Tag Archives: Wonder Women

Wonder Women and Their Socks

Last week I wrote about the inspiration of a week full of Wonder Women. From a Zoom meeting of women lead pastors to the re-start of a women’s Bible study at the church I now serve to Baptist Women in Ministry of North Carolina’s 40th Anniversary Symposium (I am still thinking about that phenomenal cake!!), I was filled to the brim in the presence of such Wonder Women.

A more seasoned ministry friend, whom I deeply admire and love serving with whenever possible, noted that the artwork I shared by the immensely talented twins, Sarah and Catherine Satrun did not include her more “full of years” (Gen. 25:8) group.

“None of these Wonder Women look like women of my ilk— you know, decrepit, wrinkled, spry, with compression socks. Jus’ sayin’. In our caricature, though, please do keep the twinkle in the eye!”

This led to a conversation about my love for Wonder Women of a certain age (my years as an eldercare chaplain were some of my favorites!), which led to a chat about WW themed compression socks, which she swiftly located. Always resourceful!

She also found a photo that I immediately saved on my desktop.

YES to every pixel of this. YESYESYES!! Friends, this Wonder Woman was 103 when this was taken! Read more about her here.

YES to those who have gone before and lived with courage and whole-hearted love and perseverance and compassion for themselves and others and who still, as they adapt to the last season of this life, open their hearts to what is now.

That’s my favorite aspect of the Wonder Women of a certain age in my life: the ability to honor what has been—what worked for them, what didn’t work for them, the truth of their experiences without rose-colored or doom-colored glasses—AND to be present to the now, to value that the world is always changing, and to not hold the women or the world of now to the shape and substance of the past.

When I am in the presence of a woman who can hold her story with respect and grace and love and also make room for others’ unique-yet-connected story…I know I am with a true Wonder Woman. That space is holy. That space is filled with the love that makes all things possible.

We can do both. We can honor what has been and what worked in the past and how hard certain things were that aren’t that kind of hard anymore. And, at the same time, we can honor what is happening now and how what used to work isn’t working anymore and lean into the desire for transformation and adaptation. Living with that kind of versatility is wisdom in motion: willingness to be malleable, responsive to the Spirit, leaning into reflective learning.

Years ago, I served a community with two prominent women leaders, whom we’ll call Polly and Alice. Both had a deep passion for loving God and loving others. Each had her own gifts to bring to the table and contributed greatly to the ministries around them.

They could not have been more different.

Polly wore vibrant clothes, laughed often and loudly, and taught her Sunday School class even after macular degeneration limited her vision. She procured a special machine that enlarged the writing in her quarterly until she could read it and kept right on leading the friends with whom she had walked most of her life.

She once told me she planned to teach until she couldn’t see anymore–and then she might learn braille! I’m pretty sure she was joking about the braille. But with Polly, you never knew—she just might do it.

Alice found her niche in missions. She’d led women gathered in someone’s fancy, seldom used parlor to learn about missionaries serving in places they struggled to locate in a map. They prayed for missionaries and raised funds in all sorts of creative ways, from collecting dimes in tiny cardboard church-shaped boxes (which fascinated me as a child!) to selling baked goods and cookbooks and crafts.

Alice struggled hard when women’s interest in missions began to shift from learning about “foreign” missionaries to doing hands-on missions in their own communities or traveling to participate in missions around the country—and even the globe. On Wednesday nights, more women opted for Bible study rather than the traditional missions study. Their call was to study scripture and live it out by doing missions themselves, making an impact right where they lived.

Alice became deeply frustrated when she could not influence younger women to do missions like their mothers or grandmothers did. She worried that “no one cares about missions anymore!” As we humans often do, she couldn’t quite make the shift to what had already shifted and was never going to shift back. Her grief for what she viewed as “lost”–the old, familiar, defining ways–was so powerful and so painful, that she couldn’t quite see the good that was happening in new, different ways of living missions.

I know now that in a way I didn’t know then that sometimes grief comes out with protective fronts like frustration or judgment, which make the grief hard to hear. Looking back, I realize that sometimes, in both ministry and my own spiritual journey, I have missed the deeper grief as I tried to deal with (or duck) the sharper, protective emotions coming my way. I want to keep becoming more attuned to the grief underneath, to listen for its tones in those protective emotions and know that what I am hearing is pain, fear, loss–grief.

During that season of ministry, I told my husband, “I want to grow up and be Polly.” I still do. Imperfect, colorful, determined to use her gifts as long as she could, finding ways to adapt and giving room for new learning. Polly absolutely would have worn Wonder Woman compression socks.

