Book Review: The 7 Hardest Things God Asks a Woman to Do

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I am currently leading a group of ladies in a study on consecration, using Havergal’s Kept for the Master’s Use (a verse by verse discussion of her hymn, “Take My Life and Let It Be”). The chapter we are now perusing has to do with the line, “Take my will and make it thine—it shall be no longer mine.” That, in essence, is the theme of this book. Though the idea of self denial is not one that has women alone in the Scripture’s crosshairs, Kathie Reimer and her daughter, Lisa Whittle, discuss from a feminine viewpoint seven seeming paradoxes in the Word of God:

  • Have a single focus, yet multi-task
  • Be tolerant toward some things, yet intolerant toward others
  • Fail, and simultaneously succeed
  • Proceed, while also waiting
  • Hold on and, in turn, let go
  • Lead, and still follow
  • Die, and consequently, live more abundantly

An apt sub-title for this book would be, What It Looks Like for Christian Women to Deny Self.

Strengths

The chapters themselves are not deep in scriptural discussion for the most part, although Kathie (my favorite of the two authors) tends to offer more to chew on. Most of the book consists in offering what Kathie calls “snapshots” (ch. 7) of how dethroning self will appear in the life of the woman desiring to follow Christ.

If you are looking for sermon illustrations on the topic, this book is chock full of them. There are also some pithy one-liners such as, “Faith is confidence that something or someone is reliable” (p. 157); “The journey to the end of ourselves is a great and necessary place for all of us to go” (p. 78); “Your tongue, when unregulated, is a natural disaster” (p. 52); and “The one last human freedom that remains available to a man, after everything else has been stripped from him is his ability to choose the way he will react to his circumstances” (here quoting Dr. Viktor Frankl, p. 29).

I liked Lisa’s take on submission in Chapter 6 (“Lead and Follow”):

For many of us wives, our view of being submissive to our husbands tends to be somewhat skewed. We look at it as intrusive, controlling, humiliating; but it is not. Submission requires strength, not weakness. It takes courage. It requires a strong belief and trust that God knew what he was doing when he established this ‘chain of command’ back in the days of Adam and Eve. (p. 155)

I was pleased that each chapter offers a substantial list of Scriptures for further study, along with application questions. My inclination would have been to spend more time discussing these verses, rather than offering so many personal sketches for observation.

The final chapter (“Die and Live”) is, appropriately, the most lengthy. I feel it would also have been effective to place it first. The question of dying to self and living unto God really provides the tools for success in the other six contrasting areas.

I enjoyed Kathie’s application of each of the preceding “hard things” and how they come into play with regard to what some often see as the hardest thing—sharing our faith. Readers will find good scriptural discussion from the Gospels there.

Weaknesses

One thing I found objectionable was a repeated setting up by both authors of Mother Teresa as an example. Yes, she led a sacrificial life, but for what purpose? With what ultimate motivation? Where is she now? Are there not good, solid, evangelical heroes of the faith to choose from without looking to the Roman Catholic Church? Someone else who worked selflessly in Mother Teresa’s native India comes to mind: missionary Amy Carmichael.

Various translations (NKJV, KJV, NIV, NASB, NLT) are used in the book. Discussions of particular Scriptures that were weak at times, or absent altogether. For instance, in explaining Colossians 3:2 in Chapter 1, Kathie states that setting your affections on things above means “to fall deeply in love with Jesus”—an expression that is not only inaccurate in this case, but which also uses a sentimentality that makes me squirm. She further refers to Jesus as “our loving, heavenly parent.” Parent? These references are both in the first chapter, which made me wonder if I was to slog through this type of thing throughout the whole book. Later on, Kathie posits of Psalm 55:22,

To all of us Jesus says, “Cast your burdens and cares upon me—and I will sustain you”—a promise from the one who cannot lie. To “cast” means we have to let go [I understand this to be correctly translated “to throw or fling”, which has a very different dynamic], and, like so many other verses in the Bible, this one is very likely a continuing action verb, not just a one-time-will-do-it word.” (p. 110, emphasis mine)

Jesus says? And, I wonder—is there a reason we are guessing about verb tenses? I understand this meaning could be implied, but she develops this idea of continued action even further, so would it not have been the better part of wisdom to find out for sure first? These “warm fuzzies” and “guesstimations” are what drive me away from this type of book and toward plain old study tools, time and time again.

