{"id":35167,"date":"2022-09-10T21:58:09","date_gmt":"2022-09-11T02:58:09","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/preaching-to-women\/"},"modified":"2022-09-10T21:58:09","modified_gmt":"2022-09-11T02:58:09","slug":"preaching-to-women","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/preaching-to-women\/","title":{"rendered":"Preaching To Women"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>Is  It Really True That Men Are from Mars and Women Are from Venus?<\/p>\n<p> In the 1990s,  John Gray made at least a small fortune with his book Men Are from Mars,  Women Are from Venus. The book was on best-seller lists for years and was  discussed on almost every talk show. It also fed some of the prevailing myths  about women and men. Was that book on target? Are men and women from different  planets?<\/p>\n<p>When we look at  some of the recent popular literature, we may conclude that John Gray was right.  Both Christian and secular writers appear to have accepted his basic premise.  For example, in Men and Masculinity, British evangelical leader Roy McCloughry  concluded that &#8220;all conversation between men and women is cross-cultural  conversation.&#8221;1 He later elaborated by quoting Deborah Tannen&#8217;s You  Just Don&#8217;t Understand: Men and Women in Conversation. Tannen makes the point  that men and women use conversation for different purposes: Women use conversation  to seek confirmation, to make connections, and to reinforce intimacy; men, on  the other hand, use conversation primarily to protect their independence and  to negotiate status.2<\/p>\n<p>If, in fact, there  is truth in these conclusions, the task of preaching to mixed audiences may  be far more complicated than most preachers know. It is possible that the way  a doctrine is taught or an illustration is selected can actually backfire on  half (or more) of an audience, simply because we think that men and women hear  the words we have spoken in the same way. Is it possible that men and women  in the same country, in the same town, in the same church could actually move  within different cultures? If so, what are the implications for the preaching  task?<\/p>\n<p>Anthropologist  and missiologist Paul Hiebert discusses culture as the way in which ideas, feelings,  and values are shared by a group of people.3 In normal use, the word culture  refers to any group&#8217;s &#8220;way of life&#8221; &#8211; how people act based on  what they believe, feel, and value. Churches have their own cultures &#8211;  their shared beliefs, feelings, and values. Ethnic groups have their own cultures  &#8211; their shared beliefs, feelings, and values. Nations have their own cultures  &#8211; their shared beliefs, feelings, and values. It may be that men and women  in North America have subtly different cultures, with somewhat different sets  of shared beliefs, feelings, and values.<\/p>\n<p>We tend to think  that &#8220;all Americans&#8221; or &#8220;all Methodists&#8221; (or Baptists or  Pentecostals or whatever) would hear messages in similar ways. Yet it takes  only a few minutes of reflection to recognize that deep divisions exist even  within our ethnic or denominational subcultures. That should alert us to the  possibility that men and women may actually live in different worlds of ideas,  feelings, and values.4<br \/> Historian Anne Firor Scott tells us that our culture grinds the lens through  which we view reality.5 A lens that allows us to see one thing clearly may also  make other things fuzzy, impossible to see. Anyone who wears bifocals understands  how that works: A near-sighted person needs one lens for reading and a separate  lens for seeing anything more than a few feet away. Is it possible that men  and women have different cultural &#8220;lenses&#8221; that cause them to look  at reality in differing ways?<\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<p>&#8226; Our culture  shapes our ideas, our cultural knowledge.6 Cultural knowledge is not  only the categories we use to sort out reality but also the assumptions and  beliefs we have about reality &#8211; the nature of the world around us and  how it works. Our culture provides us with the basic building blocks of our  thoughts, so we must ask if there is a separate male culture that provides  men with ingredients for their thoughts that are different from those provided  to women. Perhaps no. Perhaps yes. But it is a question we must ask.<\/p>\n<p>&#8226; Our culture  shapes our feelings about things &#8211; our attitudes, our notions  of what is beautiful or ugly, our tastes in food and dress, how we like to  enjoy life, how we experience sorrow or joy. Clearly, women have cultural  permission to feel and express emotion in ways different from those of men.<\/p>\n<p>&#8226; Our culture  shapes our values, which help us judge which things are moral and which  are immoral. Many women would assert that men have a different moral code  with its own culturally defined sins &#8211; not identical to the moral code  that defines sin for women. Men and women do not always agree on which acts  are righteous and which are immoral.<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p> It may be easier  for us to grasp the reality of cultural difference in terms of different generations.  