Designed for Joy: How the Gospel Impacts Men and Women, Identity and Practice
By Owen Strachan, Jonathan Parnell, Denny Burk and
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About this ebook
It's one of the most important—and controversial—topics of our time.
God created men and women in his image—equal in value and complementary in roles. These distinctive roles are not the vestiges of a bygone era, but integral to God's timeless good design for humanity.
Designed for Joy includes fresh contributions from fourteen young leaders, casting a unified vision for Christian manhood and womanhood. Whether discussing the significance of gender, the truth about masculinity and femininity, the blessing of purity, or the challenge of raising children in a confusing world, this practical resource challenges us to embrace God's good design—for his glory and our joy.
Denny Burk
Denny Burk (PhD, The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary) is professor of biblical studies at Boyce College, the undergraduate arm of the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. He also serves as associate pastor at Kenwood Baptist Church in Louisville, Kentucky. Burk edits The Journal for Biblical Manhood & Womanhood and speaks and writes extensively about gender and sexuality. He keeps a popular blog at DennyBurk.com.
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Reviews for Designed for Joy
4 ratings1 review
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
May 27, 2020
Exposed parts of my heart i didn’t know needed help and work.
Book preview
Designed for Joy - Owen Strachan
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DESIGNED
FOR JOY
How the Gospel Impacts
Men and Women,
Identity and Practice
EDITED BY
JONATHAN PARNELL
AND OWEN STRACHAN
FOREWORD BY
JOHN PIPER
Designed for Joy: How the Gospel Impacts Men and Women, Identity and Practice
Copyright © 2015 by Desiring God
Published by Crossway
1300 Crescent Street
Wheaton, Illinois 60187
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopy, recording, or otherwise, without the prior permission of the publisher, except as provided for by USA copyright law.
Cover design: Jeff Miller, Faceout Studio
Cover image: Shutterstock
First printing 2015
Printed in the United States of America
Unless otherwise indicated, Scripture quotations are from the ESV® Bible (The Holy Bible, English Standard Version®), copyright © 2001 by Crossway, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
Scripture references marked NIV are taken from The Holy Bible, New International Version®, NIV®. Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984, 2011 by Biblica, Inc.™ Used by permission. All rights reserved worldwide.
All emphases in Scripture quotations have been added by the authors or editors.
Trade paperback ISBN: 978-1-4335-4925-0
ePub ISBN: 978-1-4335-4928-1
PDF ISBN: 978-1-4335-4926-7
Mobipocket ISBN: 978-1-4335-4927-4
lineLibrary of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Designed for joy: how the gospel impacts men and women, identity and practice / edited by Jonathan Parnell and Owen Strachan; foreword by John Piper.
1 online resource
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Description based on print version record and CIP data provided by publisher; resource not viewed.
ISBN 978-1-4335-4926-7 (pdf) – ISBN 978-1-4335-4927-4 (mobi) – ISBN 978-1-4335-4928-1 (epub) – ISBN 978-1-4335-4925-0 (print)
1. Sex role—Religious aspects—Christianity. 2. Sex role—Biblical teaching. 3. Men (Christian theology) 4. Women—Religious aspects—Christianity. 5. Men (Christian theology)—Biblical teaching. 6. Women—Biblical teaching. I. Parnell, Jonathan, 1985– II. Strachan, Owen.
BT708
233'.5—dc23 2015011182
lineCrossway is a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers.
To John Piper and Wayne Grudem
Contents
Foreword by John Piper
Introduction: How Does the Gospel Shape Manhood and Womanhood?
Owen Strachan
1 Being a Man and Acting Like One
Jonathan Parnell
2 Masculinity Handed Down
Joe Rigney
3 The Happy Call to Holistic Provision
David Mathis
4 The Feminine Focus
Trillia Newbell
5 The Nature of a Woman’s Nurture
Gloria Furman
6 What Is Submission?
Christina Fox
7 Every Day Godward
Tony Reinke
8 Discipline for Our Good
Andy Naselli
9 Training Our Kids in a Transgender World
Denny Burk
10 Good News for the Not-Yet-Married
Marshall Segal
11 Purity We Can Count On
Grant and GraceAnna Castleberry
12 My Recovery from Feminism
Courtney Reissig
13 Immature Manhood and the Hope of Something Better
Brandon Smith
Afterword: The Glad Conviction
Jonathan Parnell
Contributors
General Index
Scripture Index
Foreword
I asked to write this foreword. I had hoped to endorse this book and help spread the word through Twitter. But then I took a PDF on the plane to Brazil and could not put it down. So I told Marshall Segal, one of the authors, who told the editors, If you’ll take me, I’d like to write the foreword.
The reason for my eagerness is partly nostalgia, partly thankfulness, partly amazement, partly admiration, and partly hope.
The editors and most of the authors of this book were not yet teenagers when Wayne Grudem and I were editing the big blue book
called Recovering Biblical Manhood and Womanhood from 1988 to 1991. So to see this project emerge twenty-five years later with a shared and refined vision is like seeing our baby graduate from college. But of course, my nostalgia is no reason for you to read the book. So let’s turn to what matters more.
Rising in me, as I read, was a high sense of thankfulness to God for the insight, wisdom, giftedness, biblical faithfulness, and courage of these younger authors. The vision of manhood and womanhood they are trumpeting is biblical, beautiful, and sadly obnoxious to many in society. That is, it fits with faith in Christ and infuriates those who love the atmosphere of self-actualizing autonomy—what editor Owen Strachan calls "narcissistic optimistic deism." So I am thankful for the valor of these men and women, who are willing to swim against unbiblical currents.