I sensed a bit of incongruence between mother and daughter on the concept of self love/self hatred. Kathie tends to lay it out in Jim Berg-like fashion (low “self esteem” is rooted in covetous comparison and a selfish sense of entitlement), while Lisa addresses self-hatred as being a viable something that springs from self love (p. 55). It came across as sort of a psycho-babble/biblical counseling hybrid. I have perceived from various books and biblical counseling materials that self-loathing is not hatred at all, but rather a morbidly ironic manifestation of loving one’s self exceedingly. “I want________ to change; I don’t have ________; I’ll never be ____________” all seem to be at the root. This is self absorption masquerading in martyr’s clothes, a self-deception the Adversary relishes, no doubt. I’m with Kathie on this one.

Toward the end of the book, there is an interesting illustration regarding da Vinci’s “Last Supper.”

He asked a friend for an evaluation. The friend heaped superlatives on the masterpiece and especially praised the wine cup by the Lord’s hand. At that point, Leonardo da Vinci blotted out the cup. “Nothing,” he was said to have answered, “should distract one’s attention from the Lord.” (p 149)

This was my own personal paradox while reading this book—experiencing a draw toward spiritual ideas while often feeling distracted away from the Scriptures by creative analogies and entertaining or touching stories. Analogy and illustrations have their place, without a doubt, but I was disappointed that the greater portion of the book was typified by this, rather than deliberate inviting of the reader into a prevailing, deeper understanding of what Scripture says. I think I’ll stick to my friends, the dead guys.


Diane Heeney is a stay-at-home mom, who enjoys some freelance writing, blogging, and speaking for ladies’ retreats and functions. She received her BA (Church Ministries) in ‘85 grad from Bob Jones University and went on to serve at BJU as a secretary in the Extension office and later as Director of Girl’s Extension Ministries. Diane and her husband Patrick have helped a number of churches in the past 16 years, and are now assisting the ministry of a growing church in Lander, Wyoming. They have three children: Erin (breathlessly awaiting 13), Michael (all camo, all the time at 9), and Kate (their sweet surprise, now 3 yrs old).

Discussion

I’ve noticed that you and I agree about the sentimentality and cuteness that seems to characterize much of what is offered to women in books, Bible studies, and devotional guides- the whole Lace Doily Sprinkled with Potpourri approach, as if women don’t want meat- we want crustless cucumber and watercress sandwiches. Ick.

WE WANT STEAK! WE WANT STEAK! http://www.freesmileys.org/smileys.php] http://www.freesmileys.org/smileys/smiley-eatdrink053.gif

I loved the list of seven paradoxes. How absolutely true.
Kathie tends to lay it out in Jim Berg-like fashion (low “self esteem” is rooted in covetous comparison and a selfish sense of entitlement)… I have perceived from various books and biblical counseling materials that self-loathing is not hatred at all, but rather a morbidly ironic manifestation of loving one’s self exceedingly. “I want________ to change; I don’t have ________; I’ll never be ____________” all seem to be at the root. This is self absorption masquerading in martyr’s clothes, a self-deception the Adversary relishes, no doubt. I’m with Kathie on this one.
I agree with this interpretation.

Is this the same Kathie Reimer that wrote [URL=http://www.amazon.com/1001-Ways-Introduce-Child-Bible/dp/080543836X/ref…] 1001 Ways to Introduce Your Child to the Bible[/URL]? I remember it as having some good ideas (I used to teach a 2-3 yr old class) but I think the lessons say they are geared for kids as old as 8. IMO, if a kid is still singing ‘Bible’ songs to the tune of Three Blind Mice at 8 years old, the train has done left the station.

Thanks for the review, Diane.

Thanks for the kind words and the smiley, Susan. :bigsmile: I’m not sure if this is the same author as the other book you mention. There is no indication in this book. I don’t see any obvious connections at Amazon or CBD.

Apparently I’m not the only one who tired of the “stories”. Here is http://www.discerningreader.com/book-reviews/the-7-hardest-things-god-a…] another review I found this morning, at Discerning Reader.

And, I concur with you…it was the list itself in the Table of Contents that grabbed my attention and then gave me the forward momentum when I had to strap on the hip boots.

What are your favorite “steak” authors for women?

"I pray to God this day to make me an extraordinary Christian." --Whitefield http://strengthfortoday.wordpress.com

…and thanks for not including the “I senses” typo in your quote of my quote.

