Less Than?

Published: Sept. 19, 2023, 4 a.m.

b'READ: GENESIS 1:27; LUKE 8:1-3; MATTHEW 27:45-56\\n\\n\\n\\nSometimes, when I look at our broken world and I see more and more ways that women have been treated as less than men, I just get overwhelmed. Sometimes I wonder, does God see women as less than men? Are we less?\\n\\n\\n\\nOne day, I was sitting alone in my car and praying, and this question was once again pressing on my heart. And I was reminded of how Jesus interacted with women. Their stories began to soothe the ache in my core. Jesus is God in human flesh. He reveals the way God sees women.\\n\\n\\n\\n(1) The arrival of the Son of God was announced first to a woman. Her name was Mary, and she lived in Nazareth. The angel Gabriel called Mary \\u201chighly favored\\u201d and told her that Jesus\\u2014who is Immanuel, God with us\\u2014would grow in her womb. The Son of God would take His first breath when she gave birth to Him. (Matthew 1:23; Luke 1:26-38)\\n\\n\\n\\n(2) Jesus revealed His identity as the Messiah to a woman. She lived in Samaria, and she was coming to a well to draw water when no one else was there\\u2014except Jesus. He asked her for a drink and had a conversation with her, even though, in that society, men weren\\u2019t supposed to talk to women, and Jews certainly weren\\u2019t supposed to drink from a Samaritan\\u2019s water jar. But Jesus treated her with dignity and listened to her questions with respect. When He told her that He is the Messiah, the Savior who God had promised, she ran to tell everyone! And many believed in Jesus because of what she said. (John 4:1-42)\\n\\n\\n\\n(3) Jesus commended a woman for sitting under His teaching. Her name was Mary, and she lived in Bethany. In a society where girls didn\\u2019t receive schooling from rabbis, this woman took the posture of a disciple, and Jesus honored her for it. (Luke 10:38-42)\\n\\n\\n\\n(4) After Jesus rose from the dead, the first person He appeared to was a woman. Her name was Mary, and she was from Magdala. Then, Jesus sent her to tell others that He was alive! In a society where a woman\\u2019s testimony in court wasn\\u2019t considered as valuable as a man\\u2019s, Jesus entrusted the most important news, first, to a woman. She became the first person to proclaim His resurrection. (John 20:1-18)\\n\\n\\n\\nThese examples and many more from the Bible kindle hope in my heart, because even though our world has been broken by sin and we see injustice in so many ways, when I look at Jesus, I see that God honors women. He made women on purpose, not as an afterthought. He made both women and men in His image. And He loves all of us. Jesus died on the cross and rose from the grave so that everyone who puts their trust in Him can be part of His eternal kingdom.\\n\\n\\n\\nI follow Jesus, like many women who came before me. \\u2022 Hannah Howe\\n\\n\\n\\nMary Magdalene went to the disciples with the news: \\u201cI have seen the Lord!\\u201d And she told them that he [Jesus] had said these things to her. John 20:18 (NIV)\\n\\n\\n\\n\\u2022 In what ways have you seen people being treated as less than others? How can knowing that we are all created in God\\u2019s image help us see ourselves and each other as God sees us? (Genesis 1:27)\\n\\n\\n\\n\\u2022 Have you ever felt less than? You can bring these thoughts and feelings to Jesus anytime. As Christians, we can rest in our true value in Christ. In God\\u2019s eyes, we are His masterpiece\\u2014all of us. And He equips each of us to be part of the good work of His kingdom. (Galatians 3:26-29; Ephesians 2:10)\\n\\n\\n\\n\\u2022 Can you think of any examples of women being treated as less than men, either throughout history or in your own life? God invites us to process these things with Him. He grieves alongside us, and He gives us hope. One day, Jesus will return and right every wrong (Revelation 21:1-5). In the meantime, He has promised to be with us through everything we face (Matthew 28:20). How can these truths comfort us when we encounter unfair situations?\\n\\n\\n\\n\\u2022 How can looking at the ways Jesus interacted with women affect the way we view women?'