Jesus at the Prom

This week I read Susan Campbell’s Dating Jesus: A Story of Fundamentalism, Feminism, and the American Girl. Parts of her autobiographical narrative seemed so familiar that it was almost like we could have been siblings. Other parts demonstrated just how widely a religious upbringing in America may vary. Fundamentalism is a powerful force, and one that often feels impossible to outgrow. The added dimension of a constant, insistent criticism of gender made Campbell’s account truly wrenching at times. Having been raised in a similar environment, I had been taught that ministry is a male prerogative, an activity women were separated from just as surely as begetting babies. Having been raised mainly by my mother, however, I was more sympathetic to a woman’s plight than most of the outspoken advocates for male privilege. Campbell’s story hit close to home.

One of the most tenacious aspects of Fundamentalism is the brain patterning it impresses on young minds. Who doesn’t know that baby birds impress parenthood on the first creature they see after hatching? Young children, trusting well-meaning parents, are impressed with a religious branding iron before they can sort things out for themselves. We make our children in our own image. Few ever undertake the intense reflection later in life to challenge these impressions. Like Campbell, I attended seminary because I was curious. Many of my classmates had no questions in their heads – they knew already that they were to be ministers. Seminary was a hoop to be leapt through rather than a rung to be climbed for a different perspective. And their children will be taught their perspective. Denominations will continue to increase in numbers as acorns roll not far from the tree, but just far enough.

Campbell’s memoir is a gentle indictment of the male establishment. What once began as a biological division of labor has been given a religious imperative; male dominance is ordained by God, and women have no option but to comply. Even as the divine gets pushed into an unlit corner of everyday life, the deity may always be drawn back out for a session of gender oppression before being tucked safely away again. In these days of advanced technology and wide perspectives, women are still held down as some kind of inferior sub-species by men who believe that they are the default version of the image of God. It is time to be honest and admit that the only reason women are kept from the male preserve in any field is because of a jealous green-eyed god called privilege.

8 thoughts on “Jesus at the Prom

  1. vicki

    You know what I went through ten years ago. Defending my gender was a new experience for me. I had a conversation about a week ago with a member of our mentoring advisory board. He told me he didn’t approve of women pastors, but he had to admit, I got the job done. At least I got him thinking!

    I want to read this book.

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  3. sharon

    “by men who believe that they are the default version of the image of God”

    So true, so true! Wonderful review. It’s so great to hear from a man who feels that he, too, has been affected, and not in a good way, by the religious justifications for treating women as second-class humans.

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    • Steve Wiggins

      Thank you, Sharon.

      The use of gender to define a person’s value is a travesty against any true religion. More than that, it is a crime against humanity. I see no justification, biblical or otherwise, for injecting unfairness into what should be an equitable experience of all people. Thanks for stopping by the blog!

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  4. “made Campbell’s account truly wrenching at times.”

    I sobbed through most of it. I’m still going through the grieving process, myself, having experienced the trials and tribulations of growing up as a female in a fundamentalist church.

    Awesome review.

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    • Steve Wiggins

      Thank you! I’m pretty sure that most Fundamentalists don’t intend to create the harm they cause, but it shows how important it is to reflect on the wider implications of what your religion is doing. There really should be a support group for recovering Fundamentalists. I’m glad you appreciated what I had to say.

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