Three Cheers for Michelle Obama

Posted by deangonzales on December 4, 2008
12 Comments

APTOPIX Democratic ConventionMichelle Obama has declared her chief project as the nation’s first lady.  It’s being a mom!  In an article entitled, My First Job as First Lady is to be First Mom, Michelle Obama stated: “Now that Barack has been elected president, it will be an honor to be First Lady. I will work daily on the issues closest to my heart: helping working women and families, particularly military families. But, even as First Lady, my No 1 job is still to be Mom. At 7 and 10, our daughters are young. My first priority will be to ensure they stay grounded and healthy, with normal childhoods – including homework, chores, dance, and soccer. Our girls are the center of Barack’s and my world” (Timesonline, Nov. 7, 2008).

Albert Mohler recently wrote: “As for Mrs. Obama, she has made her position clear — she will devote herself first and foremost to being the wife of the President and the mother of their children.  She is willingly and eagerly choosing the role of First Mom.  She will not practice law and she will not be actively involved in policy development — at least for now” (AlbertMohler.com, Dec. 2, 2008).

Well done, Mrs. Obama!  I know you’re taking heat from feminists.  But you go girl!  And I assure you that your Princeton University and Harvard Law School degrees won’t go to waste in your challenging new vocation.

Here’s an extended excerpt from Womanly Dominion: More than a Gentle and Quiet Spirit (Calvary Press 2008), pp. 108-109:

Homemaking motherhood is no refuge for the inept woman who can’t cut it in the real world.  Rather, for the biblically thinking Christian, stay-at-home mothering is the ultimate profession for the elite of her gender.

Her skill set must be highly diversified.  She’s no mere babysitting caretaker.  She realizes she’s raising thoroughbreds for the kingdom, and so she studies and reads and prepares meals with the inspiration of a dietitian and a nutritionist.  Her health care duties summon her often to rise to the level of nurse and physician.  Domestic engineer is a suitable title for her who exercises dominion over her household headquarters by subduing swarming details into workable order.  She is an economist in keeping the budget, holding the purse strings as the accountant, and acting as the purchasing agent for the family corporation, averting bankruptcy and maintaining solvency.  She’s a psychologist in analyzing the peculiarities of each temperament, tracing the development of each child, and bringing the apt word as a counselor in every situation.  She’s a personal trainer and disciplinarian as she cultivates obedience and self-control in her natively wild herd.  She’s a teacher and professor in instructing her students in reading, spelling, grammar, mathematics, history, science, and art.  This is exceptionally and overwhelmingly true of a home schooling mother.  She’s a pastor and theologian as she educates her children in the lofty themes of morality, spirituality, and eternity.

With a job description like that, I advise young women to get all the education they can.  Any liberal arts or professional university degree will provide money in the bank knowledge from which a mother will daily make heavy withdrawals.

I know that some jobs don’t really count, don’t make much of a difference, don’t actually matter that much, don’t have much lasting significance.  Not so with mothering.  I know that in some jobs the worker is only handling cleaning equipment, or car parts, or computer keyboards, or insurance policies, or court cases, or political legislation, or stockholders’ funds.  Not so with mothering.  A mother is handling things of a far greater magnitude.  She’s handling never-dying souls.  She’s daily conducting heart surgery on eternal spirits whose forever destinies are influenced most profoundly by the hands that rock their cradles, wipe their noses, spank their fannies, open their Bibles, prepare their after-school snacks, and turn off their bedroom lights.  Those motherly hands are molding characters which will become men and women who will turn the world upside down either for good or for evil.  Now that’s a job that counts.

Mark Chanski
Author of Womanly Dominion: More than a Gentle and Quiet Spirit

Womanly Dominion: More than a Gentle and Quiet Spirit by Mark Chanski

Posted by deangonzales on September 1, 2008
9 Comments

Mark Chanski is a pastor of the Reformed Baptist Church of Holland, Michigan, and the professor of hermeneutics for Reformed Baptist Seminary. Below is an excerpt from his soon-to-be published Womanly Dominion: More than a Gentle and Quiet Spirit. The book is due to be available on September 12, by Calvary Press. Chapter 13 is entitled “Womanly Dominion in the Public Square.” The subheadings are: 1. A Woman President? 2. A Woman Warrior? 3. A Woman Athlete? 4. A Woman Worker?

A Woman President?

Right now, it’s January, 2008. The polls indicate that Hillary Clinton is the frontrunner for the Democratic Party’s presidential nomination. Past polls have shown that in a general election, pitted against any Republican candidate, Hillary would win. There’s also been talk on the Republican side of the nominee possibly choosing the present Secretary of State, Condoleezza Rice, as his running mate, placing a woman a “heartbeat away” from the oval office. Setting aside for the moment specific personalities and liberal vs. conservative ideology, would this be a good thing in general, for a woman to become our President? [Ed. Although Hillary and Condolezza are out of the picture at this point, John McCain has just announced Sarah Palin to be his running mate as VP. So the scenario of a woman president is still within the scope of possibility!]

Important Considerations

1.  The Bible views it as a judgment and calamity upon a nation for it to be ruled by women.  Isaiah 3:12 reads: “O My people! Their oppressors are children, and women rule over them. O My people! Those who guide you lead you astray, and confuse the direction of your paths.”  Surely here, God views women and children as less than ideal rulers.  This probably refers to an inherent constitutional weakness in womanhood (1 Peter 3:7, 1 Timothy 2:14), which generally hinders them in high-pressured leadership challenges.

