| Book Reviews Autumn
2007
This is OUR Story:
Free Church Women's Ministry Janet
Wootton (ed)
Review by Miranda Threlfall-Holmes
NUNS: A History of Convent
Life 1450-1700 Silvia Evangelisti
Review by Sister Rosemary
"Beating the Traffic" – Josephine
Butler and Anglican Social Action on Prostitution Today Edited
by Alison Milbank
Review by Ann Gutteridge
Gilead Marilynne
Robinson
Review by Revd Sarah St Leger Hills
This is OUR Story: Free Church
Women’s Ministry
Janet Wootton (ed)
Epworth Press, 2007, pbk, £16.99, 205pp.
ISBN 978 0 7162 0606 4
THIS BOOK describes the journey to the acceptance (or in some cases
re-acceptance) of women’s ministry in many of the free churches
of the UK. It is fuelled by a sense of irritability — even
sometimes of anger — at the way in which the debate and publicity
about women’s ordination in the Church of England has overshadowed
and often completely ignored the reality of women’s ministry
in other churches. In seeking to redress this balance, ‘This
Is Our Story’ combines two distinct genres of reflection. The
first part consists of a series of essays on issues relating to women’s
ministry in the Free Churches, and the second comprises first-person
stories relating the personal experience and reflections of eleven
female Free Church ministers.
The essays with which the book begins are wide-ranging and extremely
readable. As a historian, I particularly enjoyed the chapter on the
history of women’s ministry in the Free Churches, by Kirsty
Thorpe, which to my shame was almost entirely new to me. Another
essay from which I personally learned a great deal was that examining
the idea of ‘traditional women’s ministries’, by
Cham Kaur-Mann, which surveyed a range of different cultural and
religious world views to show how relative such ideas are. This section
also includes an essay on ‘The grounds of dispute: theologies
of leadership, ministry and ordination and women’s ministry’ by
Jane Craske; ‘Worship and Preaching’ by John Drane and
Olive M. Fleming Drane; ‘Women’s Leadership in the Church
and Feminist Theology’ by Janet Wootton; and ‘The Ordination
of Women and the Ecumenical Movement’ by Jean Mayland. The
latter may be of particular interest to WATCH members, as not only
is it an extremely interesting survey but it is written by our own
Jean Mayland, of the WATCH committee.
The second half of the book consists of a wide variety of personal
stories from female Free Church ministers. I must confess that I
found these to be somewhat variable in interest and readability.
On the other hand, the variety of material covered and forms used
to express it (for example one ‘story’ is told almost
entirely via the author’s own poetry) may also be considered
to be a strength. It certainly illustrates the multifaceted and heterogeneous
nature of Free Church women’s ministry. The experiences that
the women have had of ministry and of being a woman in ministry are
also widely varied. Some have found little difficulty in being a
woman minister, others have had to struggle against opposition and
negativity.
Overall, I found the first half of the book more satisfying and interesting
than the second. This is no reflection on the women’s experiences
recorded there, but rather reflects my ignorance about the Free Churches
of the UK! I therefore learned a great deal from the essays with
which the book began, whilst the stories, though interesting and
often engrossing, did not, I feel, move us on in any very significant
ways. Nevertheless, they are stories that deserve to be told and
heard.
Revd Dr Miranda Threlfall-Holmes is Chaplain and Solway Fellow of
University College, Durham, and a church historian. She is also a
member of General Synod and of the WATCH committee
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NUNS:
A History of Convent Life 1450-1700
by Silvia Evangelisti
Oxford University Press, New York, 2007; Pp301 ( inc 21 Pp of black & white
illustrations)
ISBN 978-0-19-280435-8 £19.99
ANYONE WHO picks up this book hoping for racy anecdotes of scandal
in the cloister will be disappointed; this is serious history,
with copious endnotes and bibliography, though told in an accessible
style with abundant contemporary quotations. It concentrates on
Roman Catholic convents in Western Europe, mainly in Latin countries.
Since for most of this period religious orders were absent from
Britain, readers here may be amazed to discover how integral they
were to society in early modern Europe. For young women from rich
or noble families (and this is an important limitation), the cloister
was effectively the only alternative to marriage, and sometimes
more attractive: to parents, because it was less expensive than
financing a marriage, and provided a convenient haven for surplus
or illegitimate daughters; and often to women themselves, who might
prefer it to the prospect of an oppressive husband and the dangers
of childbirth. Such families tended to treat the convent as an
extension of the family home.
Gifted boys from poor backgrounds at this time might find entrance
to a religious community a road to advancement and a fulfilling
ministry; it gave them the chance of receiving an education, with
the possibility of ordination and even of rising to high office
in the Church. No such opportunity was available for poor girls.
If they entered a convent, they did so in order to perform the
same manual tasks they would have done outside. The class distinctions
of the world were reproduced in the cloister.
The upper-class choir nuns who were set free by this labour were
not necessarily idle; as well as their duties in church, many of
them devoted themselves to literary, musical and artistic work,
often to a high standard, and might be in contact with leading
figures in the arts outside the cloister. The illustrations in
the book — unfortunately in black and white — include
some examples of nuns’ paintings.
