Vol. 24, No. 2 |
Summer 2000 |
The Story of Ruth: Twelve
Moments in Every Woman's Life
by Joan Chittister,
with art by John August Swanson.
Grand Rapids, MI: Wm. B. Eerdmans Pub. Co, 2000,
xii + 92 pages, hardcover.
Reviewed by by Kathryn L
Pigg
I began the book, The Story of Ruth, Twelve
Moments of Every Woman's Life at a period in my life which I
was calling "life review." I was drawn to it by an
interest in the biblical book of Ruth and by my own belief that
art and ideas together have great power.
This is a visually beautiful book as well as
being beautiful in its message. Artists are often among the
invisible in our society, and giving attention to the process by
which artist John August Swanson worked is an important aspect of
the character of the book and the character of its author.
I approached this wonderfully small volume as
the perfect accompaniment for the personal retreat I had in mind.
I planned to pick it up, see what stage I was in and proceed in
the usual linear style that life seems to suggest to us. Then in
the process I discovered that although the story of Ruth has a
linear plot, there is no beginning, middle, or end for the wisdom
in this book. Wherever I read, I could identify personally with
what was happening with Naomi and Ruth. Chittister brings the
ancient text close to home and close to world systems as they are.
Sometimes closer than is comfortable!
In her foreword, the author states this clear
word , "In the Book of Ruth, the Word of God takes a position
on women that defies the social tradition, in this day as well as
in that one." Her biblical exegesis calls on the work of
contemporary women scholars of the Bible as well as men.
The story of Ruth clearly needs the woman's
voice to be understood in our time or it will fall back into the
voice of patriarchy, still active in society and religion today.
The ultimate religious questions of redemption make new
connections for us today through this story. And the biblical book
of Ruth, Chittister says is as much about the redemption of Boaz
and the nation, about the family and the culture, about the next
generation of men and the next generation of women, about the
righteousness of religion and the salvation of religiosity, about
us and the disjointed world we take for granted, as it is about
the redemption of Ruth and Naomi. It is a book about women helping
women to break the isolation of powerlessness that affects every
other man, woman, and child alive.
Early in the book, the author calls the work,
"Your story and mine" setting the context as a communal
one. In the text of the Bible story, which begins each of the
twelve chapters, Chittister recognizes these twelve moments: Loss,
Change, Transformation, Aging, Independence, Respect, Recognition,
Insight, Empowerment, Self-Definition, Invisibility, and
Fulfillment.
Each of the chapters, based on one of these
moments, is rich with wisdom and insight. I can envision a group
of women reading the book chapter by chapter and discussing it
together, sharing their stories, evoked by the text and pictures,
as well as becoming sensitive to the struggles of other women in
the world who experience systemic oppression and seek to make the
world better for all people.
Even as I read it privately I felt connected
to the many women who have shared my life and my struggles to, in
Chittister's words, "move beyond the stereotypes and the
social barriers to fullness of life and wholeness of
being."
This is a book of distilled wisdom. For me,
the moment called "Aging" was especially poignant. It is
certainly part of my life review at this period in my life.
Reading and responding to the words here was invigorating. Also
challenging. No rose-colored glasses here as the author writes,
"Yet, of all the people unheard from in our society, it is
still the older woman whose voice is missing most."
But in Naomi, Chittister sees no dispenser of
victim mentality. She says of Naomi:
She stands at the
gates of the city of Bethlehem, newly returned to the place of
her birth, broadly experienced and immensely wiser than her
peers. She has known death and gone on living. She has been
struck down and refused to quit. She has looked square into the
face of a bleak future and determined to shape it herself. She
has challenged God as did the patriarchs before her and come
back from an emotional grave as proof to the rest of us that God
is not a noun, God is a verb.
Thanks be to God for the character and witness
of Naomi and Ruth, and for the character and witness of Joan D.
Chittister and John August Swanson in this small invigorating,
empowering book.
Reviewer Kathryn L.
Pigg is an ordained United Methodist pastor in Suffolk, VA. Her
art and poetry have appeared in previous issues of EEWC Update.
© 2000
Evangelical and Ecumenical Women's Caucus |