As the twentieth century closes, the cry for equality between
the sexes is provoking unprecedented conflicts between women and
men in the workplace and in the family. Women of all colors and
classes continue to carry out an enormous amount of indispensable,
unremunerated caring labor, which at once undergirds and is
peripheral to human life--as men have defined it--and therefore
without value. Also a Mother protests this definition of work and
value, and claims that beneath the everyday scuffles over gender
roles and child care lies an essential religious crisis of work and
love.
Drawing on her situation as seminary professor and mother of
three sons, Bonnie J. Miller-McLemore argues that Christian ideals
of motherly self-sacrifice and fatherly hard work, as they have
been interpreted by church tradition and promoted in society at
large, not only fail the lives of many people today, but
misrepresent both the intent of God's creation and the promise of
the gospel message itself. She asks: How might theological
doctrines of love, self-sacrifice creation, procreation, vocation,
and community better respond to women and men who want to work in
fulfilling ways and to love in intimate relationships including
those that involve raising children? To answer adequately, theology
must seriously entertain what mothers think, feel, desire, and know
bodily, in a way that it has failed to do thus far.
The Christian feminist maternal theology that Miller-McLemore
proposes challenges the mores of a society that has selectively
divided the burdens and rewards of family and work along gender
lines, calls for a rereading of biblical and theological traditions
that have been wrongly used to uphold this division, and reclaims
the values of caring labor for both men and women.
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