Women Who Do: Female Disciples in the Gospels
Stock No: WW879158
Women Who Do: Female Disciples in the Gospels  -     By: Holly J. Carey

Women Who Do: Female Disciples in the Gospels

Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co. / 2023 / Paperback

In Stock
Warehouse Location: CH315G
Stock No: WW879158

Warehouse Location: CH315G
Buy Item Our Price$21.99 Retail: $29.99 Save 27% ($8.00)
In Stock
Quantity:
Stock No: WW879158
Warehouse Location: CH315G
Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co. / 2023 / Paperback
Quantity:

Add To Cart

or checkout with

Add To Wishlist
Quantity:


Add To Cart

or checkout with

Wishlist

Product Description

We often focus on the Twelve whom Jesus called to his inner circle. But throughout the Gospels, women played significant roles in Jesus' ministry. In Women Who Do, Holly J. Carey closely examines the four gospel accounts, as well as Acts, to see what it means to be a disciple—and contends it's the women who best embody discipleship, upending many long-held assumptions concerning female leadership.

Product Information

Title: Women Who Do: Female Disciples in the Gospels
By: Holly J. Carey
Format: Paperback
Number of Pages: 256
Vendor: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co.
Publication Date: 2023
Dimensions: 9 X 6 (inches)
Weight: 12 ounces
ISBN: 0802879152
ISBN-13: 9780802879158
Stock No: WW879158

Publisher's Description

Meet the women who followed Jesus even when the Twelve failed. 
   
To be a disciple is to follow Jesus. And that requires action. But in the Gospels, the disciples often falter. The Twelve even abandon Jesus at his crucifixion in many of the narratives. Yet it is female disciples who remain faithful to Jesus to the end. What do we make of this? 
 
In Women Who Do, Holly J. Carey examines what it means to be a disciple—and contends that it’s the women who best embody discipleship in the Gospels. Carey describes the expectations and social roles for women in first-century Greco-Roman and Jewish contexts. Then she offers a close reading of each of the four Gospels, as well as Acts of the Apostles. What emerges is a cohesive narrative-critical case that the Twelve are not an equivalent group to the disciples. In fact, the Twelve are set as foils against the faithful, active, and often nameless disciples who populate the narratives—many of whom are women.  
 
Women Who Do is essential reading for students and scholars seeking a fuller understanding of women’s roles in Jesus’s ministry. Carey’s argument not only clarifies the narrative of the Gospels but also raises questions about how the church conceives of women’s leadership today.

Author Bio

Holly J. Carey is professor of biblical studies and chair of the Biblical Studies Department at Point University.

Editorial Reviews

Review of Biblical Literature
"This is a welcome contribution to the conversation on how the Christian church should think about women’s roles in the church, given the contents of the New Testament as a whole. Carey writes in clear prose, making this book an accessible resource for the undergraduate classroom or curious laity."

The Christian Century
"Carey’s carefully researched and attractively written book is not just a collection of helpful information; it implicitly trains readers to see everything that is in scripture—and everyone."

The Englewood Review of Books
"Against the male-centric view of Jesus’s disciples, Holly Carey’s Women Who Do positively emerges as a counterbalance to the understanding of discipleship. . . . Women Who Do offers an expansive view of women disciples in the gospel narratives and in the beginnings of post-resurrection ministry in Acts."

"Contexts are crucial: the context of women’s world in the first century; the context of the distinctive narrative moves of Mark, Matthew, Luke-Acts, and John; and the context of Bible readers who are also members of Christian churches today. With scholarly, professorial, and pastoral attention to each of these contexts, Carey shows how these women take action as disciples of Jesus—as Women Who Do." 
—Elizabeth Struthers Malbon, Virginia Tech 

"If asked to name Jesus’s disciples, most of us would focus on the well-known men—Peter, James, John, and the rest. In this important, well-crafted study, Holly Carey fills out that picture by emphasizing Jesus’s overlooked female disciples while demonstrating how the women in Jesus’s life exemplified best the nature of faithful discipleship. If we want to talk about what it means to follow Jesus, we do well to take her advice: Follow the women!" 
—Joel B. Green, Fuller Theological Seminary 

"A well-written and carefully researched study, which portrays the remarkably positive role of female discipleship in the sociopolitical context of the ancient world where women had little power." 
—Dorothy A. Lee, University of Divinity, Melbourne 

Ask a Question

Author/Artist Review