Tell Her Story: How Women Led, Taught, and Ministered in the Early Church
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Last update: 12-11-2024
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Women were there. For centuries, discussions of early Christianity have focused on male leaders in the church. But there is ample evidence right in the New Testament that women were actively involved in ministry, at the frontier of the gospel mission, and as respected leaders.
Nijay Gupta calls us to bring these women out of the shadows by shining light on their many inspiring contributions to the planting, growth, and health of the first Christian churches. He sets the context by exploring the lives of first-century women and addressing common misconceptions, then focuses on the women leaders of the early churches as revealed in Paul's writings. We discover the major roles of people such as: Phoebe, Paul's trusted coworker; Prisca, strategic leader and expert teacher; Junia, courageous apostle; and Nympha, representative of countless lesser-known figures.
When we understand the world in which Jesus and his followers lived and what the New Testament actually attests about women in the churches, it becomes clear that women were active participants and trusted leaders all along. They were welcomed by Paul and other apostles, were equipped and trained for ministry leadership, instructed others, traveled long distances, were imprisoned—and once in a while became heroes and giants.
Top reviews from the United States
5.0 out of 5 stars Scholarly and Conversational, Packed with Information and Insight
Reviewed in the United States on June 16, 2023
What if, right?
Except, that is exactly what reading Tell Her Story: How Women, Led, Taught, and Ministered in the Early Church, by Nijay K. Gupta, was like for me.
Now, in the spirit of full disclosure, I have read almost all of Dr. Gupta’s books. They are probably some of the best creative nonfiction books out there on Greek scholarship and Biblical exegesis, very accessible and conversational, definitely erudite and carefully researched, and so enjoyably written a person hardly realizes they have just received an excellent education when they read that last page and close the book with happy satisfaction.
(Man, that sentence is four lines long! Must be I have been reading apostle Paul stuff recently).
Tell Her Story begins with Deborah’s narrative, and the extraordinary, unique example she provides at very nearly the beginning of the Bible of women in political and religious leadership. From there, Gupta returns to the foundational passage in Genesis 1-3 to exploring the synoptic accounts of earth’s and humankind’s beginnings. Gupta points out God’s intention of men and women partnering.
“The sum is greater than the parts, and together they have the potential to unlock the full vitality of God's creation on earth.
“… One human ruling the other that is not an ideal of the garden but an intrusion and an undoing.
“… The way back is uniformity this Christ, not hierarchy.”
Nijay K. Gupta, Tell Her Story, pp. 26, 26, 29
In the next chapter, Gupta describes what life was like for women in the Greco-Roman world of the first century, and how women navigated in both domestic and civic spaces. Gupta tells it like it was, without romanticizing. He begins, “the ancient world was a man’s world” (p. 30). There it is.
Taking the reader through a review of patriarchy, social class, and status in that world, we begin to understand how complex, actually, it really was. Being a man or a woman (or an enslaved person, or a eunuch, for that matter) was not the sum total of one’s identity. Wealth, connections, intelligence, skills and talents, education, assets, nobility, you get the picture. There were plenty of occasions when a particular woman might outclass a particular man in a given situation.
Though there were certain broad areas of life where women were barred, women had ways to operate in those spaces as well. I was fascinated to learn how!
Gupta also did a little myth-busting:
• Wives were not always under the authority of their husbands (p. 38).
• Women often could and did own property (p. 39).
• A woman’s life may have centered in the home, but it was anything but private (p. 40).
With ample citations and archaeological evidence, Gupta shows Greek and Roman women were engaged in business, politics and civic benefaction, social associations, and leadership in cultic activities. Jewish women also enjoyed opportunities to be engaged in social life, with a number of high-profile leaders including Queen Alexandra Salome of Judea (76 to 67 BC) (p. 46).
Just knowing what Gupta outlined in this chapter changes the lens through which you and I would read the stories of women in Jesus’s life and ministry, the next chapter of the book. He begins with Mary, mother of Jesus, depicting her as the courageous and biblically literate person she was. From there, Gupta shows how women “paved the way” for Jesus (p. 56) and how Jesus mindfully and respectfully engaged with women.
Of the many insights Gupta offers, here is one of my favorites:
“… there may be a clever thematic link between Acts 1-2 and the beginning of the gospel of Luke. In Luke 1, when the angel Gabriel appears to Mary, she is told that “the Holy Spirit will come on you, and the power of the Most High will overshadow you” (Lk 1:35). In Luke 3:22, when Jesus is baptized, the Holy Spirit descends in the form of a dove and rests on him. And in Acts 2 the empowering presence of the Spirit comes down from heaven and fills up the room (Acts 2:2-3). Mary can be seen to be a living link from the incarnation, through the life and ministry of Jesus, and into the ministry of the Spirit-empowered apostles. In these Pentecost paintings, then, she symbolizes the church, the guardian and agent of Christ's gospel, and the work of God from age to age, era to era, testified and confirmed by God's Spirit.
Nijay K. Gupta, Tell Her Story, p. 67
Then we get to the women leaders in the early church.
Gupta again lays the groundwork for understanding how the early church gathered, explaining the structure and habits of synagogues and the early assemblies of believers. He spells out the various New Testament terminology for these gatherings and the people who worked alongside Paul as well as served and ministered in the church.
Again, understanding all these things gives a much better template for understanding how women were engaged in Christ’s call as portrayed in scripture.
Reading the texts containing women takes care. Words matter, context matters. Here are two quotes that illustrate what I mean.
The first example concerns a single sentence from Paul’s letter to Rome:
“Greet Mary, who worked very hard for you.”
Romans 16:6
What could a person possibly get from that!?