When I am with any of my six grandsons, I hear them speak a language different  from my own. Yes, they use words that are in my vocabulary &#8211; words such  as cool or awesome or radical &#8211; but they do not attach  the same meanings to them. So I might ask Chris, &#8220;When you say that Eric  is cool, what do you mean? What&#8217;s cool about Eric? He seems pretty warm to me.&#8221;  I listen to the vast array of inflections used in the ways my grandsons pronounce  a word such as cool, and I know that it is an important word with many  meanings and many uses. I just don&#8217;t speak that language.<\/p>\n<p>But if my husband,  Randall, and I sit sipping coffee together after breakfast, chatting about our  family, our work, and the day ahead of us, I can easily assume that he and I  speak the same language. After all, we have lived together for more than half  a century! But once in a while he says something that reminds me that we are  not always speaking the same language. For example, though we both grew up during  the Great Depression and share conservative attitudes about the way we use money,  we do not talk about money in the same way. His father lost his job in 1933  and was unable to support the family. My father had work throughout the Depression,  and though we were poor by today&#8217;s standards, we never went hungry. As a result,  I tend not to worry about losing everything we have in the same way Randall  does. He is more cautious about spending than I am, coming out of a life experience  that is different from mine. Thus, the words save and spend carry  different freight for him.7<\/p>\n<p>The same thing  happens countless times between the pulpit and the pew. When a pastor steps  into the pulpit on Sunday morning, the odds make it likely that nearly three  out of every four adults waiting to hear the sermon are women, although the  ratio will vary from church to church. But the reality is that most pastors  speak to more women than men every Sunday. It is this reality that makes it  practical and logical to think about women as listeners:<\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<p>&#8226; What kind  of word from God do you think today&#8217;s woman may be listening for?<br \/> &#8226; What kind of word from God do you think she might be hearing, regardless  of what you are saying?<br \/> &#8226; What preoccupations does she have that you must break through? <br \/> &#8226; Does she differ from men in the audience in significant ways?<br \/> &#8226; If so, what are the implications for your preaching each week?<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p>Caution:  Myths Abound<\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<p>What are little  girls made of? <br \/> Of sugar and spice,<br \/> And everything nice,<br \/> That&#8217;s what little girls are made of.<br \/> What are little boys made of? <br \/> Of snips and snails,<br \/> And puppy dog tails,<br \/> That&#8217;s what little boys are made of.<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p> If we trust nursery  rhymes for the truth about gender, we might arrive at the conclusion that males  and females differ in their very essence. There is no overlap between &#8220;sugar  and spice and everything nice&#8221; and &#8220;snips and snails and puppy dog  tails.&#8221; But we do not look to nursery rhymes to answer the question of  what it means to be a man or a woman.<\/p>\n<p>Yet even without  the nursery rhymes, the moment the subject turns to possible differences between  men and women, it is necessary to flag the potholes in the road before us. Gender  differences provide fertile ground for the stuff of myths. The first gender  myth is a two-headed Hydra.8 One head is the tendency to exaggerate the differences  between men and women. The other head is the denial of any differences between  men and women (beyond physiology). Both lead us away from the truth about gender  as God&#8217;s good gift to humanity. When differences are exaggerated, people are  often reduced to sets of roles and are denied their full personhood. When differences  are denied, God&#8217;s purposes in creating humanity as male and female may be thwarted.<\/p>\n<p>It is easy to exaggerate  differences. For example, some writers draw up lists of characteristics for  men and for women. When the categories in such lists are exaggerated to the  point of being mutually exclusive, social scientists call this type-A error  or alpha-bias. Type-A error strikes daily in many contexts. For example,  on the nightly news a politician exaggerates the difference between the positions  of two parties on a bill before Congress. During television commercials, a drug  company exaggerates the benefits of its medication over those of competitors  in the market. Advertising people constantly look for the real or imagined &#8220;edge&#8221;  they can play up by exaggerating a product&#8217;s difference from its competitors.  Whether the players are politicians, drug manufacturers, or preachers also looking  for the &#8220;edge&#8221; that will make a sermon memorable, a listener must  be alert to the exaggeration of differences, simplified to the point of becoming  simplistic &#8211; and untrue.<\/p>\n<p>Any time a list  sets up an extreme comparison, excluding groups of people from one or the other  category, type-A error may be present. For example, a list that states that  men are cognitive and women are emotional, or that men are active and women  are passive is guilty of alpha-bias. Women as well as men may be cognitive,  and men as well as women may be emotional. Women as well as men can be active,  and men as well as women can be passive.