Intergenerational Feminism Online and Up High

Check out this awesome ongoing blog dialogue between Letha Dawson Scanzoni, 72, and Kimberly B. George, 27–thus the snazzy name of the blog, 72-27. They are both self-identified Christian feminists and discuss everything from labor division in the home to violence in Pakistan to chickens. Don’t miss it. A long excerpt from super smart Kimberley:

I wanted to begin this letter by letting you know that I have been thinking a great deal about that first article you linked in your last post (the BBC article that talked about women reportedly confessing the sin of pride more than men). It so happened that when I got your letter I was reading Feminist Theory and Christian Theology by Serene Jones. (Dr. Jones used to be a professor at Yale Divinity School, and now she is at Union Theological Seminary.) Her book gave me a news lens for seeing some of the important issues in Reformed theology, particularly the weighty idea of “pride equals sin” within that tradition.
Jones explains that Calvin, similar to many preachers today, focused on pride as being one of the most damaging aspects of the human condition. Pride was a brazen, over-inflation of self that offended God, or so Calvin and others have said. It was the essence of sin and to be avoided at all cost for a healthy spiritual life.
Dr. Jones questions where women–and other marginalized people–fit in this tradition. It is one thing for the most powerful people in society to promote these ideas around pride: perhaps Calvin’s deepest struggle really was this grandiosity of self that he describes. Certainly, many of the preachers I have listened to seem to struggle with pride a great deal, so it makes sense to me that they would define sin in terms of over-inflation of self.
And yet these preachers and theologians are often white heterosexual men with tremendous spiritual authority who are at the top of the power structures in society. Of course they struggle with pride. They are simply reading the Bible and writing their theology out of their lived experience. They are being honest with what they know– they just are not seeing from the vantage points of those not sharing their pedestal. Perhaps they have no idea of the “view from below” or have no sense of what it means to hold the kind of power that they have. (Indeed, they might even deny that a power structure exists, so far are they from understanding marginalization)
So, what happens when all those messages about the sin of “pride” are communicated from a position of power to those who are disempowered and marginalized? What happens when the promoters of this theology are in an entirely different position of status and voice than those “below” them?

This blogs represents just the kind of dialogue that I hope will be happening in person at the upcoming Omega Institute conference next fall, Women & Power: Connecting Across the Generations. Don’t forget to get those scholarships in.
Full bios for Letha and Kimberley after the jump.


Letha Dawson Scanzoni (alias “72?) is an author, editor, and writing consultant who lives in Norfolk, Virginia. She is the editor of Christian Feminism Today and the EEWC website and has authored or coauthored nine books. Letha was one of the pioneering writers in the biblical feminist movement that began in the 1960s and ’70s as second wave feminism arose.
Kimberly B. George (alias “27?) is a writer and teacher living in Seattle, Washington. She is currently working on a book tentatively titled, Bites from the Apple: Memoir of a Young Christian Feminist. It tells of her struggles to find and express her authentic voice as a young Christian woman awakening to third wave feminism in a new century. Kimberly also writes two other blogs: Shaft of Sunlight and Faith and Gender: A Necessary Conversation.

Join the Conversation