Relatable with Allie Beth Stuckey - Ep 1116 | Women Preachers, The Roots of Feminism, & Battling Eating Disorders | Guest: Lisa Bevere
Episode Date: December 23, 2024Today, we're sitting down with Lisa Bevere, NYT best-selling author and co-founder of Messenger International, to talk about the ways that feminism has fundamentally damaged the roles of men and wome...n in the culture. We discuss God's intention for men and women and how the disagreements between us stem from the Fall. Lisa tells us about how the Lord guided her in her marriage and how other women can listen to the Lord in the pursuit of a godly relationship with their spouse. Finally, we discuss the struggles women face with body image and how we can and should glorify God through our physical bodies. Buy Lisa Bevere's book, "The Fight for Female: Reclaiming Our Divine Identity": https://a.co/d/3Ud9vVg Buy Allie's new book, "Toxic Empathy: How Progressives Exploit Christian Compassion": https://a.co/d/4COtBxy --- Timecodes: (01:14) Lisa Bevere introduction (08:03) Feminist agenda (14:40) Building a godly marriage (28:37) Roles of male and female (37:04) How the Lord speaks to us (47:07) Body image --- Today's Sponsors: A’del — Try A'del's hand-crafted, artisan, small-batch cosmetics and use promo code ALLIE 25% off your first time purchase at AdelNaturalCosmetics.com Seven Weeks - Experience the best coffee while supporting the pro-life movement with Seven Weeks Coffee; use code ALLIE at https://www.sevenweekscoffee.com to save up to 25% and help save lives. Pre-Born — Will you help rescue babies' lives? Donate by calling #250 & say keyword 'BABY' or go to Preborn.com/ALLIE. Good Ranchers — Go to GoodRanchers.com and use code ALLIE at checkout to claim your free gift and get $25 off your order. EveryLife — The only premium baby brand that is unapologetically pro-life. EveryLife offers high-performing, supremely soft diapers and wipes that protect and celebrate every precious life. Head to EveryLife.com and use promo code ALLIE10 to get 10% of your first order today! --- Related Episodes: Ep 1097 | ‘4B’ Movement: Anti-Trump Women Are Boycotting Men https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/ep-1097-4b-movement-anti-trump-women-are-boycotting-men/id1359249098?i=1000676130477 --- Buy Allie's book, You're Not Enough (& That's Okay): Escaping the Toxic Culture of Self-Love: https://alliebethstuckey.com/book Relatable merchandise – use promo code 'ALLIE10' for a discount: https://shop.blazemedia.com/collections/allie-stuckey
Transcript
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Lisa Bevere is a speaker and a New York Times bestselling author, her most recent book,
Fight for Female, reclaiming our divine identity, is a bold and a thorough look at the history of feminism,
how we got where we did with gender ideology, and why it is so important for us as women
to understand both who we are and whose we are. Lisa and I come from different.
at theological camps, we will talk about some of our disagreements when it comes to women
preaching in church. But I am so grateful for Lisa and her very unique courage when it comes
to this issue that unfortunately many in the church consider too controversial to touch.
You will love this episode. We talk about so much and she is so encouraging. It's brought to you
by our friends at Good Ranchers.
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Use Code Alley at checkout.
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Lisa, thanks so much for taking the time to join me.
I mostly want to talk to you about your newest book.
You are one of the few Christian female teachers I know who will just be outspoken
about gender ideology and the reality of male and female, which is sad.
So tell me a little bit about it just up front, like what this is.
book is why you wrote it. Yeah, well, it's called the fight for female and reclaiming our divine
identity. And I'm not saying we're goddesses. I'm saying we're created in God's image.
And when God creates us, he creates us male and female to reflect him. And so when you start
to actually mess with male and mess with female, you're undermining the image of God. And you
you and I both, we've talked about this. There's certain things we can be like, okay, I can be
quiet on that. The sanctity of life and the image of God is not, there's not things I can be
quiet about. And I started to just read these different things of what is happening. And I thought,
what is going on? And why? If I said anything, Ali, Christian women got mad at me. If I just even
said something about men don't belong in women's sports, people would just react and say,
It's on Instagram mostly.
Well, yeah, that's about the only one I know how to access my Facebook.
I don't even have the passwords for it.
Me too.
But people are like, this is so mean.
You know, I'm okay with this.
And I'm like, no, what is going on?
And why are women not using their voice to fight for their daughters?
And I started to do a deep dive into, wait, where's the feminist?
All these advocates for women being willing to say that.
men can be women? What is going on? And Ali, the deeper I went into it, the darker it became.
And I was like, I, you know what? I'm 64. If everybody gets mad at me and cancels me, that's fine.
So I was just like, I don't even care. A few years ago, you posted the picture of your t-shirt.
