Re-Imagining
Re-Imagining was a Minneapolis interfaith conference of clergy, laypeople, and feminist theologians in 1993 that stirred controversy in U.S. Mainline Protestant denominations, ultimately resulting in the firing of the highest ranking woman in the Presbyterian Church. Re-Imagining: A Global Theological Conference By Women: For Men and Women, grew out of a U.S.A. Mainline Protestant response to the World Council of Churches' Ecumenical Decade: Churches in Solidarity with Women 1988–1998. Participants met at the Minneapolis Convention Center during November 4 through 7, 1993.
It brought together 2,200 people, one third of them clergy, and most of them women. 83 men registered. Attendees represented 16 denominations, 27 countries, and 49 states. All presenters were women. The conference aimed to encourage churches to address injustices to women worldwide and promote equal partnership with men at all levels of religious life.
In recognition of supporters' view that traditional Christianity's male-centered language and images have often stifled and hurt women, organizers chose "re-imagining" as the theme. International theologians were invited to address the theme as it applied to God, Jesus, church, creation, community, and world. Other presentations carried the theme through "Church as Worshipping Community," "Language/Word," "Sexuality/Family," and "Ethics/Work/Ministry." After four days of community and freedom of discussion with like-minded women, hearing internationally recognized feminist theologians advance new ways of thinking about Christianity, and hearing their deity referred to with female pronouns, attendees reported having a transformational experience. A number of similar conferences had been held, but the size, scope and creative atmosphere of Re-Imagining eclipsed anything that had come before.
Sponsorship and controversy
Three Minnesota councils of churches and the Twin Cities Metropolitan Church Commission sponsored the event. The latter organization's director, the Reverend Sally Abrahams Hill, was instrumental in organizing the conference along with Mary Ann Lundy, then director of the Presbyterian Church 's Women's Ministry Unit. 140 volunteers helped organize the event during a 3-year planning process.The Presbyterian Church donated staff time and $66,000 from an initial grant from its Bicentennial Fund. The Women's Division of the United Methodist Board of Global Ministries paid the way of 46 top staff members to attend the event. Presbyterians sent 20 staff members, and officers in both denominations helped plan Re-Imagining. According to the invitational conference brochure mailed in November 1992, cost per person ranged from $100 for early registration to $150 for late registration.
Several months afterward, conservative newsletters, Good News and The Presbyterian Layman, within the mainline United Methodist Church and Presbyterian Church denominations respectively, ran articles expressing outrage over what they called goddess worship and heresy at the conference. The controversy they stirred resulted in enough members dropping donations to cause a serious backlash. Mary Ann Lundy was fired seven months later. No United Methodists were fired at a national level.
Concerns raised
- Goddess worship due in part to the "Bless Sophia" chant used throughout Re-Imagining. The conference program printed the chant set to music on page 2: "Bless Sophia/dream the vision/share the wisdom/dwelling deep within." Proverbs 8 and 9 in the Christian Bible refer to Sophia as the personification of Wisdom, Sophia, and supporters say organizers intended to invoke Wisdom's blessing while valuing each woman's life and experiences.
- Understanding and acceptance for homosexual, bisexual, and transgender persons expressed by speakers from the podium.
- A Sunday Morning ritual, which reimagined God as feminine, celebrated Sophia and took the place of Eucharist...participants shared milk and honey rather than wine and bread. Interlaced with the celebration of Sophia, was a celebration of God with feminine traits which served also as an affirmation of women's gifts such as bearing children and nursing
- A bare-breasted woman depicted in one section of a painting created by Nancy Chinn during the conference near the podium.
- A number of what critics called provocative statements and heresy from speakers.' One example: Dr. Delores Williams stating, "I don't think we need a theory of atonement," and, "I don't think we need folks hanging on crosses, and blood dripping, and weird stuff." These comments came during the question and answer session after her presentation.
Williams: "I don't think we need a theory of atonement at all. I think Jesus came for life and how to live together, what life was all about."
She references visiting a Catholic church in which the only divine images were the Virgin and Child, the Cross, and the empty tomb. "No images of ministry, of the mustard seed, fishes and loaves. I don't think we need folks hanging on crosses, and blood dripping, and weird stuff. We need the sustenance, the faith, the candles to light. Jesus' mandate is that we pass on tough love, love that's whipping the thieves out of the temple. I don't see that the cross does that. I think the cross ought to be interpreted for what it was, a symbol of evil, the murder of an innocent man and victim. When we confront the status quo as Jesus did, when we raise questions about the poor and empowering people who've never had power before, we're more than likely going to die for it."
