Vol. 27, No. 4 |
Winter (January-March) 2004 |
Ancient Wisdom from a
Foreign Woman
by Reta Halteman Finger
Since I will be leading the Path on scripture
at our next EEWC conference, how about a little preview?
"Where Wisdom Calls: Crossroads and Open Gates" is quite
a provocative theme for this conference. Was it only coincidence
that I was reading about Her (Wisdom) the same weekend Letha
Scanzoni reminded me that my council column was due? I had just
discovered a fascinating chapter called "Wisdom for the
Powerful" in a book by Richard Bauckham titled The Bible
in Politics: How to Read the Bible Politically.1
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Proverbs 31:1-9 (NRSV)
The words of King Lemuel, king of Massa. An
oracle that his mother taught him: No, my son!
No,
son of my womb! No, son of my vows!
Do not give your
strength to women,
Your ways to those who destroy
kings.
It is not for kings, O Lemuel, it is not for
kings to drink wine,
Or for rulers to desire strong
drink;
Or else they will drink and forget what has
been decreed,
And will pervert the rights of all the
afflicted.
Give strong drink to one who is
perishing, and wine to those in bitter distress;
Let
them drink and forget their poverty,
And remember
their misery no more.
Speak out for those who cannot
speak, for the rights of all the destitute.
Speak
out, judge righteously, defend the rights of the
poor and needy. |
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Many of us may know about the superwife in
Proverbs 31:10-31 -- written from a man's perspective-- but less
about the preceding nine verses which comprise the wisdom of a
woman! She is the mother of King Lemuel, and apparently he
remembered and wrote down what she had taught him.
This queen's advice to her son calls for the
wise use of power for the good of his people. In brief, it
includes three things: 1) Don't fool around (sexually) with women;
2) don't get drunk; and 3) "defend the rights of the poor and
needy." In fact, over half of the text concerns treatment of
the poor and powerless. "Speak out for those who cannot
speak" (v 8). "Judge righteously" (v 9). "It
is not for kings to drink wine. . .or else they will drink and
forget what has been decreed, and will pervert the rights of all
the afflicted" (v 5).
But advice from this mother is extraordinary
not only because she is female but also because she is not an
Israelite. Bauckham cites other sources to identify her as the
queen mother of the Arab kingdom of Massa in northeastern Arabia.
This text, then, provides a fine example of the international
character of wisdom literature. By that I mean that it is not
dependent on a special revelation from Yahweh and is not part of
Hebrew salvation history, as is most of the material in the law
and prophets of the Hebrew Bible. As an example of wisdom
literature, Proverbs 31:1-9 teaches ethics of the sort that is
available to all human beings regardless of their religious
beliefs.
Nevertheless, Lemuel's mother's advice does
dovetail with many biblical texts from the law and prophets, which
are presented as coming directly from Yahweh. "You shall not
pervert the justice due to the poor in their lawsuits,"
asserts the legal material in Exodus 23:6. "Thus says the
Lord," thunders the prophet Jeremiah in 22:3, "Act with
justice and righteousness and deliver from the hand of the
oppressor anyone who has been robbed. And do no wrong or violence
to the alien, the orphan, and the widow."
Like much of the international wisdom
literature of the time, part of the job description of Israelite
kings was to have pity on the poor, weak, and needy, to redeem
them from oppression and violence (Psalm 72:12-14). Our culture
today does not have a monarchy comparable to King Lemuel's, and we
have institutional structures aimed at giving weaker members some
voice in the political process to prevent the corruption of
justice. Unfortunately, much in our political justice and tax
systems today seem to be working against the needs of the less
fortunate. Using an image from Lemuel's mother, we see too many
powerful corporations get drunk on their profits and "pervert
the rights of all the afflicted."