<\/p>\n<p>On the other hand,  because some people simplistically exaggerate differences, others end up denying  all differences. This is called type-B error or beta-bias. Because  exaggerated differences are often exploited in hurtful ways,9 some people choose  to discount any legitimate difference that exists. The temptation is strong  either to exaggerate differences or to deny them. Both are errors. Both lead  to myths that, in the area of gender, do not accurately reflect men&#8217;s and women&#8217;s  realities.<\/p>\n<p>G.K. Chesterton  compared orthodoxy to a narrow ridge between two chasms.10 The truth about gender  difference is also a narrow ridge between the chasm of alpha-bias (exaggerating  the difference) and beta-bias (denying the difference). Many books about men  and women totter on the brink of or fall into one or the other chasm. In some  churches, the difference between men and women may be grossly exaggerated. In  fact, it is often stereotyped. On the other hand, many voices in the wider culture  call for unisex, declaring that there are no differences between men and women.  But the reality is that both are chasms sloping away from the narrow ridge of  truth about gender difference.11<\/p>\n<p>All of this warns  us that it is a complex task to sort out gender issues that impact ministry.  We have to monitor ourselves for either alpha-bias or beta-bias. We want to  stay on the narrow ridge of the truth about gender and avoid the chasms on either  side of us as we explore how gender touches ministry, particularly in the area  of preaching.<\/p>\n<p>A second myth &#8211;  especially when we read popular articles or books about gender difference &#8211;  lumps all men into one category and all women into the opposite category. It  turns out that there is as much diversity within a group of women or  within a group of men as there is between men and women. This  has been shown to be true in studies of math skills, verbal skills, aggression,  and spatial abilities. The between-group difference is smaller than the  within-group difference. One reason for this is that within any general  category of difference, other variables factor in. For example, in controlled  studies, men in general have better spatial abilities than women. It turns out,  however, that gender is not the only factor involved in spatial ability. People  who have lived in wide open spaces appear to have better spatial abilities than  people who have grown up in confined areas.12 When it comes to spatial abilities,  therefore, gender matters, but environment matters more. And the environment  that appears to matter most of all in gender issues is the social environment  in which men and women interact.<\/p>\n<p>No behavior, including  behavior relating to gender, exists independent of the social context in which  it occurs. It is true that if we know the sex of the listener, we know something  important. That is good news. As we understand something about the differences  and similarities of men and women, we can be more effective preachers. But the  bad news is that in considering gender, we can never consider gender per se  alone. Gender is rarely, if ever, the only variable we need to take into account  if we are to increase the power of God&#8217;s Word in people&#8217;s lives.<\/p>\n<p>Ministers who seek  to be more effective in sharing God&#8217;s Word with women face two types of challenge.  First, they must understand, at least in part, the experience of women as women.  Second, they must also understand that the women who listen are not simply generic  &#8220;women.&#8221; Each woman is an individual who may be a woman and a business  executive, or a woman of color, or a single woman living at home and caring  for aging parents, or a woman who is divorced and receiving public assistance.  She may be a stay-at-home mother with five children. Women are never generic;  they are individuals with gender in common but with enormous differences between  them. For a preacher, therefore, these differences are as significant as gender  in the way each woman will hear the message being preached.<\/p>\n<p>A third myth is  that gender is the only factor that matters. Gender matters, but paying attention  to gender does not automatically erase the other social factors that, in turn,  impact the ways in which women hear a preacher&#8217;s voice. As a case in point,  suppose you are a young, white, unmarried male pastor of an affluent suburban  church. A colleague is ill and has asked you to step in and speak to a MOPS13  group consisting of African American women from an inner-city church in an economically  deprived neighborhood. The group includes single mothers receiving public assistance,  grandmothers who are primary care givers of young grandchildren, and young married  women working night shifts in order to stay home days with their children. Who  is your audience? Women. But is gender the only factor you must consider in  answering that question? What is the significance of ethnicity? Of economics?  Of marital status? Of age? Of your ethnicity? Your economics?<\/p>\n<p>Your marital status?  Your age? Gender matters, but we are closer to the truth in almost every instance  if in sharing good news from God, we act on the basis that gender is not the  only thing that matters. Many times it may be the least relevant factor to be  considered.