Vol. 25, No. 4 |
Winter
(January-March)
2002 |
Leading Ladies:
Transformative Biblical Images for Women's Leadership
by Jeanne Porter
Philadelphia: Innisfree Press, 2000
160 pp., paperback, $13.95.
Reviewed by Beth Ramos
I am one of nine women who founded a faith
sharing/education group in my church two years ago. Our group has
a membership of 70 women of all ages and meets weekly, September
through May. We call ourselves a core group, not a leadership
team. Eight other women serve as small group discussion
facilitators, but are uncomfortable when we call them small group
leaders. Their reasons? "I don't see myself as worthy to be
called a leader." "My faith isn't strong enough."
"I don't know enough." "I'm just a vehicle for God
to do His work."
While reading Leading Ladies , I was
struck by the author's words on page 12 where she extends her
gratitude to her "circle of 'sister ministers'" for
their support. At this point , I decided to buy this book for my
team. In that simple phrase, "sister ministers," I saw
the potential available to us--and to groups of women everywhere--
to grow in faith and a sense of giftedness for the benefit of the
greater community.
Dr. Jeanne Porter is both an Associate
Professor of Communication Arts at North Park University in
Chicago and a teacher in the African American Leadership
Partnership Program at McCormick Theological Seminary. She wrote Leading
Ladies for women like those on my leadership team--ordinary
women doing quiet things to enable others to grow closer to God
and to become the person we are created to be. Porter uses the
stories of four women from the Hebrew Scriptures to demonstrate
four leadership styles and then introduces us to contemporary
women who live out each way of being.
In the introductory brief overview of the
leadership styles (Midwife, Choreographer, Weaver, and
Intercessor), I recognized my "twenty-something"
daughters and their cousins. Kris is a Midwife who gives birth to
dreams in her writing and in her ability to hear and clarify the
dreams of others. Mers, the Choreographer, has danced the ideals
of honesty and beauty in all her relationships since birth. Jen ,
the Weaver is able to get disparate personalities to work
cheerfully toward a common purpose; and Meg, the Intercessor, has
managed, also since childhood, to seek out the poor and empower
them. What's interesting to me is that these young women recognize
themselves as skilled and, when asked, claim their role as a
leader in a community. I'm still trying to figure out which I am,
but I'm just on page 20.
When Porter speaks of leadership, she's
talking about transformative leadership, which she defines
as "freeing people to be who God called them to be and
enabling them to lead according to their God given Gifts." I
read this definition on September 10, and it has stayed with me
since then as the media has named our national leaders and heroes
as men of power (the President) and strength (Colin
Powell), who in the midst of a terrible crisis rise to the
occasion with compassion (Mayor Giuliani). I keep looking for
women in the public eye like the leaders from Scripture that
Porter names for us: Puah and Shiphrah, the Egyptian midwives who
cleverly defied Pharaoh; Miriam, the prophet who with her brothers
Moses and Aaron brought the Hebrew people from Egypt; Deborah, the
Judge, who used her authority to look for alternatives; and
finally Esther, who was the voice for those without one.
While I wait impatiently for women leaders to
surface, Porter gracefully, skillfully, reminds me that they--we--
are already out there going about God's business, quietly
influencing lives. She begins by introducing us to women who have
modeled leadership in her own life such as Granny, her first
pastor, and Maria who has just completed a Leadership program and
is excited about making a difference in her small community. And,
as I read and re-read the anecdotes Porter uses to describe each
leadership style, I recognize the Midwives who mentored me,
Choreographers who led rituals and celebration in many moments of
crisis and joy in my life, Weavers (the woman who initiated my
church group!) and the Intercessors for whom I pray because I just
don't have their kind of courage.
That's another thing I like about this book.
Porter gives one permission to say, "That's not me." And
to say, "I can do that." (On p.112, I discovered I'm a
weaver.) Because each role is unique and necessary to move any
person, any group, any community closer to the Kingdom, no one
type of leader is more important than another, and no one is all
things to all people.
Written in a simple style, well researched and
well organized, this book will be useful for personal reflection,
but I recommend it even more strongly as a resource for leadership
training and retreats. It's difficult to claim ones role as a
leader in the broader Church if one doesn't recognize oneself as a
leader within a small community. By using the series of reflection
questions at the end of each chapter, each member of a small group
studying and praying together will find herself as one among many
coming from a long line of "sister ministers."
As Jeanne Porter has paraphrased Acts 17:1-4:
"As his custom was, Paul went into the synagogue, and on
three Sabbath days he reasoned with them from the Scriptures,
explaining and proving that the Christ had to suffer and rise from
the dead. 'This Jesus I am proclaiming to you is the Christ,' he
said. Some of the Jews were persuaded and joined Paul and Silas,
as did a large number of God-fearing Greeks and not a few of the
leading (ladies)."
Porter's book leaves us with the challenge of
helping each other recognize and use our leadership
gifts.
Reviewer Beth
Ramos became an EEWC member this past year. She is the
Christian Education Coordinator for the UCC/Methodist United
Parish of Upton, Massachusetts and recently participated in the
2001 Women's Leadership Institute at Hartford Seminary under the
direction of Miriam Therese Winter. Beth's review of M. T.
Winter's latest book was published in the summer, 2001 issue of
EEWC Update.
© 2002
Evangelical and Ecumenical Women's Caucus
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