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Martha
and Mary of Bethany
Ruth,
the Sister of Jesus
Rebecca,
the Daughter of Ezra
Jesus
and the Two Courtesans
The
Woman of Sycar
The
Unnamed Woman at Simon the Pharisee's
The
Women's Evangelistic Corps
The
Winning of Mary Magdalene
The
Woman with the Scourging Hemmorrhage
The
Syrian Woman
The
Woman Taken In Adultery
The
Lesson on Service
The
Woman with the Spirit of Infirmity
The
Sabbath Banquet
At
the Crucifixion
Heralds
of the Resurrection
Jesus'
Appearance to the Women Believers
Jesus'
Appearance at Sychar
Bestowal
of the Spirit of Truth
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JESUS
AND THE WOMEN WHO FOLLOWED HIM
In one generation
Jesus lifted women out of the disrespectful oblivion and the slavish drudgery
of the ages. And it is the one shameful thing about the religion that presumed
to take Jesus' name that it lacked the moral courage to follow this noble
example in its subsequent attitude toward women. 149:2.9
Little
is written in the New Testament about the women who followed Jesus. And
yet we know from Luke 8:1-3 that women did follow him, traveling along
with him throughout the countryside and into the towns and villages of
Galilee and Samaria.
Jesus' commissioning of the Woman's Evangelistic
Corps as traveling teachers and ministers, "was a decided shock
to even the twelve apostles. . . .They were literally stunned when he proposed
formally to commission these ten women as religious teachers and even to
permit their traveling about with them. The whole country was stirred up
by this proceeding, the enemies of Jesus making great capital out of this
move, but everywhere the women believers in the good news stood staunchly
behind their chosen sisters and voiced no uncertain approval of this tardy
acknowledgement of women's place in religious life." (150:1.2)
To fully appreciate the scandalous nature of such
an undertaking, consider the reality of woman's lives in first-century
Palestine:
* It was considered "better to burn the words
of the law (the Torah) than to be delivered to women." Jewish women
received no education, and were married as soon as they became fertile,
usually around the age of 12 or 13. One week of the month (during her menses)
she was unclean, and anything she touched during that time, including food
and other persons, was considered contaminated.
* A respectible Jewish women was kept confined
at home, hidden from view. She spoke with no man outside of her family.
She had no honorable status except when she married and bore a male child.
Unless this happened, she was without honor even in her own family.
* Public affairs were the domain of men only.
In public, a woman was forbidden to speak to any man, and a man was forbidden
to speak with any woman, even to acknowlege his wife.
* Traveling by women, except for such conventional
purposes as visiting family and attending certain religious feasts, was
considered deviant behavior, usually with sexually illicit overtones.
Is it any wonder that stories about the
women who ministered with Jesus were lost to history shortly after his
death?
Now, within The Urantia Book, we get a glimpse
of the women who dared to follow Jesus. Not only was Jesus heroic in his
proclamation of the equality of women, but these women were equally heroic
in their courage and loyalty to the Master, thereby providing us with an
entirely new revelation of the truth of Jesus' gospel of the kingdom, in
which, "there is neither rich nor poor, free nor bond, male nor
female, all are equally sons and daughters of God."
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