Preview

Mary and Martha Examples of Discipleship

Satisfactory Essays
Open Document
Open Document
411 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Mary and Martha Examples of Discipleship
Anabella Morabito
03/28/2015
Reflection Paper #4

Mary and Martha: Examples of Discipleship In chapter two of her book, But She Said, Elisabeth Schussler-Fiorenza explores the Gospel story of Mary and Martha and the ways in which the contrast between the two sisters has been used as a tool of patriarchal restrictions. In common understandings of the story Martha is understood as distracted; and in contrast to Mary she represents a “bad” model of discipleship. However, in this chapter Schussler-Fiorenza explores the ways in which Martha has been unjustly understood, and at times used as a way to repress women’s understanding of discipleship. In coming to liberate our understanding of true discipleship, Schussler-Fiorenza claims that “Whether the example story of the Good Samaritan and the pronouncement story of Martha and Mary are interrelated is debated. Yet both can be read as answering the question of the lawyer, ‘What am I to do to inherit eternal life?’ Both are thus explications of the great commandment. They teach members of the Christian community what true discipleship is about.” (But She Said, 67) In reading this story, it would be useful to employ a hermeneutics of suspicion and remembrance and come to remember the character of Martha and question the readings which represent her as an insufficient model of discipleship. In our modern context, it is likely that women most predominantly relate to Martha in a way that is more profound and realistic than that which they may relate to Mary’s silence and obedience. And coming to bring an interpretation of Martha that is negative also hurts those women who relate to Martha. As Schussler-Fiorenza states
The rhetorical interests of the Lukan text are to silence women leaders of house churches who, like Martha, may have protested, and to simultaneously extol Mary’s ‘silent’ and subordinate behavior. Such a reconstruction of women’s struggle in the early Church also indicates why women have always identified

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    The author uses literary devices to tell the story of an encounter with God, makes for an unique story. Furthermore, the author chose to portray God as a round and realistic character who emits humanlike emotion, this lightens up the story and shifts the focus to Martha, a dynamic character who develops into a relationship with a figure that was first regarded as such a distant figure from her. For example, when Martha first saw God, she described him with awe, “The comfort of her small disorderly house was gone, and she was standing before this amazing figure who had convinced her at one that he was God-or someone so powerful that he might as well be God,” (190, Butler). Before separating with God, Martha had a completely different description of him, “she stepped to God and hugged her--hugged her hard, feeling the familiar woman’s body beneath the blue jeans and black T-shirt that looked as though it had come from Martha’s own closet,” (212, Butler). This shows that not only has God’s appearance and gender changed, but Martha’s interactions with God were also drastically different. Another example of the developing relation between God and Martha is that God used to be high up in his throne, “seated as he was on his huge throne like chair,” (190, Butler), and both physically and spiritually came down to earth as if as a guest in Martha’s…

    • 585 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Mary chooses to moralise things as oppose to being critical of them like Elizabeth is – Elizabeth reflects and makes a judgement on things…

    • 330 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Quiz 1 Phi-210

    • 615 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Therefore, Martha is not that which has been called by God to avoid sin and reap the rewards of heaven.…

    • 615 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    The story of “Kingdom of Matthias” describes two women, Isabella Van Wagenen whom is a slave and Isabella Matthews Laisdell whom married. Both women’s positions in society were typical because the universal role of women in all states were to attend to family needs and support their husband. The role of Isabella Van Wagenen in “Kingdom of Matthias” was to perform heavy household work and did most of the cooking because for Matthias, he kept all the women in the house (Johnson and Wilentz 105). On the other hand, Isabella…

    • 1250 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Jude changed many women’s lives and made them alter their differing prospects on both the American culture and the Catholic religion. Specifically, Orsi reveals that the majority of immigrants were from Southern and Eastern Europe, as well as Ireland. Since they were facing challenges of misery, war, and poverty, St. Jude offered them hope. Therefore, Orsi's ability to comprehend the staid female followers of the Patron Saint of Hopeless Causes makes his book a thought-provoking interpretation of the U.S. and Catholic cultures. Most importantly, it demonstrates an appealing attempt to challenge the limits of religious studies. In fact, the voices of Jude's fanatical female follower’s flashback, through Orsi's narrative and observations, effusively inform the reader on the importance of piousness and the refinement of female personalities. In this illustrative literature material, Orsi raises questions that require answers from students and scholars, including why Saint Jude’s cult was extraordinarily personal and solely female. Therefore, these flashbacks help readers shape and comprehend their future for many generations to…

    • 827 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Theo 202 Se3

    • 762 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Mary has brought a very tough predicament to the table, one that is definitely not easy to solve. I do not know if I will be able to give her the correct advice, but I will share with her what I know. The accepted role of women in the church has been a highly debated argument for centuries. Acceptable roles have changed quite a few times, usually with the denomination. Even the Scriptures can lead to different interpretations that cause the debate to continue. The debates include women being elders or deacons, and whether or not they can be ordained and hold leadership positions in the church.…

    • 762 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    This specific type of narrative was so we could see how they are just every day people like us who struggle with which subject is more important: service to Christ or worship to Christ. Mary wanted to sit as Christ’s feet and worship Him because she cared about what was happening now, not like Martha who was worried about things that did not matter in comparison to Christ. So, when Martha becomes upset at Martha for not helping her in verse 40 saying, “’Lord, don’t you care that my sister left me to do the work by myself? Tell her to help me!” (New International Version Bible). According to Keck, when Mary goes to worship Christ instead of helping Martha she violates “a clear social boundary [and] she is bringing shame upon her house” (231). We can see here it must have been a social understanding and practice that the women of the house would have prepared a meal and the house for…

