Kassian sets forth disastrous effects of feminism in The Feminist Mistake
Jeff Robinson
June 20, 2005
In her 1992 book The Feminist Gospel, Mary Kassian examined the cultural tsunami of feminism, showing the rise of a radical ideology that sought to redefine the very nature of gender itself.
Thirteen years later, Kassian, a council member for The Council on Biblical Manhood and Womanhood (CBMW), has witnessed cataclysmic fallout from the waves of feminism that have crashed hard upon the shores of both the church and contemporary society.
In her latest book, The Feminist Mistake: The Radical Impact of Feminism on Church and Culture (Crossway Books, 2005), Kassian provides a wholesale update to The Feminist Gospel, only this time she examines the seismic impact of feminism on both the church and culture. The book includes the earlier material that traces the rise of feminism through its incubation period from 1960 until 1990.
Kassian identifies three distinct stages of development in the history of feminism:
Stage One ran from 1960 to 1970 and was a period in which feminists began to deconstruct the Judeo-Christian view of womanhood and asserted a "right" to self-identification.
Stage Two encompassed the 70s through 1980 and was a decade in which women progressed to a deconstruction of manhood, gender relationships, family/societal structures, and a Judeo-Christian worldview, asserting a "right to name the world."
Stage Three ran from 1980 to 1990 and was a period in which feminism took perhaps its most audacious step; its adherents rejected the Judeo-Christian deity and asserted a "right to name God." During this period, god became goddess and feminists addressed the Lord’s Prayer to "Our father/mother who is everywhere."
In part two of the book, Kassian examines the aftereffects of the great quake of feminism including the shock waves that continue to wash over religious and secular culture. Here, she examines select events such as the 1993 "Re-Imagining Conference" that have helped feminism to gain broad acceptance in the mainstream culture and the church.
She also analyzes the relationship of conservative evangelical feminism (egalitarianism) to the more liberal forms of religious feminism and examines how—if at all—egalitarianism relates to the overarching historical progression of feminist philosophy. The book concludes by attempting to answer the question of whether an emphasis on women’s "rights" and functional equality of the sexes ought to be embraced or rejected by evangelicals.
In the end, Kassian deems the feminist project a gargantuan failure, one that has left in its wake a broad and easily discernable path of destruction.
"Feminism has failed miserably, and ironically it has exacerbated the very problem it set out to resolve," she writes. "Instead of promoting healthy self-identity for women or contributing to a greater harmony between the sexes, it has resulted in increased gender confusion, increased conflict, and a profound destruction of morality and family.
"It has left in its wake a mass of dysfunctional relationships and shattered lives. People of this culture no longer know what it means to be a man or a woman or how to make life work. What has been lost will not easily be regained. Though feminist theory has progressed just about as far as it can, the practical outworking of that theory has not. Feminism will dramatically affect our society and churches for years to come."
The Feminist Mistake is available in the CBMW webstore at www.cbmw.org/cgi-bin/store?show|534|Gender_Issues.
