Welcome to Wading in the Waters of the Word™ with A Women’s Lectionary
Gentle Readers, Followers, Preachers, Pray-ers, Thinkers and Visitors, Welcome!
Welcome to this space where you can share your worship – liturgy and preaching – preparations – using A Women’s Lectionary for the Whole Church. We begin in Advent 2021 with Year W, a single, standalone Lectionary volume that includes readings from all four Gospels. (We will continue with Year A in Advent 2022 to align with the broader Church.) In advance of each week, I will start the conversation and set the space for you all. I will come through time to time, but this is your space. Welcome!
Media Resources
A Women’s Lectionary For The Whole Church
Session 1, October 16, 2021
Rev. Wil Gafney, PhD at Myers Park Baptist Church
Plenary 1 | Translating Women Back Into Scripture for A #WomensLectionary
This session introduces participants to frequently unexamined aspects of biblical translation in commonly available bibles and the intentional choices made in “A Women’s Lectionary for the Whole Church.”
A Women’s Lectionary For The Whole Church
Session 2, October 16, 2021
Rev. Wil Gafney, PhD at Myers Park Baptist Church
Plenary 2 | Reading Women in Scripture for Preaching, Study, and Devotion
This session provides an overview of “A Women’s Lectionary for the Whole Church,” its genesis, production, and content. There is also an in-depth exploration of specific passages appointed for specific days including time for public and private reading and discussion.
Lectionary Lectio
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Pentecost 19
The struggle for survival in the ancient world was a bloody business on a good day; add throne games into the mix and the slaughter could be epic. Many of those epic battles – real and imaginary – are churned out for small and large screens and consumed with gusto. Some few women swashbuckle through these productions; their heroines seem far removed from the domesticated and domesticating construct of “biblical womanhood.” Presaging “the good of the many outweighs the good of the one,” this woman rendered anonymous though famous in her time, excised the threat to her community, her children – all of the occupants of her city – brutally.
When read as a human animal, or even as a God figure, she is ensuring the survival of her brood and acknowledging a terrifying reality, that not everyone will survive. Not everyone will be saved. She sits in the throne of judgment and and issues a death sentence. And at the same time, the responsibility for his fate falls on the condemned man who undertook actions he knew carried a death sentence. The terrible choice here is how to save as many as possible – send one to his death. I don’t imagine civil and religious leaders (or by analogy, mothers) having to decide to kill or have killed one of their constituents. But there do come times when a member, family member or friend may and perhaps must be relinquished to a destructive path that leads to death. And therein is wisdom.
Though there are some actions from which there is no coming back, some relationships which cannot be mended; with God there is always the possibility of salvation. The psalm reads as a rebuke to the man who earned his condemnation, but in the last verse offers a way of salvation – setting oneself upon the right road. This hope is chastened by the verdict of the first lesson. There will not always be time to change the course of your life.
The reflection on conflict resolution in the epistle hopes for a less bloody process between believers. Millennia of Christian history have dashed and obliterated, those hopes. Yet the promise is there for an anti-litigous and dare I say, an anti-carceral society. We would have to have leaders as deeply trusted as the mother of her city, whose wisdom was unassailed, whose most painful decision was honored no matter the cost. (It’s worth noting she was not a monarch and did not have an army. Her people were under no compulsion or threat to follow her lead – prior to the insurrectionist threatening to massacre them all. They simply trusted in her wisdom.)
While the gospel has been styled as Jewish rejection of Jesus in some interpretations – an anti-Semitic reading that should be rejected – it displays profoundly human behavior common to all. Every culture has biases. Every person has biases. How could this person from this place be a sage or, in conversation with the other readings, the one voice we trust to make life and death decisions on our behalf? Leadership requires followeship. Healing requires receptivity (or medical compliance in contemporary terms). WIthout the consent of the governed, there is no governance (so they say; that is being severely tested in our time). The disbelief that the heir apparent to the Joseph and Sons Contracting Company™ could truly hold such wisdom and bear such power left Jesus well-nigh powerless and only able to perform a few healings. The city mother had more respect from her people than he did. When he left them, he left them still sick and still dying, effectively cut off from his saving touch, because they would not trust him with their lives. It is not difficult to imagine some dying rather trusting that upstart mama’s boy from Nazareth while spending every last copper penny on medical treatments that were of no avail.
These readings are about discernment and wisdom, wisdom to lead, wisdom to follow, wisdom to trust and, the ancient principle that the way of wisdom is the way of life.
Pentecost 18
This week’s lessons are difficult. They present the incestuous rape of Tamar by her half brother Amnon, the complicity of her cousin who set her up to be raped and, her father’s abandonment of her after the rape. The physical and sexual violence that characterized David became a signature of his dynasty and descendants. I was intentional in including the rape of Bathsheba prior to the rape of Tamar, knowing that it would mean a couple of difficult weeks. The presence of the stories in the Scriptures can and should encourage preachers and congregations to address them from the pulpit in addition to other means of engagement. I emphasize the pulpit because of the power it holds as an instrument of communication between God and her people. At this time when the bodies of women and girls have been targeted by predominantly male legislators and jurists and, constrained from making reproductive and medical healthcare choices with their provider of choice, it is important to discuss the ways in which the female body is not always respected in the Scriptures and how that fails to communicate the value God places on women and girls.
The psalm is in intentional dialogue with the first lesson. The regendering of the psalm presents a loving mother God. Tamar’s mother is not present in her story. Her father does nothing because of his love for his son. But here is God in feminine language, maternal language, who redeems and restores. The psalm emphasizes the vastness of God to heal the broken and forgive the one who does the breaking. In one non-coporeal body, in one galaxy sized heart, resides everything that we need as human beings. Everything to prevent predation should we turn to her and be transformed and everything to cope with depredation when we have been brutalized by those who turn away from the healing and love she offers freely.
The epistle presumes a model of family that is nurturing and loving and uses that model for the apostles and leaders of the early church caring for new believers. That model will unfortunately incorporate the gender hierarchy that characterizes families and the wider society of the time. While there is some benefit to that model, it is also the case that family and home are not safe spaces for all people and, familial language is not always effective in communicating care and inclusion or even as language for God. Here one might talk about all of the ways in which people form lasting caring bonds that meet their spiritual and emotional needs.
Lastly, in the gospel, Jesus presents children as fully formed humans themselves and not simply unfinished people as they were often thought of and treated in the ancient world. Turning common understandings upside down, Jesus taught that it was not adults who were the model for children to grow into but rather children who are the model for adults to grow into if we want to experience the rein and realm and majesty of God.