The Counter-Reformation produced great growth for women’s
communities, in both numbers and fervour. At the same time the
Council of Trent in its zeal for reform decreed for them strict
enclosure and total submission to male superiors, on the grounds
of women’s frailty of intellect and character. Some nuns
welcomed more secure enclosure, as a safeguard from intrusion and
a protection for their contemplative life, but many were aghast
at their imprisonment. Strong-minded and well-connected abbesses
often resisted indignantly; the better regulated the Church was
in their area, the smaller was their chance of success.
The history of the battle over enforced enclosure makes depressing
reading. Time and time again visionary leaders, like the Englishwoman
Mary Ward, attempted to establish a form of consecrated life for
women in which they could respond to desperate need in society
and serve the local community in an active way, and the hierarchy
always blocked their path.
A particularly sad example of this is found in the story of the
Spanish, Portuguese and French colonies which were being established
at this time. Male Religious, especially Franciscans and Jesuits,
accompanied the colonists, preached Christ to the local people,
helped them with health services and education, and did what they
could to protect them from the brutality and rapacity of the conquerors.
Nuns travelled to the colonies too, and would have liked to play
their part in this heroic endeavour; but they were confined behind
their walls, and could not meet the local people at all.
In the end, ingenuity (and the Holy Spirit?) found a way to circumvent
the restrictions. By not calling themselves nuns, and not making
solemn vows, women managed to form communities following a new
way of consecrated life — teaching, nursing, serving people
where they lived — that set in motion the explosive expansion
of the apostolic religious life which lasted well into the twentieth
century. At last there was another choice for women besides marriage
or the cloister, and it was open to women from the lower classes
too.
Dr Evangelisti has explored a very important aspect of both women’s
history and church history. She allows these silenced women a voice,
by quoting from their own writings. Unlike many writers on monastic
history, she gives credit to foundresses as well as founders — how
many people who know of Vincent de Paul as the founder of the Daughters
of Charity are familiar with the name of Louise de Marillac?
The author’s English style is sometimes awkward, and there
are some irritating proof-reading oversights that should not come
from an academic publisher, but these are minor blemishes. This
is an absorbing account of the lives and struggles of some of our
earlier sisters in the faith. The Church may do its best to frustrate
us, but you can’t keep a good woman down for ever!
Sister Rosemary is an ordained member of the Convent of The Holy
Name in Derby and a member of the General Synod.
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“Beating the Traffic”—Josephine
Butler and Anglican Social Action on Prostitution Today
Editor, Alison Milbank;
Published, Winchester, George Mann Publications, 2007,
Pp 188; ISBN. 978095524154
£10, paperback.
JOSEPHINE BUTLER lived from 1828 to 1906. She campaigned tirelessly
for women’s suffrage, higher education, and employment opportunities
in all trades and professions. Her particular concern was the plight
of prostitutes; her vision was female emancipation both from the
private home and the public brothel. This collection of nine essays
covers reflections on Josephine Butler herself, her spiritual motivation
and her considerable political achievements, and then goes on to
examine her legacy for the present day Christian and feminist approach
to prostitution.
I found this book very inspiring and thought provoking. Josephine
Butler’s conviction that by the grace of God she could be
effective in revealing and changing the injustices which enslaved
prostitutes is very impressive; she used her considerable intellect
in research, activism and public communication; she suffered in
her lonely and unfashionable commitment to the cause of women caught
up in prostitution and was misunderstood by many and vilified and
scorned.
The religious convictions that motivated and empowered such dedication
sprang from childhood experiences of non-conformist worship and
teaching. It is interesting to see the dichotomy between Josephine
Butler’s marriage to an Anglican clergyman and yet her apparent
indifference to the Church, relying far more on her personal reading
of the Bible and private contemplative prayer. Ron Garner in his
paper entitled “Truth before Everything” considers
Josephine Butler’s failure to use and benefit from the resources
of the community of faith and of tradition: “She had little
real allegiance to the established Church, choosing instead from
her early years the solitary way of the pilgrim soul in search
of the truth which would sustain her through life.” Josephine
Butler was however deeply impressed by St. Catherine of Sienna
to the extent that she wrote a biography of her.
Mary Magdalene became for her the model of all women — Mary
was first healed by Christ and then became a witness to his resurrection.
In Christ’s treatment of Mary, Josephine Butler saw the love
for fallen women that became her own vision and gave her an extraordinary
compassion for the wretched and destitute. Christ called Mary by
name and in turn her love for Christ conquered her previous life
of sin — only love can beget true repentance. Josephine Butler
was non-judgemental in her approach to prostitutes whom she regarded
as more sinned against than sinning. She wanted to give back to
abused women their own original divine identity, their dignity,
and a space to regroup and flourish. This led to her founding in
1867 both a House of Rest for sick and indigent prostitutes and
an Industrial Home, offering work to the destitute.
The tragic death in an accident of her five year old daughter impelled
her across the social divide separating her from abused women — she
could say to them, “I understand — I too have suffered.” Her
attitude was one of love and acceptance and of female solidarity.
