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Janice Airhart's avatar

When I taught high school, one of my colleagues, a talented and energetic math teacher, moved away with her husband and two children and then moved back to town less than a year later with her children to live with her parents. She'd hated the town where her husband found a job as a preacher. She taught for a while there but hated the school system and came back to teach at our school for a semester. When her husband later moved on to another church in a different town, she and the children planned to follow him. But she wasn't happy about it. When I asked her why he couldn't find a job in our town, she sighed. "He feels God's calling him to be a preacher, and this church called with a better offer." I said, "What about you? What is God calling you to do?" She had no answer. Just one more example of how some faith traditions have shaped the male-female roles in society, one that she passed