Black Friday Early Access: Save Up to 80%!
Black Friday Early Access: Save Up to 80%!
Black Friday Early Access: Save Up to 80%!
Black Friday Early Access: Save Up to 80%!
Black Friday Early Access: Save Up to 80%!
Black Friday Early Access: Save Up to 80%!
Olive Tree Account
Log in
Can't Log In?
New to Olive Tree?
Olive Tree Account
Forgot Password
Enter the email address associated with your Olive Tree account to reset your password
Handmaid
Available for:
iPad, iPhone, Android, Mac, and Windows.
Features
Click on a feature to learn more.
Did your resource mention a passage of Scripture, but you can't remember what the verse says? Never fear! Tap the linked verse and a pop-up window will appear, giving you quick and easy access to the verse in context.
Handmaid
For the Olive Tree Bible App
Publisher: Wipf and Stock
Handmaid
Handmaid
For the Olive Tree Bible App
Publisher: Wipf and Stock
Available for:
iPad, iPhone, Android, Mac, and Windows.
Features
Click on a feature to learn more.
Did your resource mention a passage of Scripture, but you can't remember what the verse says? Never fear! Tap the linked verse and a pop-up window will appear, giving you quick and easy access to the verse in context.
Description
A project of women's advancement in society and church life engages a multi-disciplinary and interdisciplinary approach in its quest for social transformation. In recent decades, governments, particularly in Africa, have employed various political, economic, and other social modi operandi in their attempt to advance women's participation more fully in society. The discussions on these pages seek to contribute to the women's discourse with insights from the theology and culture; more specifically, from name designation. The expression, what is in a name, falls flat on its face in most African cultures as well as the cultures that produced the Bible. In these traditions, a name is not merely a convenient collocation of sounds by which a person could be identified. Rather a name represents a story and can express something of the essence of that which is named. The power inherent in the way names are constructed and interpreted, both in terms of the Handmaid in the New Testament and more directly in the Igbo culture, contribute to the strengthening of patriarchy. Such construal potentially exclude women from full participation in social processes, and in so doing deprive society as a whole of the synergy of human potential. The discussion of Mary as Handmaid centers on the role of women in Catholic theology, so she becomes the vehicle for examining the role of the second-class citizen assigned to women in the Church, then and now. Drawing from textual and oral history, the book reinterprets in a liberative manner female names both from Igbo tradition as well as Chinua Achebe's Anthills of the Savannah. Thus the freight that a name designation carries makes imperative the exploration of its redemptive significance.
Available for:
iPad, iPhone, Android, Mac, and Windows.
You might also like…
You might also like…