EEWC Update Newsletter

Vol. 28, No. 2

Summer (July-August) 2004


Blessed the Waters That Rise and Fall to Rise Again
by Nancy A. Hardesty

Echoes from the 2004 EEWC Conference: Saturday night plenary address, PART ONE

Blessed the heron 
     flying in the wind 
Blessed the waters 
     that rise and fall to rise again 
Blessed the generations 
     struggling to be free 
For deep though the sorrow, 
     shining in the soul, 
Life lays a wing shaggy and whole.
 - Carolyn McDade, "Gratitude" 
   From her CD, As We So Love, © Carolyn McDade, 1996 

We speak about subsequent "waves" of feminism. The nineteenth-century first wave was the topic of my dissertation and the book Women Called to Witness. Those women and men worked on some very basic goals. The abolition of slavery and woman's suffrage were the most obvious, but they also struggled for women's right to public secondary and collegiate education. For the first time in American history, last year women outnumbered men on college campuses by a wide margin -- around 34 percent more. Significantly more women also received two-year associate degrees and master's degrees. 

Those early feminists also fought for a mother's right to custody of her children, for women's participation in church governance as well as ordination, for temperance, for raising the age of consent and marriage. Many of these we take for granted; others we're still working on. 

The second wave, during which this organization came into being, was propelled by such secular works as Simone de Beauvoir's The Second Sex and Betty Friedan's The Feminine Mystique; along with Mary Daly's Church and the Second Sex and Beyond God the Father; Virginia Mollenkott's Women, Men, and the Bible; Paul Jewett's MAN as Male and Female; and Letha Scanzoni's and my All We're Meant to Be

The third wave is now in process, exploring new questions, aided by new technologies. The waters rise and fall to rise again. 

Each wave wrestles with its own issues and faces its own opposition. The struggle for full equality for women has not yet been won nor are its gains secure. Within Christianity, one has only to look at evangelical fundamentalism, the Roman Catholic Church, and the Orthodox churches to see the need for continued work. Within American society and around the world, women and children are still very much at risk, despite the courageous work of women leaders everywhere. 

Our Beginnings 

This organization's pre-history began, when in 1973 invitations went out to about fifty people, inviting us to a conference on Evangelicals and Social Concern to meet Thanksgiving Weekend at a rundown YMCA just south of the Loop in Chicago -- actually right down the street from the famed Pacific Garden Rescue Mission. 

At that time, I had just started Ph.D. studies at the University of Chicago Divinity School. I received an invitation because I was the former assistant editor of Eternity magazine and had taught English for four years at Trinity College. I had also taken courses at Trinity Evangelical Divinity School. And I was a woman. Only five or six of us were invited: Sharon Gallagher, editor of Radix magazine; Dr. Ruth Lewis Bentley, an African American sociologist who taught at Trinity and at the University of Illinois Medical Center; Betty Danielson, a social worker from Minneapolis; Chicago black activist Wyn Wright Potter, and Eunice Schatz, director of Chicago's Urban Life Center. 

Men invited included a few of the elder statesmen of evangelicalism, representatives from various major constituencies, and a group of younger and/or more socially aware, emerging leaders. The convening committee -- all male -- had prepared a draft of a statement for the group's consideration. It included lengthy paragraphs on racism, poverty, economic injustice, and militarism, but no mention of women at all. Eventually I raised my hand and pointed this out. A committee -- still all male -- was delegated to redraft a more succinct statement. A member of that committee, Gordon-Conwell seminary professor the late Stephen Mott, leaned across the table and whispered, "Give me something to add to the statement and I'll try to get it in." On a scrap of paper I wrote: "We acknowledge that we have encouraged men to prideful domination and women to passive irresponsiblity. So we call both men and women to mutual submission and active discipleship." 

Pursuing my own romantic interests at the time, I was not present when the new draft was debated. Eunice Schatz carried the cause in that debate -- although she later told me that apparently we women all look alike because Carl Henry kept referring to her as "Nancy." With the minor change of women's "passive irresponsibility" to "irresponsible passivity," my sentences were adopted and became part of The Chicago Declaration. Ron Sider later told me that when Billy Graham was shown the statement, he pointed to those sentences as the reason why he would not sign it. 

At the end of the weekend, an expanded committee was formed to arrange a second meeting. I graciously volunteered to be the token woman on that committee, and when we met to organize ourselves, I again graciously volunteered to be secretary. (As we say in the South, "My Momma didn't raise no fool!") It was clear that they intended to widen the group only slightly, and women and blacks would have limited quotas. The secretary's job included keeping the list and mailing the invitations. Those invited would have to qualify in some way as "evangelical leaders." Among white guys, they wanted to invite those who were "socially progressive." Among African Americans it was hard to find people who cared to be identified as "evangelical." As to women, I think the committee considered the fewer the better. 