Program and Speakers
According to conference materials, organizers called their schedule a "Time Flow" and encouraged participants to express themselves via art materials at every table, dance movements, and Talking Circles. Each attendee received a program book filled with songs, chants, and liturgies used throughout the presentations.Thursday
Religious Imagination
- Mary Bednarowski, a Roman Catholic layperson and Ph.D. professor of religious studies at United Theological Seminary of the Twin Cities. Her publications include the books, American Religion: A Cultural Perspective, and New Religions and the Theological Imagination in American Culture
- Bernice Johnson Reagon, Ph.D. a curator in the Division of Community Life at the Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of American History. A member of the original Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee Freedom Singers, she founded Sweet Honey in the Rock, an African American women's a cappella quintet.
- Chung Hyun Kyung, Ph.D. Assistant Professor in theology, Ewha Women's University, Seoul, Korea. Author of Struggle to Be the Sun Again: Introducing Asian Women's Theology,
Reagon began her presentation by singing encouragement for those who suffer.
"We'll stand the storm
It won't be long
We'll anchor by and by."
She said, "The storm is the only way I know what an anchor is." She sang:
"My God is a rock in a weary land
I know He's a rock in a weary land."."
Hyun Kyung invoked her Asian heritage and experiences to discuss her way of understanding God and theology. She asked for a theology and theologians who go beyond naming evils such as racism and sexism and become "alive" and "whole," centered in the reality of the world. She ended by saying, "We need to remember within us there must be men and women, East and West, past and future. Deep within us... how do we live with a cosmic connectedness? This is our task."
Friday
Re-Imagining God
- Chung Hyun Kyung discussed her difficulty being both fully Christian and fully Asian. She noted that Korea had 5,000 years of Shamanism, 2,000 years of Taoism, about 2,000 years of Buddhism, and 700 of Confucianism. Then her country had 100 years of Protestantism. "All of them are within me." She invoked three Asian goddesses which transformed her understanding of God, bringing into focus the need for justice, wisdom, compassion, persistence and resilience.
- Rita Nakashima Brock was an associate professor at that time who held the Endowed Chair in the Humantities at Hamline University in St. Paul, Minnesota. Author of Journeys By Heart: A Christology of Erotic Power
Re-imagining Jesus
- Delores S. Williams, Associate Professor of Theology and Culture at Union Theological Seminary in New York. Contributing editor for Christianity and Crisis. Author of Sisters in the Wilderness: Challenge of Womanist God Talk
- Kwok Pui-lan, Associate Professor of Theology at the Episcopal Divinity School at Cambridge, Massachusetts. Author of Chinese Women and Christianity, 1860–1927. See Postcolonial feminism
- Barbara K. Lundblad, pastor of Our Saviour's Atonement Lutheran Church in NY City. She has preached on the Protestant Hourand at Chauttaqua Institute.
Earlier in her remarks, Williams said it's problematic for black women to accept the substitution theory of atonement because black women's experiences of "substituting" such as rearing white babies and being sexual partners for white men during slavery were in no way just or salvific. She advocated an emphasis on Jesus's life, his justice work, his healing, not his death. "Jesus conquered sin in the wilderness, in life."
Kwok Pui-lan : "How many of you could imagine Jesus as something like me?... Asking me to speak? it is indeed iconoclastic... The colonizers need a white Jesus. We need to save ourselves from the white folks." She encouraged listeners to "ask the questions we always wanted to ask," and focused on differences in language, history, and imagery among cultures which have made accepting traditional Christianity difficult for the Chinese. "We want to be 100% Asians and 100% Christians." She invoked three images: students massacred in Tiananmen Square, 400,000 prostitutes in Thailand, 60% of them HIV positive, and the "victory," her way of seeing Jesus.."
Lundblad invoked the pregnancy story of John the Baptist's mother, Elizabeth, in Luke to illustrate an emphasis on birthing something new and different and asking listeners to trust the "stirring in your wombs." In closing her remarks, said, "I do not need Jesus to be a woman. I need to believe that I am called to take the scroll of Isaiah in my hands and read the words with my name attached: 'The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, anointing me to preach good news to the poor, release to the captive, recovery of sight to all those who refuse to see.'." She confessed that in her deepest moments of doubt, she cannot leave Jesus. She hears Him say to her, "Do not hold me in the old categories which no longer touch you... do not hold on to those telling you this is a story of death not life. Do not hang on to the right answers which came from somebody else because you fear they will say you are blaspheming and you are a heretic. No, say instead, you are pregnant."