It said the future is male and female, which shouldn't be remotely controversial, but it was
considered controversial. Yeah. So I, yeah, I was in Franklin, Tennessee, which is a little Christian
bubble and I went out to this place with a t-shirt on and the men were like thank you thank you for
including us in the future I'm like I got you and then I had women like I think I need that t-shirt so
Ali I actually thought everybody liked it yeah take a selfie with it 922 comments within the first 24
hours people you saw people are like you are co-signing with patriarchy this is coding like all lives
matter you are a transphobe a homophobic a bigot you're a demon of hate I mean people
people just went crazy on this concept of the future is male and female.
And what I had put underneath it was the future is male and female because without male
and female there is no future.
That's not even deep.
That's your parents.
I was like, this is biology.
And I remember, I was like, what just happened?
So I type into my laptop, what is the origin of the quote, the future is female?
And I was shocked.
A Washington Post article comes up
and it was from a lesbian separatist group in 1975 called Labris.
I was like, what is Labris?
Well, Labris is the two-headed acts
carried by Amazon's and the Greek and Roman goddesses.
And they said the future as female
was a call to war, an invocation, and a spell to cast.
Wow.
I'm like, well, this is crazy.
And it had been brought back into popularity during Hillary's campaign.
Right.
And how does this, that idea, that ideology connect to, ironically, like the erasure of women?
Because it does seem like there are many feminists, some white feminists who don't,
but many feminists who are completely on board with boys and girls' sports, men and girls' restrooms,
How do those things tie together?
Well, I, you know, and again, going to the deep dive into feminism,
I found out that it really isn't so much rooted in the empowerment of women as it is
and a Marxist agenda to dismantle family.
And so anything that's going to dismantle family, they're going to support.
Like, I always thought, okay, you know, feminism started really sweet.
And then it went sideways.
No.
That's not the true narrative.
No, it is not the true. I wanted it to be the true narrative. It was not. I discovered that the mother
of feminist thought was a woman named Mary Wollsencraft, and she died in childbirth with Mary Shelley.
Who wrote Frankenstein? Who was married to Percy, Shelly? Who believed that the serpent was the
wise counselor and God was prohibitive? And it just kept going from there. And it was always about
a self-will, self-ruled, you know, women instead of men or women independent of men. And it's very
anti-godwoven. Like, you and I believe in women who are strong and women who have a voice,
but you and I do not believe in women using their voice to undermine or undercut men. And that
whole idea of feminism started to say to women, if you want to be powerful, act like a man.
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don't know what you just said about first wave feminism, second way feminism, third way
feminism, how they're connected to gender ideology today because I've heard that over and over again,
that really feminism in its foundations is good. I've even heard some people try to say, well,
you know, Jesus was a feminist in some ways. So tell us how. Jesus was pro-female. Yes. You can be
pro-female. Yeah. That's what I was going to ask you. Draw the distinction. Draw the distinction there.
Yeah. So, I mean, you and are pro-female. Yeah. But the feminist agenda is very,
very much a push to go into the man's world and beat him. It actually is really interesting to me
because the more you actually, even what I was reading about Labras, these are lesbian separatists
who look like men. I'm like, if you hate men, what are you trying to look like? It didn't even
make sense. But I have listened to so much of the anger in the feminism and it's like,
go into the man's world, beat him at what he's is game, behave sexually like him.
divorce, I can't, you know, whatever that is. And what I have learned is that I believe feminists are very
anti-female because they tell women if they want to be powerful, they need to act like men.
Instead of saying, there is something beautiful and powerful about acting like a woman. And so being
pro-female is not necessarily equated with being pro-feminist. If anything, I feel like feminists are
anti-female and anti-male.
I mean, we're watching the lovely 4-B movement.
Right.
I'm expression right now.
I got in a little bit of trouble.
I only put it on my story, but I was like, hey, I just want to thank you,
4B women, for your sacrifice.
Because of you, there's going to be less as to the eyes.
Because of you, there's going to be less unprime pregnancies.
Thank you.
Thank you.
I mean, it's just crazy.
Yeah.
And for those who don't know, the 4B movement, we
did an episode on it. And it stands for the Korean word for noes that start with a B or the four
knows. It started in South Korea. It's kind of moved elsewhere. It's very small in South Korea,
but it's kind of become more pervasive because of social media here today. And these women who are
shaving their heads, they're warding off men. They're saying no sex, no men, you know,
no reproduction, obviously, and all of that. No marriage. Yeah. In response to Trump's election,
saying basically the patriarchy got us here.
And so we are repudiating any connection with men.
Okay, does this all go back to the curse after the fall
and the curse in which God said,
look, you're going to struggle for the usurpation
of your husband's authority?
Does all of this enmity that we see between man and women
and even the disagreement about what a woman is?
Does it go back to that?
I absolutely believe it does.
You know, when we see the fall of mankind in the garden,
what you see for the very first time is you see order turn into disorder,
multiplication turn into division.
You see all of a sudden a breach between the husband and the wife,
between parents and children, brother to brother.
I think all of the things that we see now that are broken in our world started
with the fall. But here's the thing I love, Allie. It says that Jesus came to seek and save
that which was lost. So I believe that when we follow Jesus, he creates a pathway where we do not
fight for the position with our husband, but that we fight to be one with our husbands. That submission
means that we are under assignment with our husbands. You know, we're not, as a woman, we're not
under every man. Submission means that I'm under my husband because together we are building a marriage,
we're building a family. We work together in a ministry, so we're building a ministry together.
