Vol. 25, No. 4 |
Winter
(January-March)
2002 |
Wisdom Ways: Introducing Feminist Biblical
Interpretation
by Elisabeth Schussler Fiorenza
Maryknoll, NY: Orbis Books, 2001
229 pages, paperback, $20.00
Reviewed by Alena Amato
Ruggerio
One of the elite Christian feminist
theologians currently engaging in the highly specialized academic
conversation about gender roles and the Bible is Elisabeth
Schussler Fiorenza. She is a prolific author, famous for
groundbreaking work in feminist theological scholarship; and I
know her activism has touched many members of the Evangelical and
Ecumenical Women's Caucus personally. Aware that Christian
feminism must be accessible on many different levels, Elisabeth
Schussler Fiorenza presents us with Wisdom Ways, a book
intended as a basic introduction to biblical interpretation for
feminist activists, beginning Bible readers, and undergraduate
students.
Although Wisdom Ways is a profound work
that's not easy beach reading, Fiorenza writes in a clear,
straightforward style, mapping out a woman-focused biblical
spirituality based on the idea of Wisdom as feminine.
She tells us that as she watched sunlight
sparkle on the ocean waves (4), she was inspired with the imagery
of feminine Wisdom as a spiral dance. The circling dance--with its
connotations of process, fluidity, art, beauty, and energy
--symbolizes Fiorenza's method of interpreting scripture. By
listing ways to overcome the roadblocks that the hermeneutical
dancer might encounter along her spiral journey (54-74), Fiorenza
provides a toolkit of approaches to sacred text.
To push aside Roadblock 1, we dancers must
reclaim the word "feminism." At a time when many people
reject the label feminist, and womanists and mujeristas and
postcolonialists have been critiquing bourgeoisie white U.S.
feminism for twenty years, it is time to redefine the popular
understanding of what feminism stands for. For Fiorenza, that
definition is political and can be summed up in the bumper
sticker slogan, "Feminism is the radical notion that women
are people."
Once the category of feminism has been
clarified, then Roadblock 2, the misconceptions about who can be a
feminist, can be challenged. Fiorenza starts by explaining the
place of men in her interpretive framework, but moves beyond
male-female dualisms to challenge our monolithic sense of sex.
Consequently, throughout her writings, Fiorenza refers to wo/men
written in this broken form to denaturalize and de-essentialize
such a diverse category.
Dancing around Roadblock 3 involves
understanding the multivocality of feminisms. Fiorenza presents an
entire array of feminist options including postmodern feminism,
postcolonial and global diversity feminism, and her own category,
critical liberationist feminism (59). Fiorenza's approach to
feminism seeks to create an "emancipatory grassroots
democratic ethos" (81), in which we do not just point out the
injustice of the oppressors, but also create a consciousness of
transformation through understanding that all injustice is
interconnected. Fiorenza looks to the Bible as a site where these
interrelated power struggles play out, and also as the site where
many people seeking emancipation find their liberation. Hence, her
version of Christian feminism is a counter to kyriarchy,
her term for the combination of patriarchy and the overlapping
power of social locations.
Overcoming Roadblock 4, the desire to flee
Christianity entirely that some people feel when they consider the
inherent patriarchy in the Bible, will be a familiar process to
readers of EEWC Update. Fiorenza argues that not all
feminists can abandon Christianity as a lost cause. The Bible must
be regarded as important to feminists, even if one does not
embrace its sacred authority, because of the way it affects the
material conditions and inner lives of women across the
globe.
Roadblock 5 along the path to Wisdom is the
belief that there is no practical application for feminist
biblical hermeneutics. We can counter with the rhetorical
understanding that all reading, whether originating in the ivory
tower or not, is interpretation, and that some of the misogynistic
interpretations of the Bible offered in popular media and
conservative evangelicalism need to be countered with careful
scholarship.
We will not dance with divine Wisdom until the
oversimplifications about the Bible, or Roadblock 6, are
productively complicated. Fiorenza reminds us that the Bible is
not a single coherent unit; it is a collection of books, a
collection of translations, even a collection of different
canonical traditions. How can we understand the Bible as
Christians in our Western culture without acknowledging its deep
connections to the East, to Judaism, and to Islam? When Christian
feminists open up a space to question prevailing interpretations
of the Bible, we are challenging Roadblock 7, which is fetishizing
the Bible. According to Fiorenza, bestowing the Bible with so much
authority that one cannot interrogate it in light of kyriarchy is
to worship the text as an idol. No interpretation that supports
oppression is sacred.
