Rowman & Littlefield Publishers / Sheed & Ward
Pages: 352
Trim: 6 x 9
978-1-58051-218-3 • Paperback • October 2007 • $19.95 • (£14.99)
978-1-4616-3554-3 • eBook • October 2007 • $18.99 • (£14.99)
Leonard Swidler is professor of Catholic Thought and Interreligious Dialogue at Temple University in Philadelphia, where he is the Founder/Director of the Institute for Interreligious and Intercultural Dialogue. He is the author of numerous books, including Making the Church Our Own.
Chapter 1 The Plan
Chapter 2 Prologue: Women in the Ancient World
Chapter 3 Yeshua, Feminist and Androgynous an Integrated Human
Chapter 4 Women in Yeshua's Language
Chapter 5 Women in Yeshua's Teaching
Chapter 6 Women in the Life of Yeshua
Chapter 7 The Attitude toward Women Reflected by the Gospel Writers and Their Sources
Chapter 8 Conclusions
Leonard Swidler makes the case that Jesus respected, cared for and even advocated for the rights of women, not in the sense of Betty Freidan, but in the highly personal relationships he formed and the subtle societal changes he was able to bring about through them....The church as we know it couldn't have come into being without women leaders at its beginning. A well-researched, illuminating book, it asks, is our feminism today as deep as his?
— Linda Benninghoff; Reader Views, November 2007
One does not have to subscribe to all of Leonard Swidler's theories about the origins of the gospels to be deeply appreciative of this book. Swidler mines the biblical texts with zeal and skill to make his case that Jesus took his stand on the side of the marginalized women of the first century. I found this book powerful, insightful, and challenging.
— John Shelby Spong, author of Jesus for the Non-Religious
Swidler brings together a lifetime of academic research and personal involvement with one of the most pressing concerns for the Church: the rightful place of women. He convincingly shows that Jesus promoted the equality of women with men, looked on them as fully human persons, and expected them to be treated as such. The prejudice against women manifest in later Christian thought and practice cannot legitimately be attributed to anything Jesus said or did. This readable, compelling, passionate, and yet scholarly book is set to become another Swidler classic that Church authorities cannot afford to ignore.
— John Wijngaards, author of Women Deacons in the Early Church
The book Jesus Was a Feminist makes a convincing case for Jesus' feminism. According to Swidler, the church as we know it couldn't have come into being without women leaders at its beginning. A well-researched, illuminating book, it asks, is our feminism today as deep as his?
— Reader Views