genre, Stanley explores how the experiences of
salvation and sanctification empowered her subjects. Since
sanctification required public testimony to it, women were both
compelled and theologically sanctioned to speak out. These
particular women experienced God's call to ministry and often both
described and defended that call in their autobiographies.
Their ministries were wide-ranging. They
preached wherever they could -- at camp meetings, in prisons, on
the streets, at revivals, in railroad cars. Some planted local
congregations and became pastors. Some even founded denominations.
Others headed urban missions, shelters for prostitutes, homes for
divine healing, missions for alcoholics. They campaigned for
temperance, women's rights, a living wage, and other structural
social changes.
The book opens with a chart listing the women,
their birth dates and places when given in their autobiographies,
their writings, any biographies written about them, and their
denominational affiliations. Having read a number of these
autobiographies myself and recognizing the names of other women
mentioned, I sometimes found myself frustrated in Stanley's book
by the lack of additional information about their lives. I am one
of those people who wants to know all of the stories of their
lives. Stanley is more intrigued by comparing the impact of their
spiritual experiences on the development of what she terms
"the sanctified self," expressed in their work and
writings.
I have just completed a book manuscript on
divine healing in the early Holiness and Pentecostal movements,
utilizing some of these same works. I was disappointed that
Stanley does not explore the healing work of some of these women.
Nor does she indicate which ones eventually experienced speaking
in tongues and moved on to such Pentecostal denominations as the
Assemblies of God or the Church of God (Cleveland, Tennessee). As
an ordained minister within the Church of God (Anderson, Indiana),
a denomination that remained Holiness (along with such groups as
the Church of the Nazarene and the Christian and Missionary
Alliance), Stanley focuses entirely on her subjects' Holiness
connections.
Holy Boldness is an intriguing book.
Stanley has done us all a huge favor in lifting up the lives of
these mostly forgotten women. She helps us think about the impact
of spiritual experience on women's lives and our lives. Hopefully
she will send many of us scurrying to our libraries and onto the
used book Internet sites to find the books these women wrote (I
already have my copy of Mattie Perry's Christ and Answered
Prayer because she lived right here in the upstate of South
Carolina).
If you want to get to know some of those holy
women who form that "cloud of witnesses" who surround us
and cheer us on, I urge you to read Susie C. Stanley's Holy
Boldness.
Reviewer Nancy A.
Hardesty, national coordinator emerita of EEWC, is professor
of religion at Clemson University in South Carolina. She has just
completed a manuscript tentatively titled Faith Cure: Divine
Healing in the Early Holiness and Pentecostal Movements for
Hendrickson Publishers.
© 2002
Evangelical and Ecumenical Women's Caucus
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