He's ultimately the leader, but a leader is somebody who actually exercises something called
dominion. I feel like under the fall we had domination, but dominion says, I'm going to use my authority
on behalf of those under my care.
Whereas, you know, and then I get it, the patriarchy, they're like, patriarchy,
patriotic.
You know, I get really nervous when I hear Christian women denouncing the word patriarchy.
I feel like they have forgotten.
He's the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.
That is a patriarchal line.
It doesn't mean that God doesn't honor and value matriarchal, but God is a father.
And so when we start to say, oh, no, he might be female and it could be this.
And we are really skating on thin ice.
And just too many people are running very loose with what God has created.
And again, we look in Ephesians and Phoecians says, okay, so there's not going to be a struggle if husbands love their wife as Christ loves the church.
And the wife honors and respects and obeys her husband.
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i know this is a little maybe of an aside from the topic of your book but it's on what we're
talking about i saw a post that you put on instagram a few months ago where you were talking about
the struggle that you had the power struggle at the beginning of your marriage yes where you were in
charge you were leading and you felt like honestly i can do it better but there was also this tension
inside of you that knew this is not how my marriage is supposed to be. Can you talk about that?
Yes. I was very young. I had just had my first baby. I'm working full time. My husband's working
part-time. And I wanted to do everything perfectly. So I am breastfeeding at home. Then I'm pumping my
breasts at work. And then I'm nursing my baby at my lunch hour. And then I'm making organic food.
And I would ask my husband, just drop the baby off at this time. Couldn't do it. Take out the
garbage. He would forget to do it. I was so stressed out.
Ali, I would get in my bathtub and I would submerge myself where only my nose was above the water.
And John would come in, I'm like, what are you doing? And I'm like, I'm trying to relax.
And he'd say, maybe you just need to break. I'd be like, you better hope I don't break because I am holding all of this together.
And he said, why don't you give it to God? I said, I don't want to give it to God. I want to give it to you.
And you are not carrying it right. So I keep taking it back. So I'm like, okay, the bass aren't working.
So I get in the shower and I'm trying to relax. I'm like, relax, relax.
And, Allie, I had not sense the spirit of God.
I had not, like, I could read the Bible, but it was like I was reading it,
and it just wasn't even going into my head.
I don't know if you've ever been in that season where you're just so you and so not yielded.
So I'm in the shower.
I'm like, God, I'm just so stressed.
And I heard, I heard.
And I, you know, I don't know how people feel about this, but it was a moment.
I heard the question, you don't think John's a good head of the household.
to you. And I thought, I know he's not. You think you can do it better? I thought, I know I can do it better.
He said, it's a yoke to you, Lisa. But it's a mantle to John. Throw it off your shoulders.
And I thought, if I throw it off my shoulders, nothing is ever going to get done. And all of a sudden, Allie, all the times that I had been disrespectful and dishonoring. And I would even say emasculating.
of my husband came back into my mind.
And what I thought was so funny in the moment was heartbreaking.
And I started crying in the shower.
And I thought, no wonder why we don't feel close anymore.
No wonder why when we praying together, I'm thinking,
why is he holding my hand so tight?
Like, why does he ever pray about the?
I was even critical when he was praying.
So I come out.
I'm like, John, I am so sorry.
I will quit my job tomorrow.
I just want to be one.
And I remember John said, Lisa, you don't have to quit your job,
but I do think you need to quit thinking you're the source.
And he said, you can work full time and know God is your source and you'll be a peace.
Or you can be a stay-home mom and think you're the source and you won't.
And, Ali, I discovered in that moment that all my husband had ever known.
Well, and I'm just going to preface this, he was the only son of an Italian mother.
and he had five sisters.
So it was like, my son, my son, she did everything for him.
And so all he'd ever know was a mother.
And I treated him like he was a child.
And so I had to step back.
And I had to say, instead of using my strengths to say, look how smart I am,
I'm going to actually speak to the man that I want to see.
And I remember he would say, what do you think we should do?
I'd be like, you'll do the right thing.
And in my head I was like, he's not going to do the right thing.
You better tell him.
But I had to rebuild a confidence that I had in him.
And when I was like, God, I don't know if I trust John because you don't have to trust John.
You have to trust me.
And that's the beautiful thing.
When we are rightly positioned with God, God watches over us.
I think it's pretty amazing that God says, if you do not treat your wife,
right, God won't hear your prayers. I mean, that's what he said, your joint heirs in Christ. So God
watches over not just his sons, but also his daughters. And I watched my whole marriage change
and I watched my husband go from being a boy to a man when I stopped being his mother and I
started to be his wife. So did that look like practically holding your tongue when you wanted to
criticize letting go of some expectations you had? Because I imagine that his big,
behavior didn't necessarily change overnight. Maybe he still wasn't dropping off the baby at the right
time. Maybe he still wasn't taking out the trash the way that you wanted him to. But I'm guessing
the dynamics still changed because of the choices that you were making. Well, he always, this is what
used to say. He said, I feel like I used to supernaturally forget to take out the trash.
