eBook - ePub
Bone of My Bones
Gaw,
About this book
Bone of My Bones fictionalizes a Biblical equality and mutuality. The "complementarian" debate usually focuses on the realm of theory, and stereotypes the lived experience and the people who suffer from the contemporary Church's brand of sexism. This novel fleshes out many popular gender ideas, and explores how and why these conflict with Biblical truth.
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Yes, you can access Bone of My Bones by Gaw in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Literature & Literary Criticism. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
Information
Chapter 1
There is neither Jew nor Gentile, neither slave nor free, nor is there male and female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus.
āGalatians 3:28
She felt she achieved an insight into her new culture when Nora learned that the largest bookstore in Poplar was Firm Foundation Christian Books. The fact related to the astonishing number of Baptist churches in the small town coexisting with almost every other denomination she knew. She pulled into its generous parking lot from the main highway coming into town from the south. It was situated in her least favorite part of town, where the box stores and fast food chains congregated, and where pedestrians were practically prohibited. Cyclists who shopped in the area constantly risked serious bodily harm. The surroundings contrasted with the old downtown she and Luke so enjoyed. Firm Foundation comfortably neighbored a Walmart big box on one side and a Loweās home improvement store on the other.
She was here because the moving van was missing an important box when it arrived in Poplar. The most difficult decisions in the moving process had been about books. The library was the heart of their old home and the room in which they spent the most time. It had floor-to-ceiling, built-in bookcases on three walls and both their desks on the other. The new house had only two small bookcases, and the moving company charged by the pound. Books arenāt light. Noraās extensive collection of childrenās literature was divided up for the grandchildren, and only the most useful and important of the other volumes had been boxed to bring across the country. She had missed the box marked āBible Referenceā even before the movers left. Their inventory checklist confirmed her disappointment. The box next to item #267 was not ticked, and the truck was empty. Todayās errand was to estimate the cost of replacing item #267, but it was not replaceable. Her Strongās concordance, for example, had been given to her by her father, and its copious marginal notes begun when she was thirteen years old. Her Kittelās New Testament dictionary was safely on the shelf in the new house because those ten volumes had filled a box of their own. She always found it difficult to consider her New Testament dictionary, especially when she had Galatians 3:28 on the back burner. Here was a brilliant man and a great scholar of the New Testament who could interpret Paulās letter to the Galatians and enthusiastically and anti-Semitically support the Nazis. The text had not been the problem, but the cultural blind spot of the man. Dr. Schaeffer had several times reminded her that all of us have blind spots that we bring to the Scripture. But Nora prayed with all her heart that God would make her a Bonhoefferānot a Kittel.
She missed the Keyword Study Bible that Luke had given her soon after Blythe was born, her old Greek and Hebrew Lexicons, and other basic tools. Hmmm . . . maybe she should start doing even more research online? Others felt they saved time, but she didnāt think she could. The lost books were places, not digital spaces, where she could immediately find what she needed. Books didnāt get viruses or glitches. They didnāt bombard one with advertising in the privacy of oneās own desk. One only had to learn to use them once. They didnāt suddenly disappear for a mysterious reason. She was very thankful for the convenience and vastness of the private academic databases on the library website, but she loved her books more. Why did she feel the loss of her books so much when research experiences in cyberspace were open to her? After all, her books could disappear from a moving van. Perhaps she was the technological stick-in-the-mud her children thought her?
Looking through her windshield, Nora explored her ambivalence to entering the store as she looked at the facade. It was a well-designed, timber frame, three-story, mountain style building with beautiful stonework, huge timbers and three-story-high open beams. Why didnāt she like going to these places? It contained many expressions of the gospel she loved. It encouraged and supported many local churches and promoted worship, concepts dear to her heart.
American culture seemed always to press faith into an isolated cubby entitled āReligion,ā and this business, perhaps because it was a business, seemed to challenge that marginalization. If oneās child had been asking for a new puzzle, one might choose one of Jonah and the whale or Noahās ark rather than SpongeBob Square Pants or a Disney character. The choice itself seemed to break down barriers between faith and daily life. Nevertheless, she knew the feeling of rejection she was likely to encounter. She anticipated that old feeling of being out of sync with the church, of somehow not belonging properly to Christās body, indeed, of not being seen as fully human.
Sure, there were cultural gaps. The store was far too upscale to reconcile with the poor church she loved in Kenya. It was too open for the persecuted church she loved in Uzbekistan. It was too individualistic for the liturgy and High-Church aesthetics she loved when she was working on her PhD in the Church of Wales. And no city the size of Poplar in Western Europe could financially support such a business with their tiny percentage of evangelical Christians. The irrelevance reached far deeper. For in these sorts of expressions of Christianity, she always felt rejected for who she was. She foresaw the oncoming dissonance between her identity and her spiritual community. She prepared herself for the nice, passive, silent onslaught with Galatians 3:28.