2. Esther was a wise queen, but she did not rule as a monarch.  Persian authority rested with her husband, King Ahasuerus.  Her influence on national policy was profound, but as a bold and advising helpmeet behind the scenes (Esther 5:1-4; 7:2-6), not as a political ruler.  In her we find a noble pattern for our daughters.  If George W. Bush is the most powerful man in the world, his wife Laura may arguably be the second most powerful man in the world (Esther 4:14).

3. Deborah was indeed God’s appointed leader for Israel during the period of the Judges (Judges 4:1-5:31).  But this was a morally dark and bleak era for Israel, and Deborah’s rise to power was actually an indictment against shameful male dereliction.  (See chapter 4 of this book in explaining Deborah.)  The accomplished Puritan Poet, Anne Bradstreet, (whose husband Simon Bradstreet and father Thomas Dudley served as governors of the Massachusetts Bay Colony in the 1600’s) understood that in trying times God could use a Deborah.  In a poem commending the reign of Queen Elizabeth I, Anne Bradstreet penned:

She hath wiped off th’ aspersion of her sex,
That Women wisdom lack to play the rex . . .
Was ever people better ruled than hers?”[i]

4. The Bible looks favorably on the competence of the Queen of Sheba and the legitimacy of her secular rule over her gentile nation (1 Kings 10:1-10).  Such national leaders as Elizabeth I in England, Margaret Thatcher in the United Kingdom, and Golda Meir in Israel are examples of competent women who have admirably led their respective nations.  It’s interesting how the latter two were both given the nickname “Iron Lady,” indicating that their mettle was uncharacteristically strong for their gender.  Steely firm toughness, an essential trait for effective ruling, is typically more pronounced in men (1 Corinthians 16:13).  It’s interesting how David Ben Gurion, Israel’s first prime minister, called Mrs. Meir “the only man in his cabinet.” [ii]

5. It is difficult to imagine a high-ranking female politician’s being able to conscientiously fulfill her priority obligations as a helpmeet to her husband and a mother to her children.  Golda Meir broke off her political responsibilities for four years to stay at home and raise her two children.  However, upon returning to public life, her enormous workload contributed to the collapse of her marriage in 1945.[iii]

Summary Opinion

Though I would never vote for a woman as my pastor, I could, under the right circumstances, be persuaded to vote for a woman as my president.

[i] Anne Bradstreet, The Works of Anne Bradstreet, ed. Jeannine Hensley (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1967), 19.
[ii] BBC News Profile, BBC, Golda Meir, 21 April 1998.
[iii] Ibid.

Endorsements

“This book is a very helpful one that, when I first looked at it, I thought a man couldn’t write!  But he did!”

Dr. Jay E. Adams,
Dean, Institure For Nouthetic Studies, Esteemed Author of over 120 books,
Father of Nouthetic Counseling, Retired Seminary Professor, Local Pastor, Worldwide Lecturer

“Finally–a book that brings together nearly everything God’s Word calls a woman to be–from within herself to her marriage and family, as well as the church and the public square. Chansk’s Womanly Dominion is Biblical Womanhood 101, a biblical, succinct, practical course that shows women how to think God’s thoughts after Him, to align themselves with their holy and awesome calling, and to free themselves from the pressures of worldly thinking about womanhood. Chanski is at times very frank and direct, at other times witty and humorous, and remarkably open and courageous, but he is always biblical and realistic, and knows how to open up the fullness of the woman’s massive calling. If women follow the advice contained in this book, they will be prayerful, joyful, content, fulfilled, and too busy exercising biblical dominion in every sphere of life to join the female murmurers and feminists of the twenty-first century!”

Dr. Joel R. Beeke
President and Professor of Systematic Theology and Homiletics
Puritan Reformed Theological Seminary
Grand Rapids, MI

“Today’s woman wants freedom and power. Mark Chanski clearly and colorfully describes how we women can be liberated from feminist ideas, to exercise womanly dominion, as outlined in Scripture by the very God who designed us. We have dominion in performing our role as a wife, in nurturing our children, in managing our home, and in reaching out to others. Singles have dominion in work and in society. Our greatest privilege is to walk in the footsteps of Jesus, who humbly washed others’ feet. He said, “Whosoever of you will be the chiefest, shall be servant of all.”  In the milieu of following God’s will, we can be content, fulfilled, and honored. Womanly Dominion is a must read for women.”

Mary Beeke
Wife of Dr. Joel Beeke
Author of The Law of Kindness

“Too many Christians, men and women, have bought into secular and even pagan notions of godly womanhood. Godly womanhood is not simply having the right ideas, or even simply the right doctrine. We do not need a generation of evangelical Stepford Wives, nor do we need a generation of Proverbs 31 Ann Coulters. Instead, the Scripture calls us to Christ-honoring heroic women with a gentle and quiet Spirit that is beautiful in the sight of the Lord. Mark Chanski calls us to this vision with grace, clarity, and conviction. This book will help women to grow in Christ. It will also help older women to mentor younger women. And it will help parents to raise daughters of dominion.”

Dr. Russell D. Moore
Vice-President and Dean
The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary
Louisville, Kentucky
Frequent Guest Host on The Albert Mohler Radio Program

“Womanly Dominion is biblical, practical and compelling.  Mark Chanski provides the church with a presentation of biblical womanhood that has the rare combination of winsomeness and theological clarity.  If you care about the home and church you need to read this book.”

Randy L. Stinson, Ph.D.
Dean, School of Leadership and Church Ministry
The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, Louisville, KY
President, Council on Biblical Manhood and Womanhood

“This is a fine book that lifts Christian women to their queenly province–which reigns far above the mythical sovereignties of feminism.  Read this book and be liberated!  We highly recommend it.”

Kent and Barbara Hughes
Retired Pastor of College Church, Wheaton, IL;
Authors of Disciplines of a Godly Man and Disciplines of a Godly Woman