Mother's Day Ideas: Celebrate Women of Faith
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Seven Extraordinary Women of Faith of the Bible
Samples:
Eve - Genesis 2:4b and 3:1-24
God created Adam and found him wanting. Enter Eve, formed from
Adam’s rib, made of the same raw materials as he, and given the power to choose
between good and evil. In the creation story we find a strong, interdependent
Eve, fully engaged with the world around her. She is portrayed as a worthy and
equal partner to Adam. She explored the Garden, dialogued
with a serpent, decided on the forbidden fruit, and liked it enough to share the
experience with Adam...
Eve’s story reminds us that people can be both creative and
destructive. She teaches us to weigh our choices carefully, tempering our
desires with wisdom.
Deborah - Judges 4 and 5
In a
time in which it was improper for a woman to be alone in a house with a man,
Deborah sat outside beneath a palm tree and judged Israel. After 20 years of
oppression, it was she who summoned the military general Barak to take ten
thousand soldiers and storm Mt. Tabor against their enemy Sisera. Barak
answered, “If you go with me.” Deborah agreed, but told Barak he’d receive no
glory. “The Lord will have Sisera fall into the power of a woman.” This prophecy
would have dual meaning, for not only would Deborah be remembered as the real
leader of this victory, Sisera would literally fall because of a woman...
Deborah inspires us to trust our wisdom and instincts and to humbly accept the
credit due us. A canticle (Judges 5) is dedicated to her bravery. Her example
admonishes us to always remember and respect the power of a woman.
Ruth - The Book of Ruth
Their
names say it all. Ruth, believed to be a short version of “retut,” or lovely
friend, was the widowed daughter-in-law of Naomi. Naomi, also a widow, was
exiled from Moab because of a famine and had returned to Bethlehem after the
death of her sons. She told old friends, “Call me Mara, for the Lord has made it
very bitter for me.” What Naomi missed is the sweetness of a special gift: Ruth.
Naomi had released her grieving daughters-in-law to return to their people, but
Ruth declared, “Your people shall be my people, and your God my God.”...
Ruth’s
lesson to us? Steadfast love and loyalty may just lead you into a glorious
destiny.
Esther - The Book of Esther
Esther
was a simple orphan, raised by her cousin Mordecai, until she decided she was
destined to be royalty. Hiding her Jewish identity, she became a harem
contestant, and after a year of spa treatments, emerged a stunner. The king may
not have been bright, but he knew how to pick a beauty queen. Smitten, he
rewarded Esther with a crown. It was good to be Esther until a tip from Mordecai
forced her into action. The king, who led more by whim than wisdom, was
convinced by his evil minister Haman to kill all Jews....
Esther
reminds us to be imaginative, as well as courageous. We don’t always have to
fight to get what we want; sometimes we just have to outwit our adversary.
Mary, mother of Jesus
Much has
been said about accepting Jesus as the personal savior, but no one accepted him
in a more personal way than Mary, his mother. She literally “fleshed out” the
unthinkable: Immanuel, God with us....
Mary
was the first disciple of Christ. She had to believe in him before anyone else.
Her
faith
in Jesus was not a product of her extraordinary actions. It was a gift. Her
lesson to us is that we must let go of the notion that we create faith based on
our works. God gifts us with faith, which makes our good works possible.
Woman at the Well - John 4: 1-30
Like
Jesus, the Samaritan woman came to the well thirsty. Jesus wanted to quench his
bodily thirst; so did the woman, but the story hints at deeper layers of
meaning. Perhaps Jesus thirsted for souls, and the woman for at-long-last love.
“Give me a drink,” Jesus said, a scandal; Jews were forbidden to share anything
in common with unclean Samaritans. When she questioned him he replied, “If you
knew the gift of God, and who it is saying to you, ‘Give me a drink,’ you would
have asked him, and he would have given you living water.” ...
Mary Magdala
Poor
Mary Magdalene. St. Gregory the Great ruined her reputation suggesting she was a
prostitute. Scholars have since rejected his thesis, and today Mary Magdalene is
seen as one of Jesus’ most powerful allies. Sure, he may have had to cast seven
demons out of her, or at least healed her of an undisclosed illness, but the
grateful woman of means in turn led his female disciples and offered Jesus
financial support....
With
Mary as our example, we can follow our passions with everything within us,
fearlessly, no matter what obstacles we encounter.
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