Adult women need heroines, too. But these extraordinary women are little overwhelming to me. Truly, I can’t conquer the laundry, let alone find a cure for cancer. I take joy in the fact that the heroines in Scripture are outwardly less splashy than those from women’s history month.
“Mother shuns Disney Princess ideal and dresses daughter up as five real heroines” read the Daily Mail headline last week.
The story was about Texas photographer and mom, Jamie Moore, who celebrated her daughter Emma’s fifth birthday by dressing her up as influential women from history. Being a princess, Moore wrote on her blog, is an “unrealistic fantasy for most girls.” So she opted to photograph Emma as five significant women, “REAL women for my daughter to know about and look up to.” Real heroines.
Women who changed lives.
Women who made a contribution to the world.
Moore chose individuals who were, by any standard, amazing women: Susan B. Anthony, Coco Chanel, Helen Keller, Amelia Earhart, Jane Goodall. Giants in our history. I can understand why she selected them for her daughter.
Adult women need heroines, too. But these extraordinary women are little overwhelming to me. Truly, I can’t conquer the laundry, let alone find a cure for cancer. I take joy in the fact that the heroines in Scripture are outwardly less splashy than those from women’s history month.
Sure, there’s Esther and Jael and Rahab. But most of the Bible’s great women weren’t especially beautiful or extraordinarily smart or particularly creative. They did the little stuff, the messy stuff, and the necessary stuff.
My heroines are women like Nympha (Colossians 4:5) who was written down in the pages of Holy Scripture because she opened her door and let some saints walk in.
And Priscilla (Acts 18) who, with her husband, was a refugee. But she gave hospitality to a loud and poorly-informed young man who needed some quiet nurture before he could be useful in the kingdom.
I’m so thankful for the heroics of Lois and Eunice (2 Timothy 1:5) who mothered and grandmothered with the love of Christ shining brightly in their actions.
Sisters, “the Lord sees not as man sees: man looks on the outward appearance, but the Lord looks on the heart.” (1 Samuel 16:7) The greatest actions are not always the ones the world applauds. Often, the greatest actions are the smallest sacrifices of individuals motivated by love for Christ.
If we need heroines–and we do–we can aspire to be like the widow (Mark 12: 42) with her two copper coins and the women (Luke 8:1-3) who provided for Jesus and his disciples. Nothing remarkable. But precious in the sight of God.
Perhaps best of all, we can look to Mary and Martha (Luke 10:38-42, John 11.) They offered a little hospitality (mixed with some grumbles) and displayed a little faith (mixed with some ignorance) but mostly they were great by association. The Scriptures simply says: “Now Jesus loved Martha and her sister.”
When I grow up, I want to be like them.
Megan Hill is a PCA pastor’s wife and regular contributor to The Aquila Report. She and her mother write Sunday Women, a blog about ministry life where this article first appeared. It is used with permission.
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