<\/p>\n<p>When researchers  set up a study, they must identify and control all the variables they think  might influence the results. For example, if a medical school wants to study  the interaction of a particular drug with a specific disease, it is not enough  simply to study the drug and the disease in a certain number of infected people.  A host of other variables can skew the results of the study unless they are  taken into consideration: the patient&#8217;s age; other medications being used; family  history; usual diet, sleep, work, and play habits; addictions; and on and on.  Any one of these factors (and others) can mislead researchers if ignored and  left out of the study. It is the same when we talk about gender differences.  We must nuance carefully what we say about women and men in the pew. There are  many variables at work in their lives. Often within-group differences are greater  than between-group differences. This should caution us about assuming the myths  that may lie behind the assertion that men are from Mars and women are from  Venus.<\/p>\n<p>Some  Truth about Differences between Men and Women<\/p>\n<p> This leads to  the question whether there really are any differences between men and women  that matter when a preacher steps into the pulpit. To attempt to answer  that question, we must distinguish between two interactive parts: our sex  and our gender. They are not synonyms. Sex is the biological part of  us. It includes all the differences in male and female reproductive structures,  the differences in chromosomes (women are XX and men are XY), the differences  in hormones (the balance of testosterone and estrogen, for example), and the  differences in physical features such as body hair, muscle mass, skin tone,  and strength. Gender, on the other hand, refers to everything we associate with  being masculine or feminine &#8211; the ways we think, feel, and behave that  express femininity or masculinity in culturally accepted patterns. As a general  rule, therefore, sex refers to what is biologically determined and gender refers  to what is socially learned &#8211; the things we have picked up since our infancy  about the attitudes and behaviors that are appropriate to being male or female.<\/p>\n<p>Yet there is a  strong interaction between our sex and our gender. Look at the role played by  essential physiological differences in our reproductive systems. A woman has  a uterus and breasts and thus, in most cases, can conceive, give birth to a  baby, then nourish that infant. Such abilities have all kinds of ramifications  for difference. There is no doubt that women experience physiological events  associated with reproduction that have no counterpart in male experience. There  is no male corollary to menstruation, pregnancy, parturition, lactation, and  the physiology of menopause. Nor do women experience these events only physically.  They also experience them emotionally. These events in a woman&#8217;s body are not  just biological. They are integral to the way a woman sees her body and, in  many cases, her self-worth and her sexuality.<\/p>\n<p>Does that force  us to agree with Sigmund Freud that &#8220;biology is destiny&#8221;? Not necessarily.  Ruth Bleier tells us that &#8220;biology defines possibilities but doesn&#8217;t determine  them.&#8221;14 Biology is never irrelevant. But neither is it determinant. For  each person &#8211; male and female &#8211; body, mind, behavior, history, and  environment interact in unique ways. No two people emerge with exactly the same  gender identities.<\/p>\n<p>At issue here is  the ongoing debate about gender difference between those who believe that the  differences between men and women are innate and those who believe that the  differences are the result of life experience. But when we examine a wide range  of data, we find that it is not a question of all nature (biology) or all nurture  (socialization). There is an interaction between the two in all of us. Some  people want to exclude nature entirely and insist on 100 percent nurture. Others  want to exclude nurture entirely and insist on 100 percent nature. The truth  is somewhere in between. Gender differences do exist. The roots of those differences,  however, lie in some combination of nature, nurture, and the environment in  which the interaction occurs.<\/p>\n<p>There is a danger  in exaggerating the role of nature in the difference. For example, some Christian  writers state that God created men to be initiators and women to be responders.15  If God created men and women thus, then any deviation from that norm in the  behavior of a man or a woman is a deviation from God&#8217;s creational intention.  Yet there are Christian men who are uncomfortable in the role of sole initiator,  and there are Christian women who do not fit easily into the passive mode of  a responder. This is important for you as a preacher to appreciate. If you accept  that the differences between men and women are inherent (whether by God&#8217;s design  or biology), you may create great inner conflict and guilt in well-meaning people  who do not conform in every way to the model being held up to them as godly  or inherent in their being.16 You do not preach to a few stereotypes. You speak  to individuals in a given social context. To be true to your calling in sharing  the Word of God effectively, you must see your listeners as individuals beyond  the stereotypes.