
Modern readers of the New Testament often notice its varying ideas about women. Some passages encouraged women to be submissive and remain silent. Yet in others, women characters owned property, headed households, or spoke with approval. Women in the New Testament World helps readers understand this conflicting evidence. It argues that social norms of the time encouraged traditional feminine virtues. However, as Susan Hylen argues, women in the culture enacted these virtues in a variety of ways, including active leadership in households, associations, and cities. In contrast to earlier approaches that divided the evidence into groups that either allowed or forbade women's leadership, this book points to a tension that was pervasive across different groups and regions of the Roman world. Society widely viewed women as inferior to men yet applauded their active pursuit of familial and civic interests. Thus, it was not the case that some women led while others were silent; instead, women were praised for modesty at the same time as they exerted influence in their communities. Elaborating on this rich historical background, Hylen illuminates new possibilities in New Testament texts.
How did women in the New Testament era navigate the conflicting social expectations of domestic modesty and active public influence? Susan E. Hylen, a scholar of New Testament studies, examines the historical and cultural landscape of the Roman world to reconcile the disparate portrayals of women in early Christian texts. She argues that rather than a binary division between submissive and authoritative roles, women of the period operated within a complex social framework that simultaneously demanded traditional virtues and permitted significant civic and familial leadership.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and students of biblical history identify this work as a nuanced contribution to the study of gender in antiquity. Readers frequently note that the text provides a sophisticated alternative to simplistic interpretations of early Christian social structures.
Page Count:
176
Publication Date:
2018-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190237597
ISBN-13:
9780190237592
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