Re-imagining Creation
- Anne Primavesi, Ph.D, member of Associate Faculty at Schumacher College
- Sister Jose Hobday, O.S.F., Holy Names College, Oakland, CA
- Elizabeth Bettenhausen, Ph.D., Women's Theological Center, Boston and the Divinity School at Harvard University
Re-imagining Church as Spiritual Institution
- Ada Maria Isasi-Diaz, Ph.D., Asst. Professor of Theology and Ethics at Drew University
- Joan Martin, doctoral candidate at Temple University and ordained Presbyterian pastor
Re-imagining Women/Arts/ Church
- Nancy Chinn, artist.
- Nalini Jayusuria, painter, writer, musician from Sri Lanka.
- Ingeline Nelson, Ph.D., musician from Germany and Zimbabwe.
Saturday
Re-imagining Community
- Lois Miriam Wilson, Chancellor of Lakehead University, Canada, ordained minister, and the first woman Moderator of The United Church of Canada.
- Mercy Amba Oduyoye, Ghana, lay pastor in Methodist tradition, Deputy General Secretary of the World Council of Churches in Geneva.
Re-imagining Language/Word
- Johanna W. H. Bos, Ph.D. professor of Old Testament at Louisville Presbyterian Theological Seminary
- Rosario Batle, D. Min. United Evangelical Theological Seminary, Madrid, Spain
- Jacquelyn Grant, Ph.D., founder and director of Black Women in Church and Society, Asst. Minister at Flipper Temple A.M.E. church in Atlanta, GA.
Bos began her talk with a song: "We shall not give up the fight/ We have only started."
Her text was 2 Kings, Chapter 22, a story reflecting the positive and strengthening nature of change. In this text the prophet Huldah is the interpreter and canonizer of Holy Scripture, who announces the end of things as they are. The text authorized by Huldah reveals God, the source of all good, in implacable opposition to structures of oppression. We know that patriarchy distorts all relations in the created world and its institutions, a state that surely grieves God's heart today. Huldah warns that it may not be enough to clean it all up, that the old has to come down before a new community can begin. By God's grace we recognize that the word of judgment has come especially to patriarchal hierarchies that possess the temple. We know that the axe has been laid to the root of that tree. We are ready to engage battle with the structures, knowing that change may be a long time in coming, but come it will surely.."
Grant said, "We are called to free God from all our oppressive linguistic gymnastics."
She compared God to the black woman, "the suffering servant who is despised and rejected by humanity... the black woman has borne our griefs, carried our sorrow, and been bruised by white iniquity."
She emphasized freeing God from limitations.
Re-imagining Sexuality/Family
- Frances E. Wood, writer and educator. Author of training and policy manuals on issues of sexual abuse, AIDS, and domestic violence for a number of denominations.
- Susan Brooks Thistlethwaite, Professor of Theology at the Chicago Theological Seminary and an ordained minister of the United Church of Christ. Author of Lift Every Voice: Constructing Christian Theologies From the Underside.
- Mary E. Hunt, Co-founder and co-director of WATER, Women's Alliance for Theology, Ethics, and Ritual. Author of Fierce Tenderness.
Mary Elizabeth Hunt criticized the church for being distracted by sexuality when the real issues of concern are violence, poverty, and exploitation of the powerless.
Re-imagining Ethics/Work/Ministry
- Aruna Gnanadson, World Council of Churches, India.
- Beverly Wildung Harrison, Professor of Ethics at Union Theological Seminary in New York City. Author of Our Right to Choose: Toward a New Ethic of Abortion.
- Toinette M. Eugene, Associate Professor of Christian Social Ethics at Garrett Evangelical Seminary in Evanston, Illinois.
Re-imagining Church as Worshipping Community
- Christine Marie Smith, Associate Professor of Preaching and Worship at the United Theological Seminary of the Twin Cities.
- Virginia Ramey Mollenkott, Professor of English at William Patterson College of New Jersey. Author of 12 books including: Women, Men, and the Bible, The Divine Feminine: The Biblical Imagery of God as Female, and Is the Homosexual My Neighbor?
- Ofelia Ortega, Presbyterian pastor, Cuba. First woman to be ordained in the Reformed Church of Latin America.
Mollenkott spoke of growing up in the Plymouth Brethren tradition attending four hours of worship on Sundays and more on Tuesday nights. She came from a background that was so fundamentalist that by the time she got to Bob Jones University, that seemed like the most liberal Christian place ever. Mollenkott said, "I was taught that whenever a woman speaks or leads in church, the result is always heresy." She was shamed publicly by her parents when her homosexuality was discovered. "The worshipping community I would envision would have to be sincerely determined to uproot in itself any vestiges of assuming that some people are entitled to more than others because of gender differences, sexual orientation, racism, nationalism, socio-economic class, or any other reason human egos can think up.".