Aw, now I done drug it out into the light, hain’t I? :X

"I pray to God this day to make me an extraordinary Christian." --Whitefield http://strengthfortoday.wordpress.com

My favorites are fairly eclectic- [URL=http://www.solvefamilyproblems.com/index.php?option=com_virtuemart&page…] S.M. Davis[/URL] , [URL=http://www.drlaura.com/main/ Dr. Laura Schlessinger[/URL] , [URL=http://www.reviveourhearts.com/ Nancy Leigh DeMoss[/URL] come to mind first… but I tend to read blogs rather than books nowadays, due to the lack of availability, quality, or variety of Christian books in our local library or the book bin at Goodwill.

To clarify- I know that Dr. Laura is not a Christian, but her stuff is meaty in a different way that I find appealing.

I have to admit that I am excessively intolerant in this area- as soon as a I see a book that is tootie-frootie pink, covered with roses or a cartoon figure of a woman in curlers, I often don’t bother looking at it further. I probably miss some good stuff because of it, but I am seriously allergic to cute. I don’t even like kittens. http://www.freesmileys.org/smileys.php] http://www.freesmileys.org/smileys/smiley-shocked009.gif

The cover of the book you reviewed would appeal to me, and I’d read it based on the outline.

…and thanks for not including the “I senses” typo in your quote of my quote.
I senses that the typo has now been fixed!

Views expressed are always my own and not my employer's, my church's, my family's, my neighbors', or my pets'. The house plants have authorized me to speak for them, however, and they always agree with me.

[Aaron Blumer]
…and thanks for not including the “I senses” typo in your quote of my quote.
I senses that the typo has now been fixed!
I thanks you. ;)

"I pray to God this day to make me an extraordinary Christian." --Whitefield http://strengthfortoday.wordpress.com

[Susan R] My favorites are fairly eclectic- [URL=http://www.solvefamilyproblems.com/index.php?option=com_virtuemart&page…] S.M. Davis[/URL] , [URL=http://www.drlaura.com/main/ Dr. Laura Schlessinger[/URL] , [URL=http://www.reviveourhearts.com/ Nancy Leigh DeMoss[/URL] come to mind first… but I tend to read blogs rather than books nowadays, due to the lack of availability, quality, or variety of Christian books in our local library or the book bin at Goodwill.

To clarify- I know that Dr. Laura is not a Christian, but her stuff is meaty in a different way that I find appealing.

I have to admit that I am excessively intolerant in this area- as soon as a I see a book that is tootie-frootie pink, covered with roses or a cartoon figure of a woman in curlers, I often don’t bother looking at it further. I probably miss some good stuff because of it, but I am seriously allergic to cute. I don’t even like kittens. http://www.freesmileys.org/smileys.php] http://www.freesmileys.org/smileys/smiley-shocked009.gif

The cover of the book you reviewed would appeal to me, and I’d read it based on the outline.
Yes, I like DeMoss. I have enjoyed Elisabeth Elliot…her straightforward style suits me. I like Elyse Fitzpatrick too…but she wanders into the realm of storytime a bit herself (hers are usually personal scenarios, tho, and serve to effectively illustrate her points). I have not yet read Laura Hendrickson (I’d like to see a review of her “Can Medicine Stop the Pain?”)…but she has a new one coming out in July (co-authored with Elyse and some others, entitled,”Women Discipling Women”), and I suspect her approach will be one that we like. I’ve enjoyed corresponding with her, and the worthwhile posts she has offered here and elsewhere. I’ll be getting a review copy of the new book; but I think they’ll be offering one here too. Maybe you’d like to pre-request it? :) I’d like to read your take on it.

Have you read anything by Elizabeth George? Cynthia Heald? Martha Peace? I have friends who have recommended books by them. Someone gave me “The Excellent Wife” by Martha Peace…but I haven’t gotten to it yet.

"I pray to God this day to make me an extraordinary Christian." --Whitefield http://strengthfortoday.wordpress.com

I’d also like to see a review of Carolyn Mahaney’s ” http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1581346158?ie=UTF8&tag=girltalk0e-20&l…] Feminine Appeal “…which I blogged on yesterday http://strengthfortoday.wordpress.com/2010/01/06/are-you-a-feminist-in-… here . From what I’ve read from her in the blogosphere, she calls her shots pretty straight as well. Not a lot of “foof” in what I’ve seen.

"I pray to God this day to make me an extraordinary Christian." --Whitefield http://strengthfortoday.wordpress.com

I enjoyed this review Diane.