    • 955 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Patria Mirabal

    • 904 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Patria, Sor Mercedes, as she liked to call herself, would walk around the halls of her childhood home with a plain white sheet wrapped around her head, clutching an imaginary rosary to her heart. At fourteen, Patria received her wish and was sent to Immaculada Concepcion, in order to further her knowledge of His word. Many people viewed this as a “pity” (p.45). Patria was “such a pretty girl” (p.45), with her “high firm breasts and sweet oval face.” She did not let the words of others stray her from the path of the Lord, and put all of her energy into bettering herself through Him.…

    • 904 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Damned Women: an Analysis

    • 1820 Words
    • 8 Pages

    Many forms of literature paints us an interesting portrait of women in Puritan society. by Women,s roles, specifically concerning religious conviction, are very interestingbjhighlighted…

    • 1820 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    By including the struggles she encountered in her lifetime and the labor she did that white women did not experience, she tries to persuade her audience that black women might deserve equal rights to men more than the white woman. She uses facts and logic to persuade, and by deduction, she illustrates that women are not inferior to men. Truth uses effective appeals by pointing out that someone as significant and powerful as Jesus Christ was conceived and born without the involvement of a man. Mother Mary was a woman and she created the most influential man in history without a man. This shows that a woman can make consequential differences that a man could never make and it elevates her speech further. Truth’s illiteracy was an anchor to her credibility, but she did not let that keep her from speaking her opinion. She attempts to compel the audience and put each one of them in her shoes by briefly giving several examples of her unpleasant enslavement. For the effective use of pathos, she tells the audience that she gave birth to thirteen children and could on watch as each of them get sold off into slavery. This appealed to the parents who made up most of the audience. No one would want to watch their children be taken away for any reason, and the realization that it was inevitable for…

    • 805 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Prior to and throughout the late middle ages, women have been portrayed in literature as vile and corrupt. During this time, Christine de Pizan became a well educated woman and counteracted the previous notions of men’s slander against women. With her literary works, Pizan illustrated to her readers and women that though education they can aspire to be something greater than what is written in history. Through the use of real historical examples, Christine de Pizan’s, The Book of the City of Ladies, acts as a defense against the commonly perceived notions of women as immoral.…

    • 1369 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Better Essays

    In her writing titled “A Narrative of the Captivity and Restauration of Mrs. Mary Rowlandson”, Mary lies out for the reader her experience of being held in captivity by Indians during the King Philip’s War. Perhaps one of the most significant aspects of this writing is the glimpse that the reader gets into Rowlandson’s faith and religion. Faith was a major aspect of life in the Colonial Period. It was of widespread belief that God was to be feared, and that he was the only way to redemption (Kizer). Mary Rowlandson was no different, but the extreme conditions of her captivity caused her faith to occasionally waiver. Most of the time throughout her journey in captivity, she depended on God, and the scripture to get her through the nightmare that she was trapped inside of, however; there were moments when she questioned even that.…

    • 1112 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Another proud moment for the narrator was when she spoke about being the only woman, in a village of 170 attractive women, that was thought to be pretty enough to be taken back to the domain lords attention. As stated on page 598,”When I got there, the old retainer thought I was even better than the woman in the painting, so the search was called off.” She continues to emphasize her abilities regarding lovemaking with the monk on page 601, the man she wrote letters for on page 605, and finally the 500 disciples on page 610.…

    • 298 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Better Essays

    Throughout the history of Christianity, there have been many documents displaying stories of martyrs. The word ‘martyrdom’ is derived from the Greek martyrein, meaning ‘to bear witness’. In Christian understanding this has meant witnessing to Christ and to the Christian faith, even under pain of death at the hands of others. Most of these reports show martyrs as men, who demonstrate courage and honor in the face of those challenging their commitment to their faith. The Martyrdom of Perpetua and Felicity expresses the account of two female Christian martyrs in 203 A.D. and their personal reflections in reaction to their oppression. Perpetua’s memoir reveals an insight unto her life and how these two model—in the mist of persecution—striving towards freedom against their family blood and male oppressors. Gender roles have played a huge role in society as far back as written history goes. Perpetua was not confined by how she was supposed to act as a woman and took a traditionally masculine role in several situations. Perpetua did not value her femininity as strength, rather she shed it and deliberately masculinized herself to be strong; upholding the false idea that the only way to be heroic is to be like a man. This story reflects about beliefs of the early church in correlation with the experience of a female martyr and provides insight into how the male-dominated culture of that time biasedly interpreted the actions of courageous Christian women merely as characteristic of men: Women can take on a masculine role for the sake of God to the point where they “become men” in the eyes of Christianity.…

    • 1805 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Throughout the texts we have read in class, including in the ones examined closely in this paper (namely Lanval, The Wife’s Lament, and Chaucer’s The Wife of Bath’s Tale) women consistently appear as powerful beings. This introduces a certain amount of threat simply because the woman’s position in medieval society was largely guided by the principles in the Bible – and thus, women were treated as “lesser” according to writings that stated that they weren’t allowed to teach, were to submit to the men in their life, and were to avoid “playing the whore” (Leviticus 21:9). The texts, then, will often attempt to rid those women of their powerful status or explain why they do not deserve it. At the very least,…

    • 1764 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Powerful Essays

Related Topics