Learn a lesson
from the fig tree.
When its branch becomes tender and sprouts leaves,
you know that summer is near.
In the same way, when you see these things happening,
know that he is near, at the gates.
When its branch becomes tender and sprouts leaves,
you know that summer is near.
In the same way, when you see these things happening,
know that he is near, at the gates.
Mark 13:28 - 31
The best things in life might well be
free, but they also take time. Time is the great revealer of mysteries and
secrets, the healer of bereavement and pain. Ovid famously advised: Time conquers all.
Our children grow into young men and women,
the seasons take their turns, a new generation begins and an old passes away. At
various stages of our lives we dispense our time either sparingly or lavishly
to our families, friends, work, sport, leisure, or travel. And over this time we
become who we are by the experiences we have, through the relationships we
establish and what we learn from our environment. Life is an unfolding, an
unveiling.
There are dreams we have for our children,
for their futures, and what we must provide for them is the scaffolding for a
good life. A good life is not a topsy-turvy, unpredictable place – it is organised,
planned for, achievable. Everything we choose either builds up, diminishes or
adds colour and flavour to that life. Success and happiness do not come from
winning Powerball. Self-discipline, resilience, the ability to stand on your
own two feet, roll with the punches, to withstand disappointment and a little
heartache, being a part of a team are keys to a successful life lived with
others. Do we dream that our children will be dependent, fragile and selfish?
That is most unlikely. But a childhood is the time when we begin to teach the
necessary skills, and our child’s character unfolds like the sprouting fig
leaves.
Mark’s fig tree metaphor once again
attempts to unveil the mystery of what is to come, the end times, the heavenly
kingdom and beyond. The present reality is only a pointer to that future, and
what is happening before our very eyes is calculated to give us insight beyond
the now into eternity.
But this metaphor is also about us. What
we see in our children, what we see in ourselves today are indicators, points
of reference, the potential for who we will become. And if we need to change
behaviours and attitudes, develop news skills to become the person we want to
be, then we start today afresh. And when we do struggle, and when it does get
tough, and when we do fall, time is our ally, experience our guide, hope
is our shoulder to lean on.
Women have been leading since Biblical times—they
can lead again today.
by Richard J. Clifford, S.J.
The record
number of women who will be serving in Congress following the momentous 2018
midterm elections may not be aware that the Bible supports their initiative to
serve in this moment of political crisis. Normally, women in the Bible appear
in subsidiary roles, for the action most often takes place in the public
square, the exclusive domain of men in the ancient world.
But “normally”
does not mean “always.” There is an important and often overlooked side to
biblical history: It does not move forward in an unbroken stream but rather
bumps along and in critical moments turns in new directions. In those turning
points, women, surprisingly, take on leadership roles.
Consider three
such turning points in biblical history. In each one, male leadership fails or
is absent and women take up the slack, employing wit and courage rather than
recognized authority and power to lead the community. The three turning points
are the transition from one elect family (Abraham’s) to one elect nation
(Israel); the transition from the failed rule of tribal chieftains (the Book of
Judges) to Davidic kingship; and the climactic biblical moment—the transition
from Jesus’ crucifixion to his resurrection as risen Lord.
The record number of women who will be serving in
Congress may not be aware that the Bible supports their initiative to
serve in this moment of political crisis.
1. From an Elect Family to an Elect Nation
In Exodus 1
and 2, Abraham’s family of 70 members fled famine in Canaan and found refuge in
grain-rich Egypt under the patronage of a welcoming pharaoh, a friend of the
patriarch Joseph. When that pharaoh died, “there arose up a new king over
Egypt, which knew not Joseph” (Ex 1:8), who adopted a policy that both
exploited and decimated the Hebrews. There is no mention in the text of the
Hebrews praying to the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. Instead, they
“groaned,” watching in horror as family members were enslaved and their male
children were exterminated. There is also no mention of a leader in Exodus 1-2
except Moses, who is distrusted by his fellow Hebrews because he could not
answer their question: “Who made you a ruler and judge over us?” (Ex 2:14).]\
In this
political and moral vacuum, five women emerge as leaders—the two Hebrew
midwives named Shiprah and Puah, the mother and sister of the infant Moses, and
the pharaoh’s daughter. The midwives, unwilling to follow the pharaoh’s orders
to kill the Hebrew infants, invented the excuse that Hebrew women were so
vigorous they gave birth before the midwives arrived. Another pair of women,
Moses’ mother and sister, figured out how to literally obey the pharaoh’s order
to throw every baby boy into the Nile while utterly subverting it. They “threw”
the infant into a seaworthy basket and shrewdly positioned it to float by the
pharaoh’s daughter while she was bathing in the Nile. Pharaoh’s daughter,
recognizing the child as a Hebrew, defied her father by seeing to it that Moses
was brought up as a proper Egyptian in the pharaoh’s household. Each of the
five women stepped up in the crisis and enabled Abraham’s family to survive and
become a mighty people.