Last week Nora had read another ācomplementarianā defend the passage from āthose evangelical feministsā who used it as a āpanacea.ā But the argument had seemed hopelessly weak. The more she studied the passage in context, the better it made her feelānobody could deny that. It seemed to Nora a clarion call to unity with profoundly panacean tendencies, indeed, a cultural cure-all. She was a female person united to Christ, and that qualified her to claim the promises in the text and establish her unique place in the body of Christ. Something else about the passage could not be denied, and that was that it was a parallelism. Whatever the nature of the differences in the classes of people and its divisiveness in the church, it was the same for Jews and Gentiles, people on the low and high ends of the socioeconomic ladder, and men and women. If it was clearly wrong for one antonymic class of people, it would be wrong for all three. And if it was right for a contrasting class, it would be right for the other two.
After four more recitations of Galatians 3:28, she exited the four-wheeled confines of her personal space, clicked the padlock icon on her Subaru key, and entered the zeitgeist of Contemporary American Christianity and one milieu of her faith.
The dramatic wood and glass doors opened automatically into a three-story foyer toward the back of which ran a U-shaped service counter with several clerk stations. A broad oaken double staircase rose to the second floor from behind the counter. A middle-aged woman with excellent taste in clothes and make-up, greeted her with a friendly, āGood morning, may I help you find anything?ā
āPerhaps you could point the way to your reference section?ā asked Nora as she pulled a clipboard out of her backpack.
āReference works are on the third floor at the back of the store. Another associate is up there. There is an elevator there if you prefer.ā She motioned to an alcove behind and under the staircase.
Nora headed up the stairs with a simple, āThank you.ā
On her way up the stairs she noticed that the large room to the right of the foyer with many rows of stacks had a sign above its entrance that said, āWomen.ā So, when she got to the back of the third floor, she looked for a sign of the same design that said, āBible Reference.ā
Expecting a sign over the top of the doorway like āWomen,ā a few minutes passed before she found her objective. The sign was waist high because the reference section only covered the bottom three shelves of the small stack. Nora sighed with disappointment and stared at the miniscule collection. She sat down on the floor to see the one shelf of interest to herāthe bottom shelf. Next to some Ungerās handbooks and dictionaries, she saw The New Strongās Concordance with Vineās Dictionary. As she was reaching for it, she heard steps approaching. They came to a halt beside her. She looked up. A tall, lean man of indeterminate middle age smiled down at her from above his clerical collar. But when he looked at the sign and its corresponding works, his smile fell off. āOh, dear, I was expecting a better selectionāitās such a large store. This is rather scanty.ā
Nora felt the tug of personal connection and agreed, āPositively meager.ā
āWell,ā he replied, āI need the new edition of The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Books of the Bible, but apparently my choice is between Amazon, for which Iāll need to wait a week, and an e-book, which will have no friendly pages to turn . . . Oh, I see youāre thinking about the new Strongās; I highly recommend it. Having Vineās dictionary in the same volume is rather convenient.ā
āWe just lost a box of reference books in a move; this will replace two birds with one stone,ā she remarked.
āOh, dear,ā he said with a genuine note of sympathy. āThat would be a hard loss. My family and I also recently moved here, but without a serious mishap. Everything arrived, and only some trifles werenāt in one piece. Whatās a thrift store crock pot and an old lamp compared to a concordance?ā
Nora chuckled and asked herself why she had been so reluctant to enter this store. āDo you serve a church here in Poplar?ā she asked.
āI do.ā
āAre you a Catholic priest?ā
āWrong,ā he said with a grin. āGuess again.ā
āA Lutheran?ā came the next query.
āNo, I am an Anglican pastor.ā
āReally, my husband and I have been looking for a church, and we hadnāt noticed that there was an Anglican church in Poplar. Are you with St. Markās Episcopal?ā
āNo, weāre a bit more on the conservative side of the theological spectrum than our brothers and sisters at St. Markās. I serve at King of Kings. We are a small church family without a building of our own. We meet in a hotel conference room, a La Quinta sanctuary, you might say. Iām Cormac Bruce, by the way, pleased to meet you.ā
āIām Nora Shaw,ā she said as they shook hands.
āOh, dear,ā he exclaimed looking at his watch in a way that suggested he didnāt have a gift for administration, āMy son needs picking up from his piano lesson . . . Should you and your husband be inclined to visit us at King of Kings, weād all be delighted.ā He pulled his wallet from his hip pocket and removed a business-sized card. āGodspeed,ā was his valediction as he handed it to her. āI hope we meet again soon.ā
As his step descended the ...
Table of contents
- Title Page
- Prologue
- Chapter 1
- Chapter 2
- Chapter 3
- Chapter 4
- Chapter 5
- Chapter 6
- Chapter 7
- Chapter 8
- Chapter 9
- Chapter 10
- Chapter 11
- Chapter 12
- Chapter 13
- Chapter 14
- Chapter 15
- Chapter 16
- Chapter 17
- Chapter 18
- Chapter 19
- Chapter 20
- Chapter 21
- Chapter 22
- Chapter 23
- Chapter 24
- Epilogue
- Bibliography