And he said, as soon as you did that, I started remember, because I remember, we had a baby and we
didn't even have a washer and a dryer. So I'm working full time. I'm going down to the laundry mat in our
apartment complex. And I remember I came home from work and John again was working part-time.
I have a baby. And John's like, hey, can you get something out of the filing cabinet?
I thought, I just walked in. Are you serious? And so, you know, the old me would have said,
you get it. You've been sitting home. But I just felt shh. Yeah. And I opened up the louvered
doors to where we'd kept our filing cabinet. And he'd gone out and bought a washer and dryer.
And it was like he, all of a sudden, his heart turned to me.
when I turned back to him. And I know that, you know, I have a husband who loves God.
And I know that, you know, there's women out there that have a very different situation.
But, Ali, it shifted everything for me. And I had parents that were married, divorced,
remarried each other, divorced again. I did not know how to love well. And I feel like there's
an entire generation of young women who have been sent the message,
submission is a dormat. Submission means that you'll be dominated.
the patriarch is going to stomp you into the ground submission.
But here's the thing.
I submit to Jesus.
And he doesn't stop me into the ground.
Jesus actually speaks his life and his fulfillment into me.
He loves me into a place of wholeness.
I love how the message, some people call a prayer phrase, some call it translation,
but it talks about how the husband is to love the wife.
It says he washes her with the water of the word to,
her beauty. And I feel like that is such a beautiful picture of what Jesus does for us and what
my husband does for me. And I've met your husband. He's precious and now he's got all these girls
to take care of. But yeah, no, I feel like there's been a whole breakdown of, you know, well,
we're equal. Yeah, we're equal. We're equal in value. But that doesn't mean that our roles are exactly
the same. Speak to that woman who isn't married to a Christian man. Because they might be thinking,
okay, yeah, maybe you didn't have the perfect husband, but he still loved you and loved God.
Maybe they're married to someone, whether he professes to be a Christian or not, who does believe that
headship and leadership means micromanaging, means demeaning, you know, doesn't actually mean
service as we read in Ephesians 5, but he thinks that it means, you know,
tearing someone down. What does it look like for her? Well, first of all, I mean, I think she has
every right to go to him and say, I love you, and I want to be the best wife for you. But this is what
it feels like when you say and you do those kind of things. And I want to know how we can move
beyond that. You know, we just did, we just did a marriage retreat. And last night I got a text
from one of the couples, and they're pastors. And John and I said, often when a couple has gone
through things like what you're describing with his wife, you close your spirit off to the person.
You just build these walls. And slowly and surely, you wall them out. And we just had people pray
that God, if there's anything, I've closed off my spirit to my husband or to my wife,
you know, can you open that heart back up? Can you bring love back? But what I had to do, and again,
my husband was godly, but that doesn't mean he always had his priorities right. And John used to
travel a ton, and sometimes, Ali, he'd only be home three days a month. And I remember when he would
come home, we got him at his worst. He was tired. It was basically a laundry drop off and then he left
again. And my teenage son was like, Mom, dad's never here. He's never, I need someone to talk to.
And I was like, wow. And so I tried to say something to John and John was like, well, I just felt
like pressure to him. So I remember I called one of my board members and I said, I don't, he's not
wrong that he wants this. I don't know what to do. And he asked me,
This board member was so wise.
He's probably 75 now, and he said, does Addison want to get married one day?
And I thought, he's 14.
Like, what kind of question is that?
I said, yeah, I think he does.
And he said, tell him he's going to be processing his whole life with a woman.
And he can start now with you.
And it was like instead of my son seeing it as a loss.
But I remember, I was angry with my husband.
And I was coming to God and me like, I am so frustrated.
never here. My boys need him. Doesn't help with this. And all I heard back when I was praying was,
tell me I'm enough for you, Lisa. It's like, wait, I don't want to tell you you're enough for me because
I know what happens. That means John's not changing. So I just wouldn't say it, Allie. It was like,
no, Lord, please tell me he's going to change. Please tell me he's going to turn his heart more to his
kids. Please, he's going to turn his heart more towards me. It won't be all about ministry.
God, please tell me, just kept hearing, tell me I'm enough for you. And so I started to surrender and
say, God, you are more than enough for me. And that woman at home who feels this void with her husband,
who does not know how to love her well, she can have that same prayer. And she can say, Jesus,
you're enough for me. And I know it's a scary thing to pray, but there's something that happens in
your heart where you're not living in a, in a like famine, but you're living in an overflow of God's love
and his presence.
And in that place, you're going to find out that even though you're not being poured into
by your husband, you have more to pour out.
Did John end up changing?
Yes, he did.
But it, I mean, here's the thing.
I don't know if this is different in your house.
I can ask, I can ask John, I can tell God, hey, I need John to do this.
And the only person God talks to me about is me.
He's like, Baba, you do that.
