Thursday, December 08, 2005

So Much More

Several hours on the road last weekend afforded me the time to finish the book, So Much More – The Remarkable Influence of Visionary Daughters on the Kingdom of God, by sisters Anna Sofia Botkin and Elizabeth Botkin. I was very impressed with both the quality and the content of their writing. They display remarkable maturity and wisdom and I found myself prompted to examine my own thinking on more than one occasion as the authors challenged mindsets and practices that have become widely accepted in Western society, even among Christians.

Throughout the book, the authors proclaim the beauty of God’s role for women, specifically for daughters living under the authority of their earthly fathers. They convincingly trace the feminist movement back to its Marxist roots and offer numerous quotations that expose the sinister plans of those who espoused the socialist, and later the feminist, ideologies – very sobering implications for those in this day and age who cling to their feminist ideals.

Feminist ideals. It is easy to brush aside such a description, convinced that I remain unaffected. As much as I would like to claim that my mindset is unquestionably based upon Scripture, I have had to face the harsh reality that I, too, have been “tossed to and fro, and carried about…by the sleight of men, and cunning craftiness whereby they lie in wait to deceive.”1 The subtle – and not so subtle – influences of feminism have infiltrated all of society. Many Christian women unwittingly embrace them, trading in the fulfilling life to which God has called them for a lifetime of slavery to a philosophy that, while proclaiming liberation and freedom, at its root is hostile to God and His ways. (This is borne out in numerous ways and the authors do a much better job of elaborating on this than I can in this post. I highly recommend ordering and reading the book to gain a more thorough understanding of this topic.)

In a nutshell, though, here’s what we have to wrap our brain around: God created men and women differently, to fill unique roles in His kingdom. We are not equally fitted to the same tasks. We are not mutually called to serve in the same positions. Until we recognize and embrace these unique roles, there will be tension in the home, dissatisfaction in life and disrepair in society.

How can we even hope to combat a mindset that is so deeply entrenched in our culture? We must recognize what the protagonists of these ideologies recognized years ago. Check out this strategy summarized by Charles A. Reich in The Greening of America:
“There is a revolution coming. It will not be like revolutions in the past. It will originate with the individual and the culture, and it will change the political structure as its final act.”2


The revolution to which Reich refers has come. Now it is time for it to go. Now it is time for a rebelution!

In an interview included in the back of the book, Geoffrey Botkin (the authors’ father) declares,
“When people’s souls are changed so that they think differently and act differently, history changes. The consequences are eternal because souls are eternal.”3

We must be about the business of declaring the truth of God as it applies to every area of life, every facet of society. This will be done most effectively as we embody these truths in our own lives, embrace the familial roles God has called us to fill, and live a life that is set apart in stark contrast to the world around us. Let us grab hold of this challenging, yet exciting, life-long adventure! “Let us lay aside every weight, and the sin which doth so easily beset us, and let us run with patience the race that is set before us, Looking unto Jesus the author and finisher of our faith; who for the joy that was set before him endured the cross, despising the shame, and is set down at the right hand of the throne of God.” 4



1 Ephesians 4:14
2 So Much More, page 337 (emphasis added)
3 So Much More, page 315
4 Hebrews 12:1-2

9 Comments:

At December 09, 2005 7:50 AM, Blogger natalie said...

Thanks for writing about the book. I had thought it sounded rather interesting, but this really makes me want to read it.

 
At December 10, 2005 6:12 PM, Blogger natalie said...

Yes, you definitely should read it, Natalie! I think you would enjoy it! I'd love to know if you do and what you think of it.

 
At December 15, 2005 1:29 PM, Blogger Mrs.B. said...

I just received my copy of this book. I don't have any children but I thought it would still be helpful for me (even though I'm a grown woman) because I've heard so many good things about it. I can't wait to start it!

 
At December 17, 2005 8:20 PM, Blogger natalie said...

Mrs. B~
Thanks for your kind comments - on this and a couple of my other posts. I would love to know your thoughts, as a "grown woman!", on the book once you've had a chance to read it!

 
At December 19, 2005 11:40 AM, Blogger Mrs.B. said...

