The CBE Scroll

Blog voices from Christians for Biblical Equality

Exciting News

Written by: on Monday, October 10, 2011

On Friday, three women were awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for their commitment to women’s rights. Two of those women, President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf and Leymah Gbowee, were from Liberia, the country I called home for most of my elementary school years.

I haven’t stopped grinning since I heard the news. See, it was in Liberia that I first witnessed the true ugliness of gender injustice, first understood that a tiny seed of pride and superiority dropped into the heart of a man would blossom not into a sheltering tree, but into an ugly, invasive weed that choked the life out of everything around it.

My “Damascus road” experience happened when I was nine years old, peering out the window of our second-story apartment in Monrovia. Just outside our gate, a woman was curled up on her side under a palm tree, worn tee-shirt stretched thin across her torso as she shielded her head with her dusty black arms, her lappa-clad knees tucked close to her chest. The man kicking her wore camouflage, and had a government-issued machine gun slung over his shoulder.

I was horrified. It wasn’t that I hadn’t witnessed beatings before—to the contrary, they were common in Liberia. But this was different, an armed man beating a helpless, cringing women. And I had heard the whispers, the muted conversations adults thought I was too young to understand, about what men with guns did to women.

I heard my father approaching and froze, expecting to be shooed away from the window.  But he stopped a few steps behind me and just stood there, watching the scene unfold over my head. Then he sighed, turned, and walked away without a word.

The tectonic plates in my young soul shifted. For the first time, I realized there were some things my father, the strong, sensible, white American male, couldn’t fix. That if he went out there and did what every fiber of his being was undoubtedly screaming to do, he would only make things worse. To rush into the street and put himself between a murderous mob and a thief was one thing, and he did it on a regular basis. But to put himself between a man and a woman would constitute such an insult that the woman could very well end up dead.

That’s when I realized that violence against women isn’t a social problem; it is a spiritual problem, a highly-contagious disease that eats away at the hearts, souls, minds and bodies of humanity. You can’t address the problem by treating the symptoms—you have to go deep under the surface and neutralize it at its root, that tiny seed of pride, disdain, bitterness, and superiority allowed to germinate in the soul.

That is precisely what the women of Liberia have been doing for the last decade, recognizing their God-given worth, claiming their voices, and banding together to demand not just national but personal shalom, for themselves and the next generation. Consider the words Leymah Gbowee of as she led hundreds of women to the capital of Liberia in 2003. “We the women of Liberia will no more allow ourselves to be raped, abused, misused, maimed and killed! Our children and grandchildren will not be used as killing machines and sex slaves!”

Liberia still has a long way to go. We all do. But where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is freedom, and this hope makes us very bold.

 –Jenny Rae Armstrong (http://www.jennyraearmstrong.com/)

10 Comments »

Comment by Sonnet

October 10, 2011 @ 7:03 pm

May those who bear the name of Christ stop sowing seeds of sexism, no matter how subtle, but rather sow seeds of true equality where we love others as we love ourselves.

It is exciting news that the Nobel Peace Prize was awarded to women seeking to improve our world by promoting women’s rights.

Comment by Pam

October 10, 2011 @ 10:25 pm

Such courage, this Leymah Gbowee and those like her. It really makes the lofty complementarian ideals so ridiculously academic.

Comment by Don

October 11, 2011 @ 6:58 am

I respect these women a lot who struggle for what is right. May the Kingdom continue to increase step by step.

Comment by Jenny Rae Armstrong

October 11, 2011 @ 7:31 am

Elections are being held in Liberia today (perhaps it is yesterday there by now), so we can all pray for a good result. I am biting my fingernails a bit. But in any case the Nobel Prize is a GREAT boost for the women of Liberia!

Comment by RED

October 11, 2011 @ 11:17 am

I ditto what Pam said.

Comment by Sarah

October 12, 2011 @ 2:59 pm

Jenny, that was a beautifully written article. Thank you for sharing an “insider’s” perspective on this.

Comment by Michelle

October 13, 2011 @ 11:14 am

Wow. Thank you for writing this. You articulate very well the depths of soul sickness that insists on inequality. I knew I was glad to hear about the women who were awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, but now I am even more thankful.

I also want to draw your attention, if I may, to the situation of a priest who may be excommunicated because of his support of women’s ordination. I have let even some protestants I know who do NOT support the ordination of women know of this, because I hope they agree this should not be a reason to throw someone out of a church.

http://www.change.org/petitions/dont-dismiss-fr-roy-bourgeois-for-support-of-women-priests

Comment by Jenny Rae Armstrong

October 13, 2011 @ 12:07 pm

Thanks for the link, Michelle! So sad, the things that divide us and hinder people from using their gifts. :-/

In other news, there will be a runoff election between Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf and her opponent, William Tubman, on Nov. 8. Johnson-Sirleaf got 45% of the vote, and Tubman got 36%, but a majority is needed to avoid a run-off. We need to PRAY for the people of Liberia, that the elections will go well, and that the nation will not be plunged back into violence. There have been veiled threats from Sirleaf’s opposition and Prince Johnson, who has been rabble-rousing in Liberia since I was a little girl. :-/

Comment by Meggie

October 15, 2011 @ 8:26 am

Beautiful article! What courage these women have to bring change within such a brutal and oppressive milieu! They will help many who come after them!

Comment by margaret

October 16, 2011 @ 2:36 pm

What many people don’t seem to understand–sexism corrodes the souls of men as well, but most can’t see past the short-term rewards and see the long term damage

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