Yeah, he did.
He did.
And my heart was ready.
I mean, he came home from a trip.
And he just said, I have been so selfish.
I have had the wrong, everything I would have hoped that he would hear from me,
he heard from God.
Yeah.
And he said, I'm so thankful for you.
I'm so thankful for the boys.
And, you know, Allie, I don't know if you know this.
My oldest son, my youngest son, and six of my grandkids live 30 seconds from me.
And we work with our oldest son and our youngest son.
And so I feel like we lost some time there, but God has given us length of days with our children.
That's really beautiful.
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When it comes to the roles of male and female in marriage, you've laid out really beautifully what I think you would describe as complementarianism.
Like, it's, I mean, I'm kind of like, I don't, I don't buy into egalitarian all the way.
Right.
I kind of sometimes feel like a complementarian and an egalitarian got married and had a baby.
But I don't know what that title would be.
But yes, I would say roles in a marriage for sure, complementarian.
Yes.
and in church we've talked about this privately, how we probably land in different places,
although we agree on the principle of the authority of scripture, the difference between male and female,
and the different roles within the church of male and female.
I think we actually agree on that.
But there will be some people I've got, you know, a big conservative reformed crowd who will say,
what, she is a charismatic, false teacher, preachers to admit.
There may be some people who say false teacher, maybe they, because we talked about this.
I haven't seen this, but you said that some people have called you prosperity gospel.
Which is shocking.
Yes.
And we can talk about all of those different things, just in case there's someone out there who's like, wait, I might have heard that, but I don't really know.
But let's start with, since we're talking about the roles of male and female, what you believe the roles of male and female are when it comes to the church, when it comes to preaching.
Yeah, I feel like it, I feel like the household of the church is reflect.
I feel like it reflects.
So I feel like the senior pastor,
I'm the most comfortable with senior pastors being men.
And I don't believe that women have no voice,
but I believe they have the voice of a mother in the church.
And so I am not a pastor.
I do not lead a church.
If I get invited to speak at a church,
I don't see that as exercising authority
because I'm not doing church discipline.
I'm not appointing elders.
I'm serving. And I'm under the authority of the pastor who asked me to come and maybe speak on marriage or speak on gender identity or, you know, and so I'm not there going, listen, I'm the boss of your world right now. So it's different. And I guess that to me there's a big difference between preaching and pastoring. So there's a difference between fivefold ministry and ministering as a believer and making disciples.
sharing what God has done in your life.
And so that's where I've landed.
So, but I know that reform was a lot more hardline on those things.
Mm-hmm.
I'd say so.
And I'm not, I respect that.
I don't think it's an issue of salvation.
Yeah.
I would not say it's an issue of salvation either.
We did talk about this.
I think when we were at dinner.
Yeah.
When you look at 1 Timothy 2.12,
I do not permit a woman to teach or to exercise authority over a man.
rather she is to remain quiet.
Obviously, this is in context of the local church.
What do you, what do you take that to me?
Well, it's interesting.
How did that start?
I do not permit a woman.
So he doesn't say God does not permit.
Paul said, I do not.
And it's interesting to me, I think he was very focused on not just that moment.
He was like, here's the culture.
And the women are uneducated.
They were not trained.
And he's like, I do not.
permit this. And, you know, there's the Greek culture, there's the Roman culture, and again,
teaching and talking, like, if we're going to be legalistic about it, women need to stop talking
the second the enter of the building. Like, they need to be passing notes. If they have to remain
silent in the church. So it's, to me, the pulpit didn't even start till a thousand years ago.
So Paul, it was a very different situation. But again, you know, Allie, I respect other people's
sensitivity to the things of the spirit. You know, the first time I ever did a Sunday morning service,
I was a nervous wreck. I was sweating. I was like, am I sinning? Am I sitting? I don't want to sin.
I want to honor God with all of my heart. And I had to really wrestle with that because I always just
said no. I would say, no, no, no, no. Thank you for asking me, but I'm going to take my own kids to
church on Sunday morning. My husband's not there to take them. So, you know, everybody needs to
find out. But I also feel like we're at an Acts
217 moment. In the last days, God says, I'll part my spirit
on all flesh and your sons and your daughters will
prophesy. And not, I don't believe prophesy is like
get up and you know, you're going to have a boat or whatever. I believe it's
to speak under divine inspiration. And and so I believe in the last
days, we look at, it looks a little different than it does in the first days.
And just to clarify where I stand, because there might not, there might be
people who don't know. One, of course, I consider Lisa a sister in Christ, and I wouldn't have her
on if I didn't believe in her wisdom and appreciate her so much. I do not read the scripture
as permitting a woman to preach before men in church. Now, there are people who would expand
that even more who would say that I should not even have this podcast because it is preaching.
And I've seen you speaking to mixed audiences. Yes. And so, but that's what I would say.
I would say that it is not just an individual preference from Paul because it is in the word of God.
And so I wouldn't see the use of the pronoun I as discounting this as God's authority.
But I certainly don't see it as a salvation issue.
But I have talked about this before.
