Today's Scripture Reading (June 18, 2026): 2 Chronicles 34
English
Theologian, N.T. Wright argues that everything in the Bible is expressed in
terms of cooperative opposites. The idea is that from the very creation of the
universe, we see essential pairings of opposites. Day makes necessary night.
Water and dry land are mutually defining. In the mind of Wright, this is one
principle that argues against the idea of gay marriage. God's design from the
very beginning is that cooperative opposites are what is critical in any
endeavor. In the concept of marriage, those cooperative opposites must be "one
man and one woman," or what we have come to call traditional marriage.
I
am not convinced that Wright is correct in his argument about marriage. Even in
same-sex marriages, the participants are usually quite different. However, that
does not mean he is wrong about the importance of both men and women in the
world in which we live. Maybe one problem within contemporary feminism lies in
the concept of gender equality, which often argues that we can do the same
things. I believe strongly in a radical equality between the sexes, but that
does not mean that men and women are the same. We aren't. Men and women, even
outside the concept of marriage, present a necessary, complementary opposite in
life. Both men and women are required to accomplish societal goals that extend
beyond marriage and reproduction. Men and women approach problems differently.
One is not better than the other; they are just different. And the best
solution usually results when both are involved in the process.
The
Book of Kings offers us another example of cooperative opposites in the story
of the prophetess Huldah. Huldah is remembered as one of the seven prophetesses
of Judaism, alongside Sarah, Miriam, Deborah, Hannah, Abigail, and Esther. But
Huldah had a more famous male relative. His name was Jeremiah. According to
tradition, Huldah and Jeremiah were two sides of the same coin, or, as Wright
might put it, cooperative opposites. Jeremiah and Huldah performed very similar
functions in the religious life of the day. We know that Jeremiah, often nicknamed
"The Weeping Prophet," taught a message of repentance to Judah during
the last days of the nation. Jeremiah begged Judah to return to God. But it
seems that his ministry was mostly to the men of the city. Huldah set herself
to the same task with the women of the city, pleading that they would return to
God before it was too late.
Huldah
is also thought to have been an important public educator of her day. It might
be that the King's delegation went to Huldah, rather than to Jeremiah, because
they believed she might be more inclined to respond with compassion and
intercede before God for them, rather than with the condemnation they expected
from Jeremiah. And their decision to take this new document, likely the Book of
Deuteronomy, to Huldah made her the first person to declare a document scripture,
as she treated the newly found text as the authoritative word of
God.
Tomorrow's
Scripture Reading: Zephaniah 1
See
Also 2 Kings 22:14