I just finished the new Nancy Leigh DeMoss book, Choosing Gratitude, and found it to be sufficiently “meaty”. It was so refreshing compared to the last book I reviewed for Thomas Nelson, Find your Strongest Life. I read it because they sent it to me, but I’m sad to report that after reading it I actually became dumber :)

Practical Theology for Women by Wendy Alsup has gotten very good reviews. I know she is a woman who has had enough cutesy books for women. I plan to read her book in the near future.

I’m waiting to buy a book by Diane Heeney. I bet there would be some real depth to her manuscript!

Keri,

I was sending you an email while you were posting, apparently.

Wow…thanks for the compliment. :8) I don’t know yet if I am in that season of life to devote myself to a book. I had a hard enough time completing this review…but part of that was because of the time of year and the fact that I found it a bit tedious.

Elisabeth Elliot wrote to a young mother (I’m not “young” per se, but I have kids the same age as young mothers!) that it was wise to read great things during this season of life, to get a feel for substance and cadence. That is what I am endeavoring to do. She also advised that just because it has already been said (written) doesn’t mean it that it does not need to be said again…for the present generation. I think that is a wise observation, and it is also a consolation to me. I don’t have many new things to say that superb authors have not already eloquently addressed…but perhaps I can say them in a new way that is more applicable/absorbable for today.

I enjoy your writing as well (and this is not just a “mutual admiration club” as my Dad would say; I mean that sincerely)…perhaps we both ought to be on the watch for what God may want us to say, and, in the meantime, give ourselves to a steady diet of meaty, inspiring stuff. Do you have any opinions on the authors/works I mentioned above?

"I pray to God this day to make me an extraordinary Christian." --Whitefield http://strengthfortoday.wordpress.com

Nancy Leigh DeMoss is excellent. Last summer I worked through her Bible study SEEKING HIM and was deeply challenged by it. It was actually about the basics of the Christian life, but it had new perspectives and really showed that it had been carefully written and prayed about, over a period of years, rather than just thrown together to get it on the market and make some money. LIES WOMEN BELIEVE is another good one of hers, particularly the chapters on why Eve originally sinned and its ramifications on how women think today.

You also can’t do better than Elisabeth Elliot.

[Ann B.] Nancy Leigh DeMoss is excellent. Last summer I worked through her Bible study SEEKING HIM and was deeply challenged by it. It was actually about the basics of the Christian life, but it had new perspectives and really showed that it had been carefully written and prayed about, over a period of years, rather than just thrown together to get it on the market and make some money. LIES WOMEN BELIEVE is another good one of hers, particularly the chapters on why Eve originally sinned and its ramifications on how women think today.

You also can’t do better than Elisabeth Elliot.
The Bible study sounds very interesting, Ann. I know I have enjoyed “A Place of Quiet Rest” and “Choosing Forgiveness” by her. Top shelf.

I know what you are saying about the “thrown together” idea…I think it is remarkable that someone such as Nancy can be such a prolific writer, but not be turning out slap-dash material. I think it is excellent commentary on how she views her writing—as a ministry rather than a cash cow. I have high regard for that.

"I pray to God this day to make me an extraordinary Christian." --Whitefield http://strengthfortoday.wordpress.com

I receive Elizabeth George’s newsletter, but the only books of hers in the library are in the Large Print section, and I can’t bring myself to check them out. It’s too much like parking in a handicap spot when my mom is not with me. BTW- if you search “Elizabeth George”, be aware that there is a well-known secular mystery author of the same name. The Elizabeth George we are speaking of did not write What Came before He Shot Her.

Another helpful and meaty source (especially for homeschoolers) is Steve and Teri Maxwell’s site at [URL=http://www.titus2.com/corners/ Titus2.com[/URL]. I also read [URL=http://theologyforwomen.blogspot.com/ Wendy Alsup’s blog[/URL] - loved her post about [URL=http://theologyforwomen.blogspot.com/2010/01/impulse-control.html Impulse Control[/URL].

I do think there is value in stories and illustrations, especially personal ones or those from real life (not the sappy ones that get passed around through email). I reserved Women Who Do Too Much by Patricia Sprinkle from the library, and read the first couple of chapters this morning. In her testimony I saw reflections of my own struggles, and her explanation of how God dealt with her and those around her was encouraging.

But sometimes stories are a way of not landing the point. IOW, you can circle the field forever with one anecdote after another, and “Ha ha ha, isn’t that great”, and for a few minutes you feel good because you had a laugh (Prov. 17:22)- but it isn’t until you use Scripture that you actually LAND the thing and the Holy Spirit can bring conviction. I think sometimes women are afraid of being though of as harsh- we’re supposed to be soft and sweet and not hurt anyone’s feelings. But I don’t think making one’s point in a straightforward manner is unfeminine. Don’t ‘soften the blow’ with too much sentimentality or humor- let the Sword pierce the heart, KWIM?

