I subscribe to the free version of Michael Bird's channel on Substack. Yesterday, he posted in favor of Brian J. Robinson's book Being Subordinate Men: Paul's Rhetoric of Gender and Power in 1 Corinthians (Lanham: Lexington/Fortress, 2019).
He quoted the "blurb":
and the conclusion:
My curiosity was piqued, and I gave a brief thought to purchasing the book, until I saw the $110 price. Nope! I'd *probably* be willing to spend 1/5 that amount, but that's about it.
I then went to see if I could find anything online that might give me some samples of his reasoning, with exegesis of at least a few particular passages. Instead I found this (45 min. viewing time):
It contains some interesting (undocumented) historical and cultural claims, but only allusions, no direct quotes that I recall, from the text, and absolutely no supportive exegesis. And listening to the framing comments by the interviewer and especially the author, I have to wonder if his outlook the whole time he was working on the project (which began around 2015) was filtered through his disgust with Bad Orange Man.
I *do* happen to believe that the John Wayne manly man ideal has been too readily embraced by Christians, especially evangelicals (or Evangelicals -- I'm never sure which is correct), but I'm not convinced his *radically* opposite view is correct.
He quoted the "blurb":
Being Subordinate Men offers a gender critical examination of Paul's use of gender and power in the argument of 1 Corinthians. By elevating femininity and misperforming masculinity, Paul consistently undermines first century Roman norms of masculinity. Such norms of masculinity would have allowed some of the higher status men among the Corinthian believers to occupy positions of power that would give them control over lower status members of the community. Instead of supporting such a patriarchal model, Paul articulates a form of masculinity that would require these higher status men to abandon their positions of power and occupy positions that would put them on equal status with women and men whose bodies and identities forced them to the margins of society. Such a move subverts forms of toxic, or hegemonic, masculinity that give a select few men power over the bodies of others. Instead of a toxic masculinity, Paul commands the men in his audience to embody a failed, or subordinate, masculinity. This failed masculinity not only imitates Paul's own subordinate masculinity, seen in his embrace of feminine imagery and his failure to live up to first century Roman norms of masculinity, but also supports Paul's main reason for writing 1 Corinthians by confronting the factionalism that threatens to destroy the believing community. Paul's vision for the believing community is one of equality that centers itself in imitation of the crucified body of Jesus, a body that demonstrates that equality, not domination, is the path to the kingdom of God.
and the conclusion:
Paul's self-presentation throughout 1 Corinthians evidences the same concern as Paul constructs his authorial persona and repeatedly presents himself as a figure to be imitated. The surprising part of Paul's self-presentation is not that it engages discourses of masculinity but that it consistently fails to embody the ideal position in these discourses. He is a man who cannot speak well, a woman who nurses a child a father who brings shame on his children, and a celibate man. Such a man would necessarily take a subordinate position and, as a result, be excluded from institutions and positions that were reserved for men. Such a failure, I argue, is not a mistake by or shortcoming of Paul but a direct result of his understanding of the gospel and his own imitation of Christ. From Paul's perspective, institutions of patriarchy represent oppressive structures of the present age and not representative of the way the people of God are to live. … Paul directs the men in his audience to misperform discourses of masculinity. They are to be fools not dominant orators, not to take advantage of status in Roman courts but appoint lower-status men to arbitrate disputes, to submit their bodies to their wives, and to conform to the dining practices of the weak. The point of such practices is to prevent the factionalism that threatens to tear apart Paul's audience by ending practices that create and sustain the competition for power and status that were rampant in Roman Corinth. Paul crafts a specific masculine identity that he knows will subvert the type of status and power games that were the norm in urban Roman contexts. Paul's goal is the unity of the believing community. In order to achieve this unity, Paul directly challenges systems that value some members of the community over others by calling those members of the community that could benefit from such systems to intentionally embody identities that identify them with lower-status members of the community. Because of the pervasive linkage of power and masculinity, addressing such discrepancies in power requires Paul to address the masculinity to which the men in the community aspire (p. 214).
My curiosity was piqued, and I gave a brief thought to purchasing the book, until I saw the $110 price. Nope! I'd *probably* be willing to spend 1/5 that amount, but that's about it.
I then went to see if I could find anything online that might give me some samples of his reasoning, with exegesis of at least a few particular passages. Instead I found this (45 min. viewing time):
It contains some interesting (undocumented) historical and cultural claims, but only allusions, no direct quotes that I recall, from the text, and absolutely no supportive exegesis. And listening to the framing comments by the interviewer and especially the author, I have to wonder if his outlook the whole time he was working on the project (which began around 2015) was filtered through his disgust with Bad Orange Man.
I *do* happen to believe that the John Wayne manly man ideal has been too readily embraced by Christians, especially evangelicals (or Evangelicals -- I'm never sure which is correct), but I'm not convinced his *radically* opposite view is correct.
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