2. From Tribal Chieftains to Davidic King
A second
example of female leadership in a critical time is narrated in 1 Samuel 1-3,
which in the Hebrew Bible comes immediately after the book of Judges’ vivid
depictions of misrule by tribal chieftains. The final chapters of Judges show
the self-centered leadership of Samson and the moral and social chaos of a
people adrift. Change was urgent if Israel was to be a people worthy of the
Lord.
In this
crisis, the agent of change was Hannah, a woman with the stigma of
childlessness in a culture that revered motherhood. Weeping one day over her
plight at the shrine at Shiloh, she interpreted the priest Eli’s conventional
response to her prayer as if it were an ironclad promise: “May the God of
Israel grant the petition you have made to him.” Upon becoming pregnant, she
uttered her Song (1 Sm 2:1-10), similar to Mary’s much later Magnificat, and
gave birth to Samuel, the prophet who would in the course of time anoint David
as king, establishing a dynasty that would last forever.
That
transition in the Old Testament from chaos to effective kingship became a
template for the Gospel of Luke’s depiction of a similar transition to the rule
of Jesus, son of David. Women play a prominent role here, too. The parallels
between the coming of David’s kingship and the coming of Jesus’ kingship are
hard to miss: the miraculous birth of Samuel to the barren Hannah and the
miraculous birth of Jesus to the virgin Mary; Hannah’s Song in 1 Sm 2:1-10 (“My
heart exults in the Lord”) and Mary’s Magnificat in Lk 1:46-55 (“My soul
magnifies the Lord”); and the nearly identical comment on Samuel’s character in
1 Sm 2:16 (“young Samuel was growing in stature and in worth in the estimation
of the Lord and the people”) and on Jesus’ character in Lk 2:52 (“And Jesus
advanced [in] wisdom and age and favor before God and man”).
Further, the
priest Zechariah’s deficient response to the angel’s birth announcement in Lk
1:5-20 parallels the deficient leadership of the priest Eli. Finally, it should
be noted that in both Samuel and Luke the wives, not the husbands, act and
speak: Hannah, not her husband Elkanah, Elizabeth, not her husband Zechariah,
and Mary, not her husband Joseph.
It is clear
that the author of Luke’s Gospel, searching the ancient Scriptures to validate
Jesus’ claims to kingship, found confirmation in the transition from tribal
chieftains to Davidic kingship in Judges and Samuel. As James Kugel has pointed
out, Bible readers of the time “assumed that, although most of Scripture had
been written hundreds of years earlier and seemed to be addressed to people
back then, its words nevertheless were altogether relevant to people in the
interpreter’s own time.... Its prophecies really referred to events happening
now” (“Early Jewish Biblical Interpretation” in The Eerdmans Dictionary of Early Judaism, emphasis
in original).
3. From the
Death of Jesus to His Resurrection
The most
momentous transition in the Christian Bible is Jesus’ passage from death to
resurrected life, which is detailed in the Gospels, announced in the Acts of
the Apostles and preached by Paul. During this three-day crisis, women, not
men, exercised leadership. Of the women, one was extraordinary during the
entire period when men, the expected leaders, withdrew.
All four
Gospels tell the same story: Mary of Magdala (identified by her hometown rather
than by the name of her husband or son) accompanied Jesus through his suffering
and crucifixion (Mt 27:56; Mk 15:40; Lk 23:27-31; Jn 19:25) and was the first
witness to Jesus’ resurrection (Mt 28:1; Mk 16:1; Lk 24:10; Jn 20:1, 11-18). At
the resurrection, Jesus chose her to announce the news to the disciples.
According to Jn 20:11-18, she had the privilege of seeing the risen Jesus
before anyone else. Truly appropriate is the epithet tradition has bestowed on
her, apostolorum apostola, “apostle
to the apostles.”
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For centuries,
she was mistakenly identified with the unnamed sinful woman in Lk 7:36-50, and
her faithfulness went unnoticed. In recent years, however, Mary has been
recognized as the model of a faithful and courageous disciple, stepping up in a
crisis and embracing the task of announcing that Jesus has been raised from the
dead. Mary’s greatness consists not only in her presence at Jesus’ passage from
death to life but in defining Christian discipleship as both witnessing to
Jesus’ death and resurrection and announcing the good news to others.
A Final Reflection
These
instances in which the Bible portrays female leadership at critical moments are
not just acknowledgments that women were present or filled out the scene. In
each case, they proved instrumental in moving the history of Israel forward,
and what they did had an enormous influence upon subsequent events. Leadership
by males proved inadequate for a new era; another kind of governance was called
for, and it was done by women. Their stories illustrate vividly what Paul meant
when he asked his congregation at Corinth to look around and see if they could
find among themselves “the wise” and “the strong” of this world. Paul
concluded, “God chose what is foolish in the world to shame the wise; God chose
what is weak in the world to shame the strong” (1 Cor 1:27).
In moments of such “weakness,” when conventional structures fall away,
the divine intention becomes visible in unexpected ways. The Bible catches such
moments with characteristic subtlety and expresses them with memorable flair.
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