I don't believe in women preaching.
Even if I do really agree with and appreciate the content of what is being said.
And so, Art, do you consider yourself charismatic?
Yeah, so here's the thing.
John and are both born again Catholics.
We both got born again through Campus Crusade.
And I just never heard the gospel, Allie.
And so...
Former Catholics, you don't consider yourself.
No, former Catholics.
Well, like former Catholics, yes.
So we were both practicing Catholics.
John practicing me just going to confession before I got on airplanes, basically.
So I had never heard the gospel, got born again through...
Campus Crusade. And then, yes, we believe in the infilling of the Holy Spirit, but we believe that
anybody that is born again is filled with the spirit. Now, it's interesting, we are too evangelical
for the Pentecostal world, which would be kind of the charismatic Pentecostal world over here.
And what makes you too evangelical for the Pentecostal world? Because we're very much about
scripture and not about experientials. So there's there's kind of that like John has a tendency to preach on
the fear of the Lord. He has a tendency to preach on forgiveness. He has a tendency to preach I would say
the hard truth. And so there's, they'll kind of think, oh, you guys are legalistic. So they'll say we're too
legalistic. And then you come over here to reform and they'll say we're, no, you guys are too
cares not. Yes. So I, you know, I've always.
always preferred to be nondonominational or say I'm spirit filled, but that's, I see you as
spiritfilled, you know, so I don't feel like whether you speak in tongues or not should be
divisive. Yeah. There's a little bit of a difference in language and maybe even agreement too
when it comes to how the Lord speaks to us. Now, I would not say, oh, I heard the Lord say or I heard the Lord
audibly because there's just such an emphasis on scripture. But that's not to say that I don't
believe that the Lord can convict someone a certain way that they don't explicitly read those words
in the Bible, as long as it is in agreement with scripture. And I have heard you say,
and many of my Christian friends say, I heard God say this to me. Yeah. And I just said that about,
you know, you don't think John's a good head of the household. So I would actually love you to tell me,
how do I position that where it's non-offensive?
Oh, I don't think that you should worry about that.
I wouldn't worry about positioning it in a way that is not necessarily,
that is not offensive.
I think that I do always, I'm always going to be a little bit.
If someone says, God told me, I'm going to, like my ears are going to perk up.
That's pulling the God car.
Yes.
And I'm not saying that this was you, but my ears are always going to perk up to make sure that
whatever that person says God told them is incomplete alignment with scripture because obviously
if God says, well, God told me to sleep with my boyfriend or God told me that it was okay for me to do
this even though his Bible says otherwise, then obviously that's going to be a problem.
And so, yeah, there is a difference there.
But I've had a lot of charismatic on that have talked about different things like speaking in tongues
and deliverance.
And I was raised Southern Baptist, not charismatic at all.
It was like a big deal if I saw someone raised their hands.
hand in church to worship. My mom would do that. I'd be like, mom, get your hand down. What are you doing?
So, like, very different backgrounds. But I, charismatic and I would say reformed people, we do agree on,
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I was a one criticism that reformed has is that charismatic people are more health and wealth.
And you are very surprised that people have labeled you as that.
Yeah, I think they just put you over there whether you ever heard you say anything that said that.
Matter of fact, and again, going back to like, how do you get in trying?
I, you know, when the whole craziness that we talked about, the tragic baby dying, I had said,
hey, God is always a healer, but you don't get to tell them how. And they said sometimes,
well, you're talking about, in case people don't know, Bethel, Olive, we talked about that few years
ago, like probably five years ago. It was, it was that long? Wow. I knew it was like during 2020.
Oh, okay, maybe it was last. Well, 2020 is almost five years ago, which is crazy.
Which is, but I remember I said he can heal through doctors. He can heal through lifestyle changes. He can heal through natural stuff. And he can heal by taking his home. And people were furious at me. And I said, do you think that when we go to heaven, that is the first time we're completely whole? And so they're like, no, he always heals supernaturally. And I'm like, no, he doesn't always heal supernaturally. But he can.
But, and that's, I think, where, like, John and I would be considered, oh, no, you guys aren't.
And I've, and I've had pretty strong conversations with what I would call extra biblical people.
I'd tell you, guys, you're adding, you're not, I don't believe they're evil, Allie, but I believe they can add.
And so, John and I, if it is not in agreement with the Word of God or the Spirit of the Word of God, because, you know, there's sometimes there's things like, you know, you can't find in the Bible a certain things.
but you can find the spirit of that.
And so, and even when I said about Paul saying, I, you know, Paul was like, don't get married.
You know, I Paul said, don't get married.
So, like, I'm just saying there's things that sometimes you say, now, was this God talking or
him saying, I'm very concerned that women are going to be arrested and beaten or they don't
know what they're talking about or they're bringing in crazy Greek goddess things into mixing it
into the gospel.
Like, we don't think we, and again, I, I am with you on, I have seen all sorts of abuse
and misuse of scripture and experience.
I've been in meetings where there's not even been one single scripture shared and it was
all an experience.