A recent issue of Business Week
reported that the gross economic inequalities that existed in our
country in the early twentieth century are now returning. Since
1972, the income of the bottom 90 percent of American taxpayers
has fallen by 7 percent. In contrast, the income of the top
1 percent rose by 148 percent; income of the top .1 percent rose
by 343 percent, and that of the top .01 percent rose by 599
percent (excluding capital gains). It now takes the wages of 600
average workers in a company to equal the salary of its top
executive, whereas in 1982 it took the wages of 42:1 workers.2
With the lack of adequate health care and
child care, with over-priced and insufficient housing, with tax
laws favoring large corporations and the disappearance of jobs
providing entry to the middle class, it becomes harder and harder
for working class people to move up the socio-economic ladder.
Single mothers are especially hard-hit at a time when two incomes
are almost a must in order to remain in the middle class. Adding
insult to injury, a recent study by the federal General Accounting
Office shows that women's wages, which had been rising in relation
to men's, are once again dropping, now down to 79 percent of men's
wages.3
Does the church care about this? Is it paying
attention to the more than 80 references to care of the poor in
the biblical texts? The same weekend I was reading "Wisdom
for the Powerful," a surprising feature came on CBS's Sixty
Minutes. Ed Bradley interviewed Tim LaHaye and Jerry Jenkins
on the growth of the Religious Right as a result of the astounding
popularity of their "Left Behind" novels. The fictional
aspect of these books faded away as they and their enthusiastic
followers affirmed their absolute belief in the upcoming Rapture
which they hope to experience in their lifetime. All you need is
"a personal relationship with Jesus," and then you will
be secretly snatched up to heaven to avoid the horrific
tribulations punishing the unbelievers left behind on the
earth
Aside from its twisted, unbiblical foundation,
and aside from the appalling sexism promulgated by the Religious
Right and which pervades the "Left Behind" novels, this
dispensational Rapture theology expresses no particular concern
for economic justice. Although I don't doubt that some individual
fundamentalists work on behalf of the poor, their impetus does not
come from their theology. Rather, LaHaye and Jenkins come across
as exclusive, other-worldly, and future-oriented. Their major
concern (besides making money?) is getting more people into the
"salvation lifeboat" ready to fly away to heaven and
leave the earth and the rest of humanity on the tribulation-laced
road to hell.
What a far cry from biblical and international
Wisdom literature like Proverbs 31:1-9, which expresses concern
for ethical behavior in the here and now! In the spirit of this
text, I happily affirm our conference theme of Wisdom calling at
the crossroads and open gates of the world. And how appropriate to
have a strong interfaith component among the planned activities. A
passion for justice is shared by many feminists beyond the
Christian faith, and we need to work with them "to speak out
for those who cannot speak, for the rights of all the
destitute" (v.8).
I do have a nagging unease, however. Biblical
feminists have often expressed a concern for the oppressed and
powerless in the world, most of whom are women and their dependent
children. Yet it is probably true that some women who most need to
hear wisdom calling at the crossroads of life will not be at our
conference because they cannot pay for it. As income and
educational gaps widen in this country, EEWC may have to more
seriously reckon with women's issues as they relate to economic
realities.
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Notes: |
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1. |
Richard Bauckham is University Lecturer
and Reader in the History of Christian Thought, University
of Manchester, Manchester, England. The Bible in Politics is
published by Westminster/John Knox, 1989. |
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2. |
Aaron Bernstein, "Meritocracy and
Equal Opportunity Are Fading Fast," Business Week,
December 1, 2003. |
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3 |
Luchina Fisher, "Year Ends with
Wider-than-ever Wage Gap," Women's Enews. December 30,
2003. |
Reta Halteman
Finger, one of EEWC's Southeast representatives, lives in
Harrisonburg, VA and teaches Bible at Messiah College, Grantham,
PA. She will be leading the Path on "Grounding in
Scripture" at the EEWC Conference in Claremont, CA, June
17-20, 2004.
© 2004 Evangelical and Ecumenical Women's Caucus
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