But I had no intention of wasting a precious invitation on (1) a woman who could not or would not show up (Thanksgiving Weekend is not a time when most people want to go to a conferences), and (2) a woman who did not think there was a problem with the status quo! So I started making my list and checking it twice, finding out who was naughty and who just wanted to make nice. I called more than a few people, finding women in positions of responsibility, checking out their viewpoints. I called women and said, "What are your plans for Thanksgiving? If invited, will you come?" Slowly my invitation list took shape. And then I had to make a strong case to the rest of the committee for each and every woman on my list. 

My favorite story came out in the women's initial sharing at the conference. I had sent an invitation to Fran Mason, then assistant editor of The Convenant Companion, official publication of the Swedish or Evangelical Covenant Church in Chicago (some of you have read her work under the name "Maggie Mason"). She became an ardent supporter of Daughters of Sarah as well. Anyway, when the invitation arrived in her office, she showed it to her boss. He immediately insisted that there must have been some mistake, that surely the invitation was intended for him! He was still dubious even after she produced the envelope that also had her name and title on it. 

Letha and I had started working together on All We're Meant to Be in the fall of 1969 when I began work at Trinity. We worked on the manuscript for several years and then spent several more years finding a publisher. Word Books finally released the book in August 1974, just prior to the second conference of the group that had drafted the Chicago Declaration, the group which came to be called Evangelicals for Social Action.

The Evangelical Women's Caucus (EWC) Gets Underway 

At this Thanksgiving 1974 meeting, the group decided that after an opening session, participants would divide up into smaller "caucuses" devoted to various topics covered in the Chicago Declaration: racism, poverty, militarism, global economic justice, sexism. Hence, the Evangelical Women's Caucus. All but one or two of the women I invited became part of it. During our caucus sessions, several issues emerged. We called for inclusive language in all Christian education materials, and equal pay for equal work in Christian institutions. We endorsed the Equal Rights Amendment, and made plans to collaborate with the group of Chicago women giving birth to the feminist periodical Daughters of Sarah. At the conclusion, several people from the Washington, D.C. area agreed to host a conference focused entirely on women's issues. Those brave souls included Cheryl Forbes, then an assistant editor at Christianity Today; Heidi Frost, on the staff of Faith at Work; Judy Brown Hull, associated with Broadway Presbyterian Church in New York City; and Karin Granberg [Michaelson] of Wesley Theological Seminary. 

Along with a few more recruits, they put together EWC's first conference over Thanksgiving weekend, 1975, at the YWCA Camp. I have many memories of that conference, but several things stand out. First, we had no ordained women within the evangelical orbit. Second, many of us were just starting out on careers -- Virginia Mollenkott had her Ph.D.; I was working on one; so was Anne Eggebroten.

Looking Back over 30 Years 

When I think back over the past thirty years, what I see is the way that our lives have blossomed. Yes, many of us have followed traditional life patterns. We have been married and reared some wonderful children. Many of us have gotten divorced, been widowed, and sometimes remarried. We have shared life's ups and downs. We have also pursued our other dreams. 

I often tell students that when I graduated high school, the employment ads in newspapers were still divided between "Male Help Wanted" and "Female Help Wanted." In the South they were additionally divided between "Colored" and "White." 

When I graduated from college in 1963, virtually no evangelical seminary was willing to admit a woman to its Master of Divinity program. Absolutely no one ever suggested that I might consider going to seminary -- until I was finishing my Ph.D. in the mid 70s, and then a faculty member at Fuller Seminary told me, "Too bad you don't have a seminary degree because we expect all our faculty members to have one." Over the past thirty years many of those affiliated with EEWC have attended college and gained advanced degrees. Since 1974 many more denominations have ordained women. Half of seminary students these days are women. Several denominations have women bishops. In one denomination, the Universal Fellowship of Metropolitan Community Churches, fully half the clergy are women. In the Presbyterian Church (USA), 27 percent of the clergy are female. EEWC has been blessed with ordained women from many different groups. Early EWC member the Rev. Dr. Susie Stanley has lifted up the Holy Boldness of our foremothers and organized the Wesleyan/Holiness Women Clergy International. Others of us have found our ministries in other vocations -- education, law, writing, publishing, medicine, computer science, finance, counseling, business, social service, and many more fields.