My amazement is that decades into this struggle, there is such a widespread and robust embrace of the beautiful biblical vision of complementary manhood and womanhood. This may strike you as an evidence of small faith on my part. Perhaps it is. But if you had tasted the vitriol of our audiences in the 1970s and 1980s, you might understand.
In the late seventies, we were called obscene
for suggesting that God’s Word taught distinct, complementary roles for men and women based on manhood and womanhood, not just competency. Therefore, the breadth and maturity and creativity and joyfulness of the complementarian crowd today triggers happy amazement in me.
Then, when I turned to these actual chapters, I read in admiration. These folks are not only good thinkers and faithful interpreters of the Bible; they are also gifted writers. The reading was not just informative and inspiring; it was a pleasure. I love to think of what these men and women will be writing in thirty years. If it’s this good now, what will it be then?
Finally, I come away with hope. I am pushing to the end of my seventh decade. So I think a lot these days about what is in place for the advance of God’s saving purposes on the earth in the decades to come. Reading these voices gives me hope that God is wonderfully at work to exalt his great name long after I am gone.
I commend this book to you and pray that the beauty of the vision, and the courage to speak it, will spread—for the supremacy of God in all things, for the joy of all peoples through Jesus Christ.
John Piper
Founder and Teacher
desiringGod.org
Introduction
How Does the Gospel Shape Manhood and Womanhood?
Owen Strachan
The lips of the young woman quivered. Tears rolled down her face. Her angry father stared at her. I thought you were the kind of girl who didn’t get into this sort of trouble,
he said. She looked back at him, confused and adrift: I guess I don’t really know what kind of girl I am.
This exchange came in Juno, a poignant film made a few years ago. It’s a quick scene, but it has stuck with me ever since. In this young woman’s reply, I heard the confusion of an entire generation. So many young men and young women don’t know who they are. They’ve never been taught what a man or a woman is. They may have seen terrible pain in their home, and they may have grown up without a father, or less commonly, without a mother. Or they might have had a father and a mother, but their home was compromised by sin in some way. The family didn’t eat together. The parents weren’t happy together. The children grew up without discipleship or investment.
This is 2015. Families are struggling. As one would expect, many young men and young women lack a road map—a script—for their lives. When you’re in this confusing and confused state, you don’t have answers to the most basic questions about your life. This is true of your fundamental identity, which includes your manhood or womanhood. What do I mean by this?
You Need to Know Who You Are
Many high schoolers, college students, and twentysomethings know they have a body (this is kind of obvious); further, they know they’re a boy or a girl, a man or a woman; and they know they want to follow Jesus. But they have little sense of how these realities intertwine. They don’t know what their gender, their sexuality, is for. So they’re tentative. They’re confused. Quietly, perhaps with some shame, they ask these kinds of questions in their own minds:
What is my purpose?
Why do I have this body?
What does it mean to be a man or a woman?
This book is intended to help you figure out who you were made to be. We want to give you an inspiring vision for your life as a young man or a young woman. We see that our society is training you to think wrongly about gender and sexuality. It’s telling you things like: there are no essential differences between men and women; you can change your gender if you want, and that’s totally fine; you can be attracted to whomever comes most naturally to you—boys can like boys, girls can like girls; and finally, there are no responsibilities or callings that come with being a man or a woman—you do whatever you like.
In this book, we’re going to show that these ideas are false and harmful. We’re going to offer true words and biblical counsel to you so you can know who you are and what you were created for. We will see that we are designed by God, and that his design brings us joy.
We’re not going to simply offer you Ten Tips to Be the Manly Man’s Man, the Manliest of Them All
or Five Ways to Make Doilies and Sing Nineteenth-Century Hymns at the Same Time.
We’re coming at all this from a fresh perspective. You can almost hear the can cracking open as you read these words. We want you to see that the gospel, the good news of Jesus’s saving death and life-giving resurrection, is the central fact, the most important part, of your life as a God-loving man or woman. The gospel saves us, remakes us, and helps us understand who we truly are and what we are called to be for God’s glory and our joy.
The gospel is what frees us from our sin. The gospel is what allows us to live to the full, our hearts soaring, our pulses pounding, our lives stretching before us, full of hope, full of meaning. With this in our minds, let’s now consider four ways that the gospel shapes us as men and women.
The Gospel Makes Sense of the Image of God
One of the foundational realities of human beings, men and women alike, is that we are made in the image of God. See Genesis 1:26–27, which reads:
Then God said, Let us make man in our image, after our likeness. And let them have dominion over the fish of the sea and over the birds of the heavens and over the livestock and over all the earth and over every creeping thing that creeps on the earth.
So God created man in his own image,
in the image of God he created him;
male and female he created them.
In other words, we’re created in a special way to display the full-orbed grandeur of our Creator. We do this by creating, by thinking, by taking dominion, and by enjoying relationships with one another.
But even this awe-inspiring theological truth can be a bit abstract, can’t it? What role, we might wonder, do our bodies have to play in being the image of God?
Before we’re converted, we understand that we are either male or female. That’s well and good. But it’s only when we’re saved by the grace of almighty God that we truly begin to grasp the meaning of our bodies, our sexuality. We are created as men or as women to inhabit our manhood and womanhood to the glory of our Maker. He did not make us all the same. He loves diversity. He revels in it. He created a world that pulses with difference, that explodes with color, that includes roaring waterfalls and self-inflating lizards and rapt, at-attention meerkats. But humankind, man and woman, is the pinnacle of his