I haven't read the book. But the work he did in the article I posted stands on its own merit. There is something to be said for digging through thousands of occurences of how a word was used.
As far as weightlifting and beauty goes, I probably share Grudem's distates of beefy weight-lifting and women. But light weight-lifting is supposed to be healthy for women, especially as they age. He may have seen some body builders in the gym and found it distasteful. But it sounds like that book was a different type of work from the article under discussion.
Actually, the book was
Biblical Manhood and Biblical Womanhood, by Wayne Grudem and John Piper and it is the signature or foundational book of the whole complementarian movement. The intro was about personal tastes. Now, men and women are allowed to have personal tastes in what they think is handsome or beautiful in the opposite gender. I have no issues with that! But it was the introduction to the entire complementarian movement, and the opening comment was that women should be weak and spindly. Now I happen to agree with you about "muscle bound" women being ugly, but I am not talking about that, and I don't think Grudem was. I think he was talking about any woman who tries to improve her body. Like I said, I work out to keep my body able to get out of bed at all in the morning, as my theology is that God created our bodies to move, to be active, and our society is very sedentary. I am far from muscle bound, but I reject that anyone should use their personal tastes in women's bodies to open a serious Biblical discussion. I was planning on buying the book and reading it, to be informed with a first hand source. But after that comment, I decided that there was no point in reading dubious propaganda by the opposing side, based on feelings and opinions, instead of solid Biblical exegesis.
Besides, I was led to read Stanley J. Grenz's book
Women in the Church: A Biblical Theology of Women in Ministry, which was basically a rebuttal of the entire book by Grudem and Piper. Now, I know reading a criticism of the original document is not scholarly, unless you have first read the original, but after Grudem's comment about women's body shapes, I just could not force myself to read it.
I even read Dawkins'
God Delusion for Apologetics, and a few rebuttals by Christians. Although Dawkins is a complete idiot, sadly, his kind of attacks on Christianity were the same kind as Grudem's, but somehow one expects stupidity from an atheist whose goal is to make money by being an idiot and getting on the best seller list.
Anyway, I did go through a lot of the Septuagint uses of Kephale, before I posted, and I do firmly believe that the man is the leader in terms of defending his wife and family. Physical strength made that necessarily in Bible days, but even today, I think men are more geared for that type of defensive action mentally and physically, while women are more geared for nurturing. That is not sexist, and may not apply to everyone, but I think generally it is true. But that does not mean I would force anyone in a marriage to take those roles, if they do not work.
About 2 years ago, I led a man to Christ on the internet. He had severe social anxiety disorder, and stayed home and took care of the children, while is wife went out to work. He started attending a local church, his wife got saved, then the children. But they did not change the way their lives worked, because of his mental illness, and they were happy the way things were working, and so were the children. The church, fortunately, did not push them into roles where the mother stayed home and the poor man had to go to work. That is what freedom from roles is about. God created each of us as unique and special people. If the submission "roles" thing works for a couple, who am I to say the woman is being oppressed? That is between them and God. But it is not the Biblical standard as laid out in Genesis 2, but a consequence of the Fall. Roles are the result of sin. And Christ has made us new creatures in him, which means women need to follow Jesus Christ, above all, and his calling.
So I guess I am saying, I don't like sweeping generalizations about men or women should do from anyone. As far as Peter's quote, which you obviously have taken as a life verse. In that same passage there is an instruction that women should not wear gold or braid their hair.
"Do not let your adorning be external—the braiding of hair and the putting on of gold jewelry, or the clothing you wear—" 1 Peter 3:3.
My husband's grandmother went to a church that took this as the literal truth. His grandfather forced his grandmother to never wear jewelry, including a wedding ring, and she was not allowed to take her long hair and put it back into a braid around the back of her head, like the older Germanic women in her culture did. She obeyed, but it saddened her and the children. That is the bondage of legalism, especially when you consider that Peter was talking about hair-dos that took half the day for the slaves and servants to create, and were twisted with gold and precious jewels and were a status symbol. In our society, the braid is probably one of the simplest hair styles you can wear. My mother braided my long hair as a child, to keep it from tangling. So this verse is totally cultural!
However, I agree heartily with Peter's next comment in verse 4:
"but let your adorning be the hidden person of the heart with the imperishable beauty of a gentle and quiet spirit, which in God's sight is very precious. " 1 Peter 3:4
Now that is something I have been striving for since I read it the first year I was saved. And like I said, I always have submitted to my husband, out of reverence for Christ, so this is NOT an issue. What is an issue, is that Peter was a Jew, speaking to Jews, and using examples which the Jewish women would understand. Yet even in this case, submission is still used in the verse, never obey. Submission is voluntary, and although Sarah "obeyed" Abraham, as I said, she obeyed him when he told her to sin, and I really have to question that type of ethics.