I want to as well. I also want to keep learning how to lovingly tend to my own grief, listening for my own protective measures– criticism or anger or judgment–and recognizing that they connect to something that hurts. And the first step to healing that hurt is realizing that it exists.

As I keep getting fuller in years, I want more twinkle in my eye, more compassion for myself and others. I want to give more room for others to be, to create space for those who come after to make their own ways of living out their faith—and know that, just like I did “back In the day,” they need support for the hard work of figuring it out in their own setting. When the things I hold dear shift, I pray for the grace to grieve what was so good for me for so long and trust that God is still, as always, doing a new thing, a new good thing.

Both Polly and Alice were Wonder Women in their own ways. They taught me so much. I think maybe Alice just forgot for awhile that her tiara could also be a boomerang—more than one thing can be true at once.

In fact, a whole lot of things can be true at once, including the rich variety of Wonder Women, of every age, size, style, spirit and socks.

Photo from https://myfavoritescrubsllc.com/collections/women-compression-socks

A Week of Wonder Women

This past week I had THREE different opportunities to be in the company of Wonder Women. Women whose unique brilliance shone bright, simply by their presence in the room. Women whose compassion showed in the way they welcomed others, embracing old friends and warmly connecting to new people. Women whose commitment appeared in how they intentionally engaged with others, truly listening, seeing, and valuing the other.

There’s just something powerful that I see over and over in a gathering of women–the laughter, the connection, the kindness, the willingness to show up for one another. A room full of Wonder Women.

The first gathering was via Zoom, a group of women lead pastors that I was graciously invited to help shepherd as they form a Peer Learning Group. In every face in every square, I saw glimpses of their gifts, their calling, their perseverance, their love for God and God’s people so apparent even in our first meeting. Women who pastor in faith traditions that are late to the “and your daughters shall prophesy” party are a courageous kind. There are layers upon layers upon layers of realities women pastors face that may not be apparent on the surface. What a privilege and honor to get to walk and learn alongside these Wonder Women as they keep following God’s call on their lives, step by step.

The second gathering was a Women’s Bible Study at the church where I now have the privilege and honor of serving as Minister of Missions. The church has a rich and meaningful history of Bible studies oriented to women through the years. So there was serious positive energy about getting to re-start this ministry after a long, hard pandemic pause.

About 30 women gathered around tables in our Fellowship Hall and several others are signed up to join us. As I looked around the room last Wednesday night I again saw the wonder of women who show up for one another. Women who know hardship and pain, who bear losses carved on their bones, whose joy and goodness rise in a thousand ways. Women whose commitment to deepening their relationship with God and one another is reflected in their willingness to set aside this time to slow down and open their hearts. It’s perfectly fitting that we are learning about lesser known women in scripture who followed God’s call and changed the world. Wonder Women studying Wonder Women.

The third gathering was the Baptist Women in Ministry of North Carolina Symposium and 40th Anniversary Celebration. It was my first BWIMNC gathering after six and a half years out of state, where such an organization didn’t exist, much to my disappointment and grief. A small group of women in ministry in the town where we served in West Virginia tried to gather quarterly and it was always a gift to be together, but it was hard work to make it happen. I had several Wonder Women there who anchored me in stormy times–and still do. They truly helped carry me through some of the hardest days in ministry I have ever experienced.

But having an organization like BWIMNC to organize, advocate, educate, and support us as we together follow God’s call is priceless. No one has to add corralling calendars and emails and people for a gathering onto our already overflowing ministry–and usually motherhood–plates, because BWIMNC is doing all the heavy lifting, executive functioning, and execution for us. PRAISE GOD FROM WHOM ALL BLESSINGS FLOW! And Ka’thy Gore Chappell, one of Wonder-est of Wonder Women, and her team do faithful and fantastic work in ministering to us.

Everywhere I looked in that room–Wonder Women. So much creativity, compassion, determination, loving-kindness, wisdom, and a bevy other blessings filled that space. Each woman bearing scars and tending wounds, even as they honor the scars and minister to the wounds of those they serve. Each one profoundly gifted and shaped for what the “such a time–and place–as this” that God has called them to in this moment. Each one with questions, struggles, stories, and testimonies to God’s faithfulness and learning things the hard way.

There was no “ideal” woman I met this past week. They don’t exist. Yet we were all ideal in the sense that we were willing to show up, to listen, to be changed, to honor what God is doing in and among us.

I want to spend more time this weekend giving thanks for the Wonder Women I met. And I want to spend more time in the days to come seeing–really seeing–the Wonder Women around me…and letting them know how wondrous they are, just by being who God God has created and is calling them to be.