Passionate Homemaking

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The True Woman: Chapter 5 - Community

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Welcome to the recap of chapter 5 of our book study on The True Woman by Susan Hunt, brought to us by Sono Harris, a godly older woman that I greatly admire. Please participate with us in this inspiring read! This post will remain at the top of my blog for the duration of the week and is open for discussion.

Chap­ter 5: A Cul­ti­va­tor of Community

In her book, The True Woman, Susan Hunt dis­plays, through the clear instruc­tion of Scrip­tural truth, empir­i­cal his­tor­i­cal and varied con­tem­po­rary exam­ples, how a Chris­t­ian woman, pas­sion­ate to be all that God has designed her to be, can move closer to the ideals of godly beauty and strength. Once again, in Chap­ter 5, she achieves these objec­tives on the sub­ject of community.

Hunt presents chal­leng­ing and pro­vok­ing exhor­ta­tions that are within reach to all of us by God’s grace. In other words, the excuses: I am not mar­ried, My hus­band is not spir­i­tual, Cir­cum­stances of my life exempt me, If my chil­dren were only, etc. will not work. You cannot legit­i­mately say, “She doesn’t under­stand. This does not apply to me.”

Hunt’s single mind­ed­ness as a woman of the Word and prayer lays the foun­da­tion for com­mu­nity wholly on our covenan­tal rela­tion­ship with God. She clearly states that you cannot have authen­tic, hor­i­zon­tal Chris­t­ian com­mu­nity with­out it. We must begin there.

After estab­lish­ing that truth, she goes on to describe how the unique design of women enables and equips them to be a key player in the cul­ti­va­tion and preser­va­tion of com­mu­nity life. Hurrah! She exalts the gift­ings and qual­i­ties of women. She val­i­dates the unique con­tri­bu­tion that only a woman can make.

But Hunt will not allow us to rest on our fem­i­nine lau­rels nor will she let any of us hide out behind an imag­ined female spir­i­tu­al­ity: “the woman who is mar­ried will not infuse real com­mu­nity into any rela­tion­ship if she is not doing it in her marriage.” With that poten­tially painful state­ment, we are pro­voked and spurred on to real, not feigned, bib­li­cal love and good works.

She chal­lenges women to learn and prac­tice these ideals of cre­ative nur­ture, warmth, and rela­tional care first at home, then to the larger church com­mu­nity. The pro­gres­sion seems to be: family (hus­band/ chil­dren or par­ents/ sib­lings), then church. (This is the same pro­gres­sion we see in Scrip­ture related to the qual­i­fi­ca­tions of over­seer and deacon of the church. I Tim­o­thy 3:1-13 Manage your own house­hold well before you try to manage the house­hold of God.)

Then Hunt unpacks what it means to prac­tice and enjoy that covenan­tal level of com­mit­ted rela­tion­ship you imple­ment at home, in the church. What a much needed mes­sage in 21st cen­tury Amer­i­can evan­gel­i­cal­ism where self-​centeredness (which dis­re­gards duty to others), indi­vid­u­al­ism (which looks only to its own needs) and self-​fulfillment (which values the church only as it con­tributes one’s own per­sonal pur­suits) are the defin­ing char­ac­ter­is­tics of church­go­ers and church shop­pers. (Sug­gested read­ing, Stop Dating the Local Church by Joshua Harris)

Hunt paints a con­trast­ing and com­pelling pic­ture of the beauty of the life and cul­ture expe­ri­enced by those who will take church rela­tion­ships seri­ously. (Mary Matthew Burton, an his­tor­i­cal figure who enjoyed the multi-​generational bless­ing of stay­ing in the same covenant com­mu­nity and Lynn Brook­side, a con­tem­po­rary single woman who dis­cov­ered family through the family of God.)

This chap­ter is quin­tes­sen­tial Hunt. She does not allow us to camp out in a pietis­tic under­stand­ing of any Bib­li­cal truth. Rather, with delight­ful pre­ci­sion, she man­ages the ten­sion between piety and activ­ity, ortho­doxy and ortho­praxy plac­ing us solidly on the straight and narrow path of true Chris­t­ian community.

Discussion Questions:

Feel free to share any­thing that stood out to you in the chap­ter (if you are read­ing along), or answer one or both of the fol­low­ing questions.

1. How can we prac­ti­cally cul­ti­vate com­mu­nity in our homes? How can we make it a haven of rest for our fam­i­lies? How can we build rela­tion­ships in our home rather than tear­ing it down?

2. How can we prac­ti­cally cul­ti­vate com­mu­nity in the church? How can we make the church feel like home and create a sense of family?

Thank you Sono for your contribution!

Sono Harris, is the wife of our pastor, Gregg Harris, and mother of seven chil­dren. As a family they have been foun­da­tional in the home school move­ment. Their sons, Alex & Brett have just released their new book, Do Hard Things, and are host­ing con­fer­ences around the nation on this impor­tant topic.


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4 Responses to “The True Woman: Chapter 5 - Community”

  1. Kimiharris @ the nourishing gourmet Says:

    I appre­ci­ated this chap­ter, which has come at a good point in my life (thanks Sono, for the excel­lent recap :-) ).

