Jesus among women | Bandera

Jesus among women

Fr. Dan De Los Angeles - September 16, 2016 - 12:10 AM

FRIDAY 16
September 2016
Friday, 24th Sunday
in Ordinary Time
First Reading:
1 Cor 15: 12-20
GOSPEL: Luke 8:1-3

Jesus walked through towns and countryside, preaching and giving the good news of the kingdom of God. The twelve followed him, and also some women who had been healed of evil spirits and diseases: Mary called Magdalene, who had been freed of seven demons; Joanna, wife of Chuza, Herod’s steward; Suzanna and others who provided for them out of their own funds.

D@iGITAL-EXPERIENCE
(Daily Gospel in the Assimilated Life Experience)

We need to revisit the struggles of women to appreciate today’s Gospel reading. It was only in 1974 that the world saw a woman president for the first time in the person of Marma Estela ‘Isabel’ Martinez Cartas de Peron of Argentina. She merely took over from her deceased husband though. The world’s first elected woman president came only in 1980 in the person of Vigdis Finnbogadsttir of Iceland. In Philippine history, it took two popular uprisings for the country to have women presidents. Corazon Aquino became president through people power revolution in 1986, while Gloria Arroyo through a similar uprising in 2001.

Today, women are better recognized. This was not so in the time of Jesus. Women were considered so low that a strict rabbi would not even talk to his wife, and any husband dissatisfied of his wife could simply scribble a notice of divorce and the divorce would be final and executory. People, including the women themselves grew up with the idea that women were second-class citizens. It was this mentality that Jesus tried to change.

We see the revolutionary in Jesus when he gave critiques a double whammy by talking to one who was not only a woman but also a Samaritan. He even asked her for some water to drink. Earlier he had allowed one who was not only a woman but was also a public sinner to cry at his feet. He even granted her instant forgiveness even though she herself didn’t ask for it. In today’s Gospel reading he and his disciples were seen in the company not just of one but many women. He even made them co-evangelizers. In support of Jesus’ crusade St. Paul wrote later to the Galatians: “There can be neither Jew nor Greek, there can be neither bond nor free, there can be no male and female; for ye all are one man in Christ Jesus” (Gal. 3:28).

The Philippines has improved a lot on the issue of gender sensitivity. The downside of it all is that what our women are gaining in their struggle for equality with men, some of them might lose by descending from the altars to which men have enshrined them. – (Atty.) Rev. Fr. Dan Domingo P. delos Angeles, Jr., DM, MMExM, MAPM, REB. Email: [email protected].

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