She saw her role as giving “a voice to the voiceless” and
urged the solidarity of educated women with all other women and
especially with the abused who cannot speak for themselves.
The later essays in “Beating the Traffic” deal with
modern problems of the abuse of women and the lack of worth accorded
to them and with the pastoral care of women in prostitution, striving
to help them recognize their own dignity, worth and potential.
The issue of non-consensuality is considered, especially where
teenagers who have spent their childhood in care go into prostitution.
The challenge is presented to the churches of putting into practice
a loving response to those engaged in the sex industry — recognizing
the ethical and spiritual implications and emulating Josephine
Butler’s approach of rigorous research and analysis. In the
final paper Carrie Pemberton points activists in our country to
examine Swedish legislation with a determination to emulate whatever
may be of benefit here. Hope is the concluding message of the book;
the conviction that modern Christians will be effective in pursuing
social justice and improving the lot of marginalised women when
we see them as sisters and equals and help them to help themselves.
I commend this collection of essays as stimulating and encouraging
and valuable food for thought. I also enjoyed reading them.
Ann Gutteridge is a theology graduate from
Manchester University who practised as a solicitor in Buxton until
retirement. She is a founder of the High Peak Hospice where she
is Company Secretary and worships at St. Peter’s Church in
Fairfield.
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Gilead
Marilynne Robinson
Virago Press in Great Britain 2005 (and reprinted twice).
Hdbk, £14.99 (paperback also available)
Pp282 ISBN 1 84408 147 8
When you have nothing more to say, just drive
For a day all around the peninsula.
The sky is tall as over a runway,
The land without marks, so you will not arrive
But pass through, though always skirting landfall.
This extract from ‘The Peninsula’, part of Seamus
Heaney’s Death of a Naturalist collection of poetry, floated
in my mind as I read Marilynne Robinson’s beautiful prose.
Both seem to be speaking the same language, talking of the same
things, of transcendent grace-filled accounts of what it means
to be alive.
Gilead is a book which reads like poetry, which refuses to be hurried.
The writing is as spare as the little backwater town of the title,
and poignant in its ordinariness. Gilead is narrated in 1956 by
Reverend John Ames, an elderly minister who is coming to the end
of his life, and it takes the form of a letter to his seven year
old son. It is part reminiscence, part advice, and part theological
reflection.
Above all, it is about blessing. John Ames’s life has been
suffused with blessing - but it is a concept in which he has both
struggled and rejoiced. He describes blessing a litter of kittens, ‘I
still remember how those warm little brows felt under the palm
of my hand....The sensation is of really knowing a creature, I
mean really feeling its mysterious life and your own mysterious
life at the same time.’ (p. 26). This ‘really knowing
a creature’ is at the heart of his life, the heart of his
ministry of embodied grace. But he is not pious. John Ames struggles
with feelings of guilt, of making mistakes, of not being enough,
especially in his relationship with his namesake, his best friend’s
son. This relationship is central to the narrative, and provides
the counterbalance to the beauty of the love story between John
Ames and his young wife, his son, and his oldest friend.
Relationship and reconciliation are key in his view of blessing,
and as such, are rooted in Creation and the incarnation. There
are echoes of Jacob and Esau and their father’s mistaken
blessing; of the prodigal son; and of course of the ancient wail, ‘Is
there no balm in Gilead?’ (Jeremiah 8:21). But ultimately
this is a hopeful narrative. Christ seems to appear in the myriad
of intensely beautiful descriptions — of the ‘shimmer
in a child’s hair’; of ‘the dark (as) a great,
cool sea’; of parishioners fixing the TV antenna on the roof, ‘The
young men are terribly interested in these things. It makes them
happy to do a kindness so perilous and exotic in nature.’ (p
144).
Marilynne Robinson’s book draws you into prayer as you read,
almost as in lectio divina. Blessing has the final word as John
Ames is finally able and allowed to bless his name sake.
This book is extraordinary in its quiet grace — to quote
George Herbert — there is indeed here ‘heaven in ordinary’ (from
Prayer 1).
John Ames writes about his town, ‘To me it seems rather Christ-like
to be as unadorned as this place is, as little regarded.’ (p281)
This book should be anything but ‘little regarded’ and
much like the Seamus Heaney poem, is not about arriving, but about
passing through. It is both comforting and disquieting. It draws
you in from the world, but also demands in its Christ likeness
that you take something of your blessing out into the world. John
Ames has the last word: ‘I think there must also be a prevenient
courage (as well as grace) that allows us to be brave — that
is, to acknowledge that there is more beauty than our eyes can
bear, that precious things have been put into our hands and to
do nothing to honour them is to do great harm. And therefore, this
courage allows us, as the old men said, to make ourselves useful.
It allows us to be generous, which is another way of saying exactly
the same thing.’ (p
281)
Revd Sarah St Leger Hills formerly practised as a psychiatrist
and is now a curate in Sheffield. Her research interests are peace
and reconciliation with special reference to South Africa.
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