Our ladies’ study group used one of Elizabeth George’s video series a while back - A Woman after God’s Own Heart. There was good stuff, but it was also pretty “fluffy”, and the videos became rather painful to me after just a couple, due to her “cutesiness.” I had a hard time with the study in general, though, as it focused heavily on husbands and children, with statements for single women tacked onto the end as afterthoughts, like, “These principles can apply to you single ladies, too.” So my perceptions might have been tainted a bit.

I would highly recommend both Nancy Leigh DeMoss & Elisabeth Elliot. Elliot especially does a good job of adressing women’s issues fully without making single women feel like incomplete or fringe Christians.

[Susan R] Another helpful and meaty source (especially for homeschoolers) is Steve and Teri Maxwell’s site at [URL=http://www.titus2.com/corners/ Titus2.com[/URL]. I also read [URL=http://theologyforwomen.blogspot.com/ Wendy Alsup’s blog[/URL] - loved her post about [URL=http://theologyforwomen.blogspot.com/2010/01/impulse-control.html Impulse Control[/URL]. I do think there is value in stories and illustrations, especially personal ones or those from real life (not the sappy ones that get passed around through email).
I have enjoyed Titus 2 as well. I went and took a peek at Wendy’s site. The opening of the post you mention is good use of a personal story. It paves the way and helps to further drive home the scriptural application. God does use circumstances to flesh out scriptural truth in our lives, and it can be helpful for us to hear these illustrations as an aid to understanding.
But sometimes stories are a way of not landing the point. IOW, you can circle the field forever with one anecdote after another, and “Ha ha ha, isn’t that great”, and for a few minutes you feel good because you had a laugh (Prov. 17:22)- but it isn’t until you use Scripture that you actually LAND the thing and the Holy Spirit can bring conviction.
Agreed. If your aim as an author is to inspire, to exhort, to encourage rather than just to entertain, then scripture had better be employed, and frequently. God doesn’t necessarily promise to bless my words, but His come with a guarantee. :)
I think sometimes women are afraid of being though of as harsh- we’re supposed to be soft and sweet and not hurt anyone’s feelings. But I don’t think making one’s point in a straightforward manner is unfeminine. Don’t ‘soften the blow’ with too much sentimentality or humor- let the Sword pierce the heart, KWIM?
Yes, I like to be liked too. Who doesn’t? We like acceptance. And if you’re a blogger and you are tough in your posts, the “hits” diminish…if you are tough as an author, your readership (which translates into purchases) may very well decrease. But the people who really seek and who would be the ones to genuinely benefit from straight talk…they will return time and again. Look at the number of devotees both Elisabeth Elliot and Nancy Leigh DeMoss are experiencing. God will bless faithfulness, for the day is at hand. And, as far as femininity goes, perhaps this is a misunderstanding of roles. Being a submissive woman doesn’t mean I am silent or fawning. We are not to be afraid of leadership. In that Titus 2 passage and elsewhere, we “older” (ahem) women are supposed to take the reins and lead.

Like anything else, this is about balance. I love humor. I like to smile. One of my students at BJ said that I “teach through my teeth”…hard sayings can be softened by the countenance without laying a finger on, or weakening, content. Anyone who visits my blog will know that. But funny stories and cartoons are not the majority of what I offer. Mostly it is what I am learning. Things that smack me in the face when I read them. Experiences that have the fingerprints of God upon them, which I feel accountable to share. Gems and quotes I come across that would burn a hole in my pocket if I tried to keep them there.

You know, I’m thinking that this easily translates over into the realm of preaching too. I have heard (no doubt everyone here has too) preachers who peppered their sermons with jokes and stories that are entirely unrelated to the matter at hand, and sometimes are also entirely inappropriate for them to dispense in the first place, for the gaining of a few laughs, or to endear the audience to themselves. I get restless with preaching that is all story and no scripture. I admit to having come out of some Bible Conference services feeling, “Why did you waste our time like this?” There is a different dynamic here than perhaps with preaching, but the idea is the same. Be sure what you’ve got to say is constructive, marinated in the Spirit, and true to the Word. God never wastes time, and neither should we. The summer will soon be ended.

"I pray to God this day to make me an extraordinary Christian." --Whitefield http://strengthfortoday.wordpress.com