An Elite Organization 

In many ways, EEWC has always been an educated, privileged, elite group of women. We've struggled with that. We've felt guilty about it; we've tried to change it. I think we also need to take pride in the fact that we have worked hard for education, ordination, professional achievements. We have worked hard to prove that Billy Graham was wrong when he told readers of the Ladies Home Journal in 1970 that "wife, mother, homemaker -- this is the appointed destiny of real womanhood." Graham himself would probably revise that statement today in light of the fact that most critics agree that his daughter Anne Graham Lotz inherited his gifts and is the best preacher in the family. 

As privileged women, we have a responsibility to continue to publish, lecture, preach, and speak out professionally with the basic messages of biblical feminism. We need to remind Christian denominations in this country and around the world that ordination of women is a matter of responding to the Holy Spirit's call, not a political marker to distinguish conservatives from liberals. We need to keep reminding people that both women and men, girls and boys, are created in God's image and re-created equally by the grace of God manifested in Christ Jesus. Male domination is a sign of sin, not salvation. All people are called to submit to one another, to love others as themselves. 

I live in South Carolina. The only national category in which my state consistently ranks near the top ( Number Three) is in the number of men who shoot their wives or girlfriends. And the majority of Christians in the state are Southern Baptists, who still argue that wives should "graciously" submit to their husbands. They are defending domestic violence just as surely as they defended chattel slavery 150 years ago. And that includes as well, those Christians who use Proverbs to argue their right to beat their children.

A Comprehensive and Inclusive Vision 

As the members of EWC explored biblical feminism together, it became clear to many of us that feminism was not just about us as women and us as generally very privileged women. With instruction from women of wisdom such as Virginia Mollenkott and Rosemary Ruether, we came to see biblical feminism as a much more inclusive idea, a much more comprehensive and global notion. Patriarchy has many tentacles. And one of its strategies is to divide and conquer, to set women against each other. 

Our Jewish sisters pointed out early and emphatically that especially as evangelicals who said we took the Bible seriously, we could not build our case by arguing that the Jews treated women badly until Jesus came along and set them straight. Jesus was a Jew; Paul was a Jew. Their inclusion of women was not unique or novel but common practice in Jewish Amystical and messianic movements of the first century. The later author of the Pastoral Epistles, the rabbis in the Talmud, and later Church Fathers were the ones who circumscribed women's roles. Christian and Jewish feminists can work together to appropriate the Bible. We learn from each other. 

From the beginning, Evangelicals for Social Action and EWC have made very conscious and consistent efforts to combat white racism and to include African Americans and those of other ethnic groups. We have also respected the rights of other women to articulate their own womanist, mujerista, Asian, and other biblical interpretations and theologies. We have tried to reach out to people of all races and ethnicities. And we admit with regret that we remain all too Euro-American. 

All of us have been very aware of the economic discrimination against women in our society. Despite women's enormous gains in various fields of endeavor, in 1974 women earned less than 60 cents to every dollar men made; today women still earn only 76 cents on the dollar (67.5 cents if you compare all women's wages to those of white men only). Many women still work in blue and pink collar jobs, what we now call the "service sector." According to a recent article, pay equity will not be achieved for another fifty years! This is not just an economic issue, but also a very biblical issue. As John Dominic Crossan and Reta Finger have pointed out, Jesus had a lot to say about economic inequities, and so do other New Testament writers. 

In just the past year we have witnessed women's equality in the military. The line between combat and support troops was erased in a heartbeat for Jessica Lynch, Lori Piestewa, and Shoshanna Johnson. My community buried Kimberly Hampton, a bright and beautiful young woman, a graduate of Presbyterian College, and the first female helicopter pilot to die in combat. A woman general apparently was in command when the prison abuses -- by both male and female soldiers -- took place. Including women in the military has obviously not changed the insidious relationship between patriarchy and militarism. 

From the beginning of this organization it was clear that a biblical feminism must include all issues of both gender and sexuality. We argued that this meant liberation for both women and men, boys and girls. And it began to seem obvious to us, as it had to secular feminists, that "women's liberation" did not just apply to some women and not to others. And not all lesbians are non-believers -- although one must admit that far too many Christian churches are working really hard to make it that way.

Ed. Note: In the second part of Nancy Hardesty's plenary address, presented June 19, 2004 during EEWC's 30th anniversary conference, Nancy tells about EEWC's struggles over questions about homosexuality, the choice of some members to leave the organization, EEWC's continued ministry of inclusiveness, the decision to add another "E" (for ecumenical) to our original name, and challenges and goals for EEWC's future.

Continue to PART TWO of Nancy Hardesty's address.

Nancy Hardesty teaches religion at Clemson University, Clemson, SC. She is the author of numerous books, including Women Called to Witness; Inclusive Language in the Church; and most recently Faith Cure: Divine Healing in the Holiness and Pentecostal Movements; and is coauthor with Letha Dawson Scanzoni of All We're Meant to Be: Biblical Feminism for Today.