You're welcome Natalie! And when I finish reading it I'll let you know what I think. (o:

 
At January 13, 2006 7:32 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Natalie, if you really are so positively impressed by the Botkin sisters book, you should immediately resign from any agreements with your music students, marry a rich guy, and have lots of babies.

 
At January 15, 2006 8:50 PM, Blogger natalie said...

Anonymous~
I'll get right on that... :-)

Let me say that I believe that the principles set forth in the book will carry different applications for different people. I am "so positively impressed" with the book because even having been raised in a Godly home, surrounded by excellent teaching, much of what the Botkin sisters shared was a perspective that I have not heard so clearly articulated before. And it is certainly not a popular message.

The tendency when being confronted with the reality that certain underlying philosophies have influenced my attitudes and behavior more than I was aware is to try to figure out how my current lifestyle can fit in with the particular teaching. Instead, I ought to search out whether the teaching is in line with Scripture, and, upon finding it to be so, must conform my lifestyle to be in harmony with the Biblical teaching.

God's primary role for women, as presented in Scripture, is to be in the home, extending their influence in that sphere. Certainly, God may open other doors of influence or use a woman in another sphere for a season of her life, but primarily, a woman's role is to be a "keeper at home."

Most importantly, though, a woman should maintain a heart of submission toward the Lord and toward her God-given authority - usually either her father or her husband - and be open to how the Lord will direct her and her activities through that authority.

 
At March 02, 2007 8:22 PM, Anonymous Christina said...

I found your blog on So Much More from doing a search for any comments on it.
My two sisters and I received it as a Christmas gift, and have been "eating it up" as fast as we can. It has been a big blessing for us, since we had felt convicted (as did our parents)of so many things they confront.
One of the things I did not agree with, though, is that women should not be foreign missionaries. The Lord has worked in such a marvellous way - a way that one can only say GOD Himself did it all - that I can do nothing but obey Him when He speaks. When He tells me to do something other than what we have heard all our lives, we can't tell Him "that's not lawful, Lord." As Peter told Him that "I cannot eat unclean things, Lord," so we can't say the same to our All-Knowing God!
I am all for ladies against feminism... it saddens me a great deal that women have become the dominant beings when God created them - in the first place - to be a "HELP" meet to the man.
The one things that really bothers me, is that so many young women are going off to college primarily because a college degree has become a label nowadays. I think that it is totally sad, since those who don't have a degree or the intention to obtain one are looked down upon.
PRAISE God for the opportunity to be persecuted for Him!
Thank you for your comment, Natalie, when you said,
"Certainly, God may open other doors of influence or use a woman in another sphere for a season of her life, but primarily, a woman's role is to be a "keeper at home."
I appreciate your openness to share your thoughts. It is always very helpful!

 
At July 18, 2008 9:09 PM, Anonymous Christina said...

Well, I don't know if anyone reads this blog anymore, since I am the Christina who posted last, but I'm going to give a kind of "update" on my last comment.

It's amazing how the Lord can change a person's heart and mind, isn't it? That was a little over a year ago that I wrote the above, and here I am saying that I am now home under my father's roof not even planning to return to the foreign mission field unless God gives me a husband with that vision.

I am a Returned Daughter and proud of it!

To make a L-o-n-g story short, let me just say that the Lord gave me a pining heartache for home and family that I have never in my 21 years felt before as I did when I was being a "missionary". I felt so alone, so awkward, so HOMESICK that I wanted to go back home after 10 days.

Oh sure, I loved the native people, tongues, food, scenery, culture... but there was an unexplainable longing in my heart that I knew - but didn't want to admit - was from the Lord Himself, showing me how stubborn and selfish I was for wanting to be this great missionary all by myself, only to pine and dream of my father and mother's talking to me 1-on-1 or sharing a laugh with a brother or sister.

So... I came home (it was whole heartedly necessary due to some not so nice circumstances that ended up coming my way).

Instead of the whole year I envisioned myself away, I was home after just three months on Indian soil.

But what I went through was totally God's will for me. It was planned out that way, even when I was so adamant about getting there as soon as possible, so eager to get my Visa and tickets straightened out.

So yes, I have fallen in love with the Botkins' book yet again, falling to my knees every time I'm inspired or convicted (or encouraged!). For truly, this was all the Lord's doing - it is marvellous in my eyes!

Thanks, Natalie, for sharing!

 

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