If my husband told me to lie, or cheat or steal, or murder, I would disobey him without question. The ethics of the New Testament is that as a believer in Jesus Christ, I am responsible for my own walk with God. If my husband tries to make me do something contrary to God's Word, especially if it would damage other people, I would not do it. Now if you think that makes me a radical feminist, so be it. I call it the "authority of the believer." Peter himself said, when faced with being censored by the Sanhedrin,
"
Then Peter and the other apostles answered and said, We ought to obey God rather than men." Acts 5:29.
Sarah may have obeyed Abraham to their detriment, but I have access to the whole word of God, and the leading of the Holy Spirit, so I will pray the Holy Spirit will guide and lead me to have the beauty of a gentle and quiet spirit, while obeying God first! And if you think that is cherry picking, well so be it. The culture mores of Jewish culture, including Peter, who always struggled with the law versus grace, should be seen as a cultural and not universal truth. Sarah and Abraham's relationship is the worst possible model for a godly marriage, in light of all the destruction their disobedience to God (Hagar, for instance! And the resulting wars in the Middle East and the Muslim religion!) and calling Abram calling her his sister (actually, she was his half sister, so not a total lie!) but in light of hiding the truth of their marriage vows.
And I can certainly tell you, that if my husband had ever asked me to lie about my marital status to anyone, for the purpose of making me sleep with another man, even if it meant dying because of my disobedience, I would NOT obey my husband. Adultery and lying are simply against God's laws. Besides the whole thought being so repugnant and disgusting.
No, but Paul did address Peter not eating with the Gentiles in Antioch, though. And it probably happened before the Jerusalem Council. That does not mean that Peter taught false doctrine or that his epistle in the New Testament is not inspired. Do you think we should remove I Peter from the Bible because he neglected to eat with Gentiles in Antioch on that occasion? Jesus told Peter that He would give him the keys of the kingdom of heaven. Paul went to Jerusalem to make sure he hadn't run his race in vain. Apparently, he was preaching the same Gospel as Peter and John.
Inspiration of scripture doesn't mean every word is true, it means it is the accurate recording of the lives, the journeys and the revealing of Jesus Christ as the perfect model, and Saviour for all humanity. I take issue with the fact that 1 Peter was written before the Jerusalem council. 1 Peter was likely written in Rome, probably before the Neronian persecution (or it would have been mentioned in one way or another.) Likely, the time frame was probably somewhere around 62-63 AD, according to most scholars.
Estimates for the Jerusalem Council, in Acts 15, which is only half way through the book of Acts, is around 48-49 BC. So Peter had been warned about his Judaising, and in fact, the first ever council was called while Peter was still in Jerusalem to deal with issues like food and circumcision. While they may not have dealt with this specific issue, Paul gives so much more freedom to women, uses them in ministry, although he does have to deal with the unruly women in Corinth and Ephesus, in his epistles. Peter had defaulted his position to Paul, I feel at the Jerusalem Council, as the de facto leader of the Christian church, and even Peter does not understand some of Paul's deeper writings.
Peter was God's anointed man at Pentecost, there is no doubt about it, but this unlearned fisherman could not lead the church in the way that Paul did - fighting heresy, planting many churches, and spreading the gospel throughout the Roman empire, because of his his triplicate citizenship and his knowledge of Greek, Latin and Hebrew, and most important, his calling to the Gentiles, and his miraculous conversion.
I think we have different definitions of 'feminist.' I think calling what you consider 'the early feminists' 'feminists' is probably anachronistic.
I think you are probably very right about our different definitions of the word "feminist". However, I do not believe my definition is anachronistic but rather the true, historical definition of feminism. Christian women are needed in the challenge to spread the gospel and to fight evils, like abortion and slavery, which still exists even in the US today, as teenagers who are sold into the sex trade are used as chattel, and horribly damaged. I have a missionary friend who is very involved in helping former sex slaves reintegrate back into society.
I agree the term "feminist" has been abused my liberals and radicals, but as a follower of Jesus Christ, I am taking back the real meaning of the word, which is to fight for justice for all people. The Bible is a book about justice, God's justice in restoring us to be the people God once created us to be. We need to care for the poor, the sick, visit those in prison and to set the captives free.
"And he came to Nazareth, where he had been brought up. And as was his custom, he went to the synagogue on the Sabbath day, and he stood up to read. [SUP]17 [/SUP]And the scroll of the prophet Isaiah was given to him. He unrolled the scroll and found the place where it was written,[SUP]18 [/SUP]“The Spirit of the Lord is upon me,
because he has anointed me
to proclaim good news to the poor.
He has sent me to proclaim liberty to the captives
and recovering of sight to the blind,
to set at liberty those who are oppressed,
[SUP]19 [/SUP]to proclaim the year of the Lord's favor.”
[SUP]20 [/SUP]And he rolled up the scroll and gave it back to the attendant and sat down. And the eyes of all in the synagogue werefixed on him. [SUP]21 [/SUP]And he began to say to them, “Today this Scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing.” Luke 4:16-21
Jesus came to set us free from legalism, bondage, from the consequences of sin and death, including the roles which resulted from sin in the fall. That is true feminism - following Christ our Lord and Saviour, and leading the blind from the rigid roles created by the Fall, and the traditions of men.