To Christian Women Under 40:
We’re Sorry
It’s time for
women of faith to make amends.
for Her.menuetics
I’ve
watched one young woman after another pour out her heart, expressing deep
emotion about the messages they heard from other generations:
“You feel un-relatable to me and not transparent.”
“I feel like my mom is under a sworn oath to not
tell me everything.”
“I need more answers! Why keep things from me?”
“Your idea of a godly woman feels threatening to
me.”
“When you do talk to me about spiritual things, your
language is patronizing.”
“The sense I get from older women is they want to
fix in my life what was wrong in theirs.”
This
breakthrough came at a recent event called Shaping
Her Faith, part of my research on relationships
between Christian women. Women aged 22 to 77 talked openly about the
messages we send to one another and how they impact our spiritual lives.
I
suddenly knew I was witnessing something sacred. Their young, open voices
created a safe haven as we all leaned in, listening to what felt like a mystery
finally resolved.
I
watched the older generations receive the remarks from women in their 20s and
30s with grace and intentional thought; they each began to ask forgiveness of the younger women. Seasoned
women confessed to sometimes not listening, not being relatable, using
patronizing spiritual language, and trying to fix their own problems.
Beyond
the event, I heard about these women gathering together. One told me, “Pam, I
didn’t realize how quickly we could get down to the spiritual issues—they are
already there!”
In sociologist
Christian Smith’s book, Lost in Transition, Smith and his
collaborators investigated the difficulties young people face. The researchers
point out that it’s not just their problem but our problem—the struggles of emerging adults have much deeper roots
in mainstream American culture. Smith finds that much of our youth’s pain and
confusion lies with those who’ve gone before. So my message to Christian women
in their 20s and 30s: I’m sorry, too. It’s time to mend our generational wounds
and deepen our relationships as women of faith.
Part
of the solution, I believe is to stop blaming either generation. Instead I want
to call you to follow Smith’s simple advice to help avert the gap: Intentionally stay in relationship with mature
adults outside your age group.
In
our public conversation, one mature woman admitted she only met with younger
women if they contacted her. Even though older friends, relatives, and mentors
should initiate, when young women show a desire to sustain and strengthen a
relationship, both people benefit. Here’s how you—as women in your 20s and
30s—can help us make amends, to come together for the sake of the church and
God’s kingdom:
Give us a chance at
authenticity.
Older
women recognize that as young Christians, you desire authenticity. Sadly, we
need your help in honoring what that means to you. Ask us questions about our
past, probe into the durability of our faith, break beneath the surface of our
veneer so we don’t stay superficial with you. We long to tell the truth about
ourselves. Do you believe God can speak to you through us? That’s really the nagging question
mature women need answered.
Once
when I was speaking at a women’s conference, a woman in her early 20s
approached me and said, “I can’t believe how you are just yourself up there.” That
simple statement encouraged me, in mid-life with all its surprising
insecurities, to keep on doing the only thing I know how to do! See yourself
reaching across generational lines as bringing health to our nation. A strong
society is dependent upon numerous interpersonal relationships and deep feelings
of commitment.
Don’t worry about doing
things differently.
It’s
okay to remind us that we’re not
just like you. Christian Smith observes how American adults seem more
interested in projecting their hopes and ideals for what they think young
people today should be like than in
actually understanding what they are
like. At times, we look at young
women as if you are a “blank screen” onto which we project images of our own
desires.
For
example, younger women talk about being less tied to “seasons” of life—they
want it all at once. We need to talk openly about this concern without projecting
on you the way we lived our “seasons.” There’s nothing biblical about formulaic
answers to life. The wisdom you
can receive, however, from women who love Jesus through the years is worth more
than gold.
Reminding
us that we’re not like you is a humble way of seeing our relationship as a
benefit to society, the church, family, community, and the future. We can learn
from each other. Be confident about the differences that are not moral
absolutes. Let mature women know how much you love being busy and don’t feel
guilty about it. Create
extraordinary change by embracing better relationships with these resourceful
women—don’t be afraid to try.
Lead a grace-giving life.
I
was encouraged by the way we ended our conversation that day. In the end, we all agreed women must
give more and more grace to one another.
By
lowering our expectations, letting go of our agendas, and maybe even
disappointing someone—we create change by leading a “grace-giving” life. We’ve forgiven one another across the
generations, I believe now it’s time to give grace. And that’s not just your
call or their call but ours.