Vol. 27, No. 3 |
Fall (October-December) 2003 |
Contemporaneity
"the quality of belonging to the same period of
time"*
by Letha Dawson Scanzoni
One Christmas a number of years ago, my son
Dave and I were visiting my mother in Florida. At the time, David
was a 19-year old university student, I was in my mid-40s, and
Mother was in her late 70s. As we were driving to a drugstore to
pick up Mom's heart medicine and diabetic supplies, she started
telling us how nice her pharmacist was. "And he has six
children," she informed us. Then, with a sense of amazement,
she added, "And mind you, he's no older than we
are!"
For an instant, there was total silence as we
all realized what had just happened. Mother had simply forgotten
how old she was -- or how old we were. It was as though we were
just a group of friends in a car together, all experiencing the
same moment in time. And in that sense, we were all the same age!
Dave called out, "Way to go, Grandma!" And we all
laughed.
I think about that incident when I think of
the wide range of ages within EEWC's membership and leadership.
Alena Amato Ruggerio, still in her 20s, served ably as EEWC's
coordinator throughout 2003. Jeanne Hanson, EEWC's central office
manager, recently celebrated her 75th birthday. (See Jeanne's
article in this issue of EEWC Update.) We have older
members who have been with us for a long time and are now in their
80s. And we have young members, such as Sarah Oesch who have just
come onboard. (See Sarah's
review essay also in this issue of EEWC Update.) In
between, we have members all along the age spectrum.
Over the past year, three of us have been
engaged in a weekly Bible study through a phone plan that provides
such 3-way calls at no extra charge. One of us is on the East
Coast, one on the West Coast, and one in the Midwest. One was born
in 1935, another in 1955, and the third in 1975. But in our weekly
phone get-togethers, we don't even think about these 20-year age
spreads. We simply relate as sisters in Christ, united by our
feminism, our concerns for social justice, our desire to learn
more about the Bible, and our yearning to draw closer to
God.
Chronological age doesn't make much difference
in EEWC. Older members learn from the fresh perspectives of the
younger members, and younger members learn from the life
experiences of older members, many of whom also know a great deal
about EEWC's history.
The key is contemporaneity. We're all
living at this particular moment in time with all its challenges
and all its opportunities. And like my son, mother, and me in that
car long ago, all of us in EEWC are on the same journey together,
enjoying one another's company along the way.
An attitude of contemporaneity is important
for at least two reasons. One is to counter the notion that
"third wave" and "second wave" feminists must
be at odds -- that a feminist "generation gap" is
inevitable and often bitterly divisive. Alena Amato Ruggerio
discussed this in her article "God's
Grrrl: Biblical Feminism and the Secular Third Wave" in
the Winter 2001-2002 EEWC Update.
But a second reason for practicing
contemporaneity is that it's a statement of resistance against the
ageism in our society. (See Marie Shear's excellent review of Learning
to be Old: Gender, Culture, and Aging by Margaret Cruikshank
in the January, 2004 issue of the Women's Review of Books.)
In the words of a Holly Near song, "We
are young and old together, and we are singing for our
lives." Every one of us matters in EEWC. Such an attitude can
go a long way toward removing the fear of growing older.
This point was driven home forcefully to many
of us this past October when we read that the feminist author
Carolyn Heilbrun, sometimes called the mother of academic
feminism, had committed suicide at age 77. In her book, The
Last Gift of Time: Life Beyond Sixty, though generally a
positive view of her life as an older person, Heilbrun
nevertheless stated her belief that we should choose the time of
our deaths rather than waiting for the mental and physical decline
that she associated with aging and then being too feeble to end it
all. She shocked her readers by revealing that she had originally
planned to set a date to commit suicide upon reaching age 70 but
had changed her mind as she looked back on her 60s and was
surprised to have found that decade quite pleasurable.
When apparently without warning, she took her
life at age 77 -- even though still healthy, vigorous, and highly
esteemed for her work -- most of her admirers were shocked,
grieved, even angered, and wondered how they might have prevented
her death. Some, on the other hand, considered it an ultimate act
of strength and will on Heilbrun's part, a carrying out of the
resolve she had earlier written about. But in an article in the
December 28, 2003 issue of The New York Times, author Katha
Pollitt raises an important question by asking, "Is it
selfish for me to have wanted Heilbrun to set an example of how to
age -- as a writer, a woman, a feminist?"
We live in an age that worships youth, and
women in particular need positive examples of how to age. As
feminists, and especially as Christian feminists, we have already
learned to question and challenge the prevailing values of our
society, including notions of beauty as promoted by the
advertisement and entertainment industries and the obsession with
youth that stereotypes and devalues older people.
EEWC, with its mix of young and old and every
age in between, and its sense of contemporaneity -- we're all in
this together at the same time and place in history and each of us
has something to contribute -- provides countless opportunities
for demonstrating what it means to be a feminist and Christian at
any age.
The oldest speaker we ever had was at the 1980
EEWC conference in Saratoga Springs, NY when Rev. Victoria Booth
Demarest, granddaughter of the founders of the Salvation Army,
gave a rousing and powerful sermon at the age of 91. Years before,
when she was 74, Victoria had written a poem entitled, "I Am
Thy Prophet Still," in which she had asked God for more
opportunities to serve, saying that once it was gender that tried
to silence her preaching but now it was age. "The years, the
years -- and people say, 'Too old, you are too old.'" Her
poem went on to say she was better equipped for ministry than
ever, that she had so much to offer at this time of life when her
soul had "matured by knowledge and by pain." (To her
dying day, Victoria never forgot EEWC's invitation to speak, and
she bequeathed her Bible to our organization.) At that same
conference, 64-year-old Dr. Susan B. Anthony II, grandniece of the
suffragist, provided us with another link to history. EEWC has
always sought to honor those who have gone before us and to hold
up positive examples of aging.
Perhaps Carolyn Heilbrun's suicide struck me
particularly because it occurred as I realized I was now at the
age my dad had been when he died of a sudden heart attack years
before. That age seemed so "old" and far off then!
Shortly before his death, he had told me he wished he were younger
because there was so much more he wanted to do. I don't wish I
were younger, but I echo his feeling of wanting to do so much
more. As Jeanne Hanson points out in her article, this yearning to
keep doing worthwhile work, learning, and looking forward to the
future seem to be key factors in a positive experience of aging.
EEWC provides companions and role models along the way.
* Definition from the Hyperdictionary,
a useful free online resource
Letha Dawson
Scanzoni is editor of
EEWC Update and the EEWC website. She is the author or coauthor
of eight books, including two coauthored with other EEWC members:
All We're Meant to Be: Biblical Feminism for Today (with Nancy
Hardesty, first published in 1974, with revised editions published
in 1986 and 1992) and
Is the Homosexual My Neighbor? A Positive Christian Response
(with Virginia Ramey Mollenkott; 1978; revised, updated, and
expanded, 1994).
© 2003 Evangelical and Ecumenical Women's Caucus
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