I'm like, what just happened here?
And the scripture that talks about, you know, Eve was deceived first and then Adam.
Like some of the prohibition against women exercising authority, being in that position of shepherd of a flock in a church has to do with what we see in creation, what we see through the fall.
Paul goes all the way back there.
How do you see that reality manifesting itself today that it does seem like women, in some ways at least, are more susceptible to this kind of deception, even the deception of gender ideology?
Well, it even says that these are the foolish, the women that are taken captive.
Yeah.
I mean, like I rude about that.
I mean, I am with you, first of all, if we are not in the Word of God, we're going to all be subject to deception, male or female.
Yes.
We have to know the Word.
And so many Christians have gotten so lazy with reading the Word.
They read Post.
They do not read the Word.
And you and I know that you need to read the Word.
the Word of God and it rightly divides. It comes in and it separates soul from, you know,
thought and intent, joint and marrow. It comes in and it rightly divides. And we live in a time period
where there's a lot of things that sound right, but feel wrong. And the Word of God comes in and
tells you, oh, Ali, why you're uncomfortable with that is because of this. And you heard, like,
you know, we've seen this. And so if women are led by their emotions,
then they are going to be taken captive.
But if women are led by the Holy Spirit,
and to me there's this beautiful thing here
where you see, yes, Eve was deceived,
but Adam knew what he was doing.
And so he willingly, he willingly did that.
But then we see in the New Testament
that God overshadows an old woman, Elizabeth, and Mary.
And he brings this promise.
And you see this older woman and this younger woman,
and they're just prophesying to one another about Jesus, about Emmanuel, about the prophet, John the Baptist, and about the promise coming.
And there's this beautiful symphony of God's redemption on godly women.
And so I feel like God is like, hey, I'm bringing back what was lost in the garden.
And it's not that, you know, he's like, oh, we don't need male or female.
But I do feel if women can be led just by their feelings.
I also will say this is funny.
So I'm 64, but I went through menopause when I was probably 57.
And I'm going to tell you, when you were going through menopause,
there is a crazy person in your head saying things like,
you need to start yelling on this airplane right now and time to get the jet bridge out.
You need to punch your husband in the face.
And I'm like, oh, no, no, no, no, crazy woman.
You may not talk.
So it's even worse than like PMS or like when you're a teenager.
It's like PMS for two years straight.
Okay.
Oh my gosh.
So I had to read the word.
Like I had to be like you crazy woman.
I shut you down.
I will read the word of God and I cannot react emotionally.
I need to be, I need to have the guardrails of God's word and the Holy Spirit.
That's really good.
I even notice in myself when I go a period of time without reading the Bible.
as much that I find myself more susceptible to lies, not only personal lies, of course,
like my own personal temptation towards like anger or jealousy or bitterness or prior or whatever
it is, but even like worldly lies that I should definitely know better. I'm like,
is that that big of a deal? Does that really matter? And then I kind of have to realize,
oh, it's because I have been slacking in this area. It's not like you lose the Holy Spirit or
anything. But you do lose your edge. Yeah. Well, your mind is no longer, it's not being renewed day by day
by the word of God. And whatever fills you controls you. And so if you're filling your mind with
garbage, you're going to be controlled by garbage. And it's going to be harder to discern. And that's
absolutely true. They got used to being entertained during COVID. We only have a few more minutes. And
one thing I wanted to make sure that we talked about and you've talked about before is body,
image and your dad and your relationship with your body and how your dad affected that growing up
because that that does have to do with everything we're talking about with being a woman and
either embracing or repudiating our identity, all of that. So talk to me about that. So I was 15 years
of age and I swam competitively from the time I was 5 to 18, but I tore my Achilles tendon. I had to
sit down, sit out one year and I ate like I was in training. And I guess I chubbed up and didn't even know
I was just kind of like, oh.
So I came in from school one day.
My mom and my brother were out and my big gruff Sicilian dad sitting there in a chair smoking a cigarette behind his newspaper.
And he said, come here.
I'm like, oh gosh, I'm in trouble.
I just always was scared of him.
And he's like, turn around, turn around.
And I turn around.
He's like, oh, my gosh, your butt is huge.
How much do you weigh?
And I was like, I said, well, at camp I wait.
And I told him what I had weighed at camp.
that summer you're not at camp anymore. Go back and weigh yourself right now. And so I was like,
I can weigh myself? Like, I didn't even know that was a thing. And so I walked the hall of shame
back to my parents' bathroom and I climbed up on the scales. And Ali, I was probably like five,
two. And I was 20 pounds heavier than I am now. And so I came back and I told my dad what I weighed
and he just sat me down and he said, you're fat. No boys are going to ever like you. You're not going to
have a date, you need to take care of this. And I was like, yes, sir. And I just walked back into my
bedroom. And I remember I pulled on my blinds. I climbed up on the bed. I stripped off all my
clothes, stood in my bra and my underwear. And I didn't have like a full-length mirror. So all I could
see was like a headless reflection on myself. And I hated my body. It was for the first time
I thought, that is my enemy. That needs to be.
be punished. That needs to be shamed. That needs to be taken care of. And so that night,
immediately started cutting back on food, started running in the snowdrifts in Indiana in my swim
team sweats, trying to lose the weight. And as soon as I lost weight, I started to get
positive affirmation. Like my dad was like, good. I'm glad you're losing weight.