<br \/> _______________<\/p>\n<p>Alice Matthews  is Lois W. Bennett Distinguished Professor of Educational Ministries and Women&#8217;s  Ministries at Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary in South Hamilton, MA.<br \/> _______________ <\/p>\n<p>Taken from Preaching  that Speaks to Women by Alice Matthews. Grand Rapids: Baker Academic. Copyright  2003. Used with permission.<br \/> _______________<\/p>\n<p>1 Roy McCloughry,  Men and Masculinity: From Power to Love (London: Hodder &amp; Stoughton, 1992),  208.<br \/> 2 Deborah Tannen, You Just Don&#8217;t Understand: Men and Women in Conversation (London:  Virago, 1991), quoted in ibid., 210.<br \/> 3 For an excellent extended discussion of culturally relevant ministry, see  Paul Hiebert, Anthropological Insights for Missionaries (Grand Rapids: Baker,  1985).<br \/> 4 Elizabeth Aries raises important questions about this &#8220;two-culture&#8221;  approach to gender, noting that it fails to recognize the importance of sexual  inequalities at a societal level. I have chosen to acknowledge her concern for  power inequalities between men and women but not make that a part of this article.  For her discussion of this issue, see Elizabeth Aries, Men and Women in Interaction:  Reconsidering the Differences (New York: Oxford University Press, 1996), 195ff.<br \/> 5 Ann Firor Scott, &#8220;On Seeing and Not Seeing: A Case of Historical Invisibility,&#8221;  The Journal of American History 71, no. 1 (1984): 7, 19.<br \/> 6 This is not the same use of the word knowledge as that of philosophers.<br \/> 7 This is not to say that gender explains all the difference between my husband  and me! We were both shaped by our families of origin and by our diverse experiences  as adults in our social context.<br \/> 8 In Greek literature, the Hydra was a mythical monster with nine heads. As  Hercules attempted to slay this beast by lopping off a head, two heads would  grow in its place unless the wound was immediately cauterized. The hydra came  to symbolize any multifarious evil, according to Webster&#8217;s Collegiate Dictionary,  2d ed. (Springfield, Mass.: G &amp; C Merriam Co., 1949).<br \/> 9 Studies of ethnic prejudice have clearly identified the strong tendency for  &#8220;difference&#8221; to become the basis for discrimination against the one  who is different.<br \/> 10 Gilbert Keith Chesterton, Orthodoxy (New York: John Lane, 1909).<br \/> 11 There are some strange bedfellows in the gender wars. Many conservative Christians  and some radical feminists (such as Dr. Mary Daly) both tend to exaggerate the  difference between men and women.<br \/> 12 Anne Fausto-Sterling, Myths of Gender: Biological Theories about Women and  Men (New York: Basic Books, 1985), 34-36.<br \/> 13 MOPS is the acronym for a Colorado-based national parachurch ministry, Mothers  of Preschoolers. <br \/> 14 Cited in J. Williams, Psychology of Women: Behavior in a Biosocial Context,  3d ed. (New York: W.W. Norton, 1987), 97.<br \/> 15 For example, see Elisabeth Elliot, &#8220;The Essence of Femininity: A Personal  Perspective,&#8221; chapter 25 in John Piper and Wayne Grudem, Recovering Biblical  Manhood and Womanhood (Wheaton: Crossway, 1991), 397.<br \/> 16 More dangerous is that such teaching opens the door to a sociobiological  view of gender differences that sees such differences as biological and thus  irreversible. This creates the possibility of a victim mentality: One can argue  that he or she bears no responsibility for outcomes that are the result of something  &#8220;biological.&#8221; A rapist actually pled &#8220;not guilty&#8221; in a court  of law on the basis that he was a victim of his testosterone. God holds us responsible  for actions, which a victimization theory of gender would not allow. If, on  the other hand, differences between men and women stem from an interaction between  our sex and our gender (learning), we can evaluate which of them might be immutable  and which may need to be changed.<\/p>\n<div style='clear:both'><\/div>\n<div class='the_champ_sharing_container the_champ_horizontal_sharing' data-super-socializer-href=\"https:\/\/www.preaching.com\/articles\/preaching-to-women\/\">\n<div class='the_champ_sharing_title' style=\"font-weight:bold\">Share This On:<\/div>\n<div class=\"the_champ_sharing_ul\"><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div style='clear:both'><\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Is It Really True That Men Are from Mars and Women Are from Venus? In the 1990s, John Gray made at least a small fortune with his book Men Are from Mars, Women Are from Venus. The book was on best-seller lists for years and was discussed on almost every talk show. It also fed &hellip; <a href=\"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/preaching-to-women\/\" class=\"more-link\">Continue reading<span class=\"screen-reader-text\"> &#8220;Preaching To Women&#8221;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"","ping_status":"","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-35167","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-sermons"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/35167","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=35167"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/35167\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=35167"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=35167"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=35167"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}