    As far the the dis­cus­sion ques­tions, I am going to hop down to the second ques­tion since that needs the most work in my family. :-)

    Because hos­pi­tal­ity is such a key point to build­ing com­mu­nity, from the time of our engage­ment my hus­band and I have desired to prac­tice hos­pi­tal­ity reg­u­larly. Med­ical crises and health issues have delayed that from becom­ing a reg­u­lar part of our rou­tine.

    But I have real­ized how cru­cial a woman’s part in hos­pi­tal­ity is. As I have learned from others who have excelled in this area, I real­ize how the wife takes a cru­cial part in cul­ti­vat­ing that at home. A hus­band can be eager to prac­tice this, but if his wife isn’t, it usu­ally won’t happen!

    So, in answer to ques­tion two. I think that an impor­tant part to build­ing com­mu­nity in a church is women who have a heart for hos­pi­tal­ity.

    [Reply]

  2. Lindsay Says:

    Cul­ti­vat­ing com­mu­nity is such a won­der­ful priv­i­lege! God has given women a spe­cial gift in this area!

    How can this be cul­ti­vated in the home? My goal and vision has been to make my home a haven of refuge, com­fort and strength for my hus­band and any guests we wel­come into our home. This means there must be some level of orga­ni­za­tion (mad­ness is no refuge). We should cul­ti­vate a love for dec­o­rat­ing and making it homey! We should guard family time and spend ded­i­cated focused time together and invest­ing in con­ver­sa­tion and rela­tion­ships. Our speech should be edi­fy­ing and respect­ful to our hus­bands! Others should be wel­comed, loved and cared for.

    All of this is impos­si­ble, apart from the grace of God!

    My eyes have been opened to see the vast oppor­tu­ni­ties for cul­ti­vat­ing com­mu­nity in the body of believ­ers as well. In a recent sermon, the preacher chal­lenged us all that we must real­ize we are all coun­selors! Whether we like it or not, when­ever we open our mouths we are giving coun­sel, whether good or bad. Where are you get­ting your coun­sel? Is it from the world, a recent mag­a­zine, or from the Scrip­tures? Every time we inter­act with broth­ers and sis­ters we have oppor­tu­nity to invest, edify and encour­age with bib­li­cal truth. I am chal­lenged afresh to take advan­tage of the oppor­tu­ni­ties to min­is­ter by simply stop­ping and pray­ing for a need as it arises, or invit­ing another woman, who could use a friend, into my home for tea. It is not dif­fi­cult! It is a glo­ri­ous task that we can all ful­fill. Susan Hunt asks the ques­tion, how can we make our churches a more wel­com­ing and loving envi­ron­ment? What an exhortation…don’t just come and go…come and invest in others! We need each other to grow and chal­lenge one another in god­li­ness.

    What a pow­er­ful chap­ter! One I will be refer­ring to again and again!

    [Reply]

  3. Linda McW Says:

    Thank you, Sono for your well done recap of Chap­ter 5.

    I want to say “ditto” to your com­ment, Kimi, about the wife being instru­men­tal in prac­tic­ing hos­pi­tal­ity. It seems I have all too often had “legit­i­mate reasons” for not having people over. Lord, help me to be more faith­ful in cul­ti­vat­ing hos­pi­tal­ity in our home.

    There was one con­cept that espe­cially stood out to me in this chap­ter, because it is some­thing the Lord is work­ing on in my life - the con­cept of being inten­tional. I chal­lenged by, “It means under­stand­ing that these min­istries are…kingdom activ­i­ties. …our motive must be different…our motive must cul­ti­vate a sense of family among God’s people…” That brought Col. 3:23 to mind,“…whatever you do, do it heartily, as unto the Lord and not to men.”

    This con­cept of being inten­tional also “struck home” with me in regards to ques­tion #2. Invest­ing in the lives of people in our body is a pri­mary way of cre­at­ing a sense of family within the church. I’ve been trying to do this is by extend­ing myself to others at church - by asking the Lord to guide me to people to talk with, to help me be watch­ful for others who may have needs and for His grace to respond as the Holy Spirit leads. I also desire to be quick to pray for others - either at the time or during the next week (or some set time). Bear­ing one another’s bur­dens with sin­cer­ity and love is one of the great­est ways to knit hearts together and build a sense of family.

    [Reply]

  4. Rebecca Says:

    This chap­ter was one of those “Oh, yea. Duh,” moments for me. The idea that com­mu­nity flows from our covenant rela­tion­ship with God seems per­fectly obvi­ous now, but it took me the entire chap­ter, two weeks, a Piper sermon and a Driscoll sermon for it to finally sink in.

    And I don’t know why, but I was weep­ing the entire read. Not out of sorrow, but out of a desire to be the one who reaches out and helps to build com­mu­nity. I want it so badly.

    I love books that make me want some­thing like that. And it’s not even an incred­i­bly well writ­ten book. That’s when you sit up and take notice, because that’s when you know it’s God speak­ing to you. Gotta love that.

    [Reply]

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