Boys started paying attention. I started, people started to say, oh, you look good. Did you lose weight?
15, I started to think, oh, if I'm thin, I deserve love. If I'm thin, I'm successful. If I'm
thin, I'm in control of my life. So what started at 15, though, started to accelerate? Because I was living in
Indiana, and there's the corn-fed heifer thin, and then I went out to the University of Arizona. And
University of Arizona has California girls. And so now all of a sudden, I was like, I'm not thin anymore.
And in my sorority, we all just would start to throw up after we ate, take diuretics, take laxatives.
And I watched myself become captive to my own body.
And I know now looking back at 15, when my father said those things to me, it was like my soul and my body split.
Now, that was one voice, Allie.
I didn't have social media coming after me.
I've had beautiful granddaughter.
I don't want her to live with the constant comparison of social media that is always saying
you're not thin enough, smart enough, pretty enough, filtered enough, whatever that not enough is.
And I love that you're like, you're not enough.
That's okay.
I mean, because God is more than enough, you know.
But so, yeah, so that became this thing.
And then I was hospitalized because I had just so abused my body.
And then I met Jesus.
And I met Jesus.
And I was like, I probably need to stop getting drunk.
So I transferred all my excessive drinking into excessive eating.
And I went back into overweight.
And I got engaged.
My body, I think it was like a size 10 wedding gown in the hope that I could get down into it.
And I went in to get the slip.
And they couldn't even zip the dress shut.
And I came home and I remember I was like mad.
Like I become a Christian and now I'm fat.
Like I had done God some big favor.
And I sensed.
And this is so crazy because I had never heard any of this terminology.
And I had only been saved a year.
I sense the spirit saying your weight and food is an idol to you.
It's what you draw your strength from.
and it's what you give your strength to.
And he said,
I want you to go on a three-day fast.
He said, I want you to stop dining.
So wait, you just said to diet.
And he's like, no, no.
A diet changes the way you look,
but a fast change is the way you see.
And he said, you need to find out,
I am your source.
Not the refrigerator, not food, nothing.
But you, when you're sad or happy,
you come to me instead of,
to that. And I remember, I said, I don't even know what's a healthy weight anymore. I was 5-7 at the time,
and I wanted to weigh 103 when I was at my worst. And then I now, you know, I can't remember
what I weighed at that time. And I remember, I've sensed that God is the one who made me,
not shape, not vogue, not glamour. And I was like, God, what do you want me to weigh?
What do you? I don't know how to be healthy anymore. And I wrote a number on a little
piece of paper and I put it in my Bible. And then I just walked and worshipped and I stopped being
abusive to my body. Stop, stop being angry at my body. Starting thanking God for my body. You know,
Romans 12, 1 and 2 says, present your body a living sacrifice holy and acceptable to God.
It's really hard to present something to God if you think it's wholly unacceptable. If you think
it's less than. And we worship God. It's how we worship God with our body. I was bought with a price.
My life is not my own. My body is not my own. It says glorify God with your body. It's really hard to
glorify God with something you hate. And so I just walk and thank God for my body. And at first,
it felt really stupid. Like, thank God for my body. Make it thin. I was like, no, God, you wove me
in my mother's womb, fearfully and wonderfully.
First inside, then out, you created me to be a woman.
I am thankful that I am a woman.
And I just watched God heal me.
It was a very short time period.
And he just said, you know, I was reading my Bible, and I realized, oh, Sarah wasn't beautiful
because she ran aerobics in the desert.
I said because she refused to give way to fear.
And when we yield to fear as women, our whole body.
metabolism changes. And when we thank God and when we honor God and when we eat until we're satisfied
and not until we're in pain and when we say, why am I eating? Am I hungry? Am I bored? Am I angry? Am I
hurting? But when we can take those things to God, it just rebalanced everything.
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everylife.com code Alley 10. And this really does go with also the theme of your book. I know that's
not what your book is about, but you've said, oh, I have a whole chapter. Yes. And because this
is, you know, it is pretty unique to women and it is all about realizing who our source is,
who our satisfaction is, who the identity giver is. Because just as he made our body in the womb,
he designated our sex at the moment of conception. All of that is so purposeful. And so knowing
whose we are changes, not only how we see our bodies, but also how we see being women.
Yeah, absolutely. It's beautiful. Well, thank you.
Thank you so much. And I do, I really encourage people to go out and get your book to really have a theological understanding of what it means to be a woman. Yeah, you do kind of talk about a topic that is political. But for the Christian, this is pre-political. It's pre-civilizational because it goes back to the first chapter, the first book of the Bible. And so thank you for being one of the only Christian women teachers who is willing to take on this subject. Your boldness is.
an example for us and I'm just grateful for it. Thank you.