It is possible that Roadblock 8 is where
Fiorenza's emancipatory hermeneutic and EEWC's brand of biblical
feminism part company. She asserts that arguing for any single
correct meaning of scripture is impossible, since there are so
many hermeneutic paradigms that would lead one to opposite
understandings of the same words. Pages 37-49 describe an array of
interpretation strategies, ranging all the way from the
Doctrinal-Revelatory Paradigm, which accepts the plenary
inspiration of the dictated word of God as the model for the
church faithful throughout the ages, to the
Rhetorical-Emancipatory Paradigm, which analyzes the text for the
power it has to sanction and/or challenge material
oppression.
I am concerned that this pluralistic approach
to spiritual empowerment locates Fiorenza outside the boundaries
of evangelical biblical feminism. Granted, biblical feminists
never did embrace scripture unquestioningly, but it's still
important to note that Fiorenza's writings are further left on the
Christian feminism continuum than some of our members would be
comfortable with.
Roadblock 9 is so detailed that I'll return to
it after discussing Roadblock 10, the emotional toil of
approaching these sometimes painful biblical texts. So many of us
were socialized not to question prevailing misogynistic readings
of the Bible that to challenge complementarianism takes an immense
amount of courage. Fiorenza talks also of the difficulty of facing
the horror stories of the treatment of women in Biblical times and
today in many different cultures. It takes emotional strength to
dance in Wisdom's spiral.
Finally, in prevailing over Roadblock 9,
Fiorenza lays out the elaborate movements of her emancipatory
paradigm dance toward Wisdom (pages 169-189). Each of these
movements described below is circular rather than linear,
interconnected rather than discrete.
The hermeneutics of experience requires
us to value women's perspectives of exclusion and silencing (in
all their diversity) as a priority when reading the Bible. The hermeneutics
of domination and social location unmask the ideology of
reading by asking what are the social, political, economic, and
religious structures of domination in the biblical text and in the
modern interpretations. Then, the hermeneutics of suspicion
challenges the blind respect, acceptance, and obedience for the
divine authority of the Bible that so many Christians have
internalized as part of their socialization. In place of this
wholesale acceptance, the hermeneutics of critical evaluation
lets us judge the text as authoritative or not based on its
function as emancipatory.
To continue, the hermeneutics of creative
imagination encourages us to imagine the material world we're
shooting for. We retell biblical stories (such as the Midrash on
Myriam by Chris Schussler-Fiorenza on page 179) and make up new
stories to reflect our ideal vision of justice. The hermeneutics
of re-membering and reconstruction brings to life the reality
of thousands of years and different cultures. But that retelling
of stories in modern form fosters an awareness of the rhetorical
constructions of the storytellers. Lastly, Fiorenza describes the hermeneutics
of transformative action for change, her final destination in
the struggle to envision the Bible as a means of emancipating the
women of the world. Using these interconnected strategies,
Fiorenza arrives at her critical feminist hermeneutics of
liberation.
I wish I had created a reading group to
discuss the book, so that we could work together through the
reflection exercises and writing prompts at the end of each
chapter. Fiorenza calls this creating the circle--making a space
to dance together in the "ekklesia of wo/men," her term
for the radical democratic assembly of the daughters of God. She
also mentions connections to her other books at the end of each
chapter, and provides a basic library of Christian feminist
theology in an appendix.
Fiorenza appears to have written this book in
community as well, as she frequently credits in the footnotes
students in her workshops and classes who provided ideas and study
questions. In this way, she models the very community of women in
theological conversation she advocates in her writing. Indeed,
Elisabeth Schussler Fiorenza models an exciting vision of
emancipatory feminist hermeneutics for all of us, regardless of
the expertise in biblical interpretation we brought to our reading
of Wisdom Ways.
Reviewer Alena
Amato Ruggerio is helping to plan the 2002 conference in
Indianapolis. She is a communication instructor, dissertator, and
associate administrator at Indiana University, Bloomington, and
has just been awarded this year's prestigious Lieber Memorial
Teaching Associate Award.
© 2002
Evangelical and Ecumenical Women's Caucus
|