"The prominence of her being named in the early part of the list, combined with the amplifier very (“Mary … worked very hard”), suggests that she was a prominent church leader. Saint John Chrysostom comments on this verse that women carried out many different ministries in the apostolic age—not just Word ministry (teaching, like Priscilla) but also doing ministry in dangerous places, risking poverty, and enduring harsh travel conditions: 'For the women of those days were more spirited than lions, sharing with the apostles their labors for the Gospel’s sake.'”
Nijay K. Gupta, Tell Her Story, p. 101
The second example, several pages later, keys in on a significant fact about the text and context of Paul’s mention of a woman in his letter to Colossae.
“Greet the brothers and sisters in Laodicea, and Nympha and the church down in her house.”
Colossians 4:15
We can read that sentence over and over and miss its magnitude. Until it sinks in, remembering Paul’s greetings in other letters.
"Again, it should reshape how we think about first-century Christianity when we consider that the only named person we know from the Laodicean community is a woman, Nympha. This offers yet another reminder that ministry leadership in the apostolic period was not a man's job. People, both women and men, of skill and gifting, with resources and experience at their disposal, were called on to care for the people of God in Jesus Christ—people like Apphia and Nympha."
Nijay K. Gupta, Tell Her Story, p. 111
Separate chapters are given to Prisca and Junia, strong leaders in the Lord, followed by a summary of Paul’s support and enthusiastic partnering with women throughout his ministry career.
The last section of this book is entitled “What About … ?
Yes, what about those biblical passages that seem to indicate just about the opposite of everything Dr. Gupta has just finished telling us about? With his inimical winsome and conversational style, Gupta takes us through 1 Timothy 2 and the so-called household codes scattered throughout the epistles that discuss submission. Throughout, Gupta reminds us of the redemptive trajectory of the apostles’ teaching. Their work has gotten us here, honoring the dignity and worth of all human beings, and the equally loved and respected status of God’s beloved in the Kingdom of Heaven.
This book is so worth it!
Bonuses, by the way:
• For as packed as it is with information and insight, the whole thing is only 200 pages long.
• Gupta’s bibliography alone is worth the price of admission.
• Every chapter comes with a summary conclusion—if you need to cut to the chase, you can.
(Do it! You know you want to. Buy this book, your brain, heart, spirit, and library will thank you.)
5.0 out of 5 stars Stories You Won’t Forget!
Reviewed in the United States on August 9, 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars Fresh insights on women in church leadership, with one flaw at the end
Reviewed in the United States on March 14, 2023
1. Gupta starts by elevating the stories of women in leadership, starting from the Old Testament. I'm embarrassed to say that I had some things about Deborah wrong, and there was plenty I didn't understand about Priscilla.
Tell Her Story dedicated a lot of space to unpacking the heroism of these women who risked their lives to deliver the faith tradition we have today. That's a refreshing way to start the conversation, no matter if you're complementarian or egalitarian.
2. Gupta mentions and relies on the groundbreaking new scholarship, including books that were just released and at least one that hasn't been released yet.
For example, Tell Her Story uses Bernadette Brooten's exciting work on Women Leaders in the Ancient Synagogue:
"From inscriptional evidence, we also know that women sometimes held leadership titles in the synagogue. Women were called 'synagogue ruler' (archisynagõgos/archisynagõgissa) in places like
Smyrna, Crete, and Myndos; 'ruler' (archēgissa) in Thessaly; 'elder'
(presbytera) in Crete, Thrace, Venosa, Tripolitania, Rome, and Malta;
'mother' (mater) of the synagogue in Rome, Venosa, and Venetia; 'female-father' (pateressa) of the synagogue in Venosa; and priestess of
the synagogue in places like Egypt, Rome, and Jerusalem."
Gupta also also uses brand new scholarship from Helen Bond, Joan Taylor, Beth Allison Barr, Susan Hylen, and Lucy Peppiatt.
Tell Her Story's "suggested reading list" is worth the price of the book alone!
The one unfortunate misstep in the book is the handling of the relationship between wives and husbands. This 200 page book makes an airtight case for women in leadership in the church, but doesn't have enough space to defend a standard egalitarian view of marriage, which feels tacked on at the end.
After addressing misconceptions about what God calls spouses to in marriage, Gupta admits that the Apostles Peter and Paul do not promote a strictly egalitarian conception of the relationship:
"There is no getting around the fact that even when we take into account 'exceptions' to the household code 'rules,' these passages in the New Testament still make many of us feel uncomfortable, including me. Why didn’t Paul or Peter profess and affirm equal marriage?"
Gupta lands on the wobbly argument that Paul and Peter were just men of their times:
"I am not sure Paul (or Peter, or anyone in ancient society) could conceive of “equal marriage” the way we do now. There was such an omnipresent fog of sexism and misogyny in the Roman world that viewed women as weak, dumb, promiscuous, vindictive, and emotionally incontinent. Paul was above the worst of these biases, I believe. As far as we know from the New Testament texts we have, he says only positive things about named women (like Phoebe, Junia, and Priscilla). But I can only assume he, too, walked around with an inherited understanding of the male-led patriarchal household, because that was all he knew."
Between the egalitarian view that the Bible does call for equality in marriage, and the complementarian view that the Bible calls for equality in worth and purpose but different "roles", Gupta's view is an intellectually honest compromise that's actually worse than either of those options.
For a richer view, I suggest the work of Black women theologians who oppose slavery, affirm women in leadership, and navigate the gendered virtues in marriage. Read "Storied Witness: The Theology of Black Women Preachers in 19th-Century America" by Kate Hanch to get a start.
I enjoyed "Tell Her Story" and I will recommend it to friends who want to understand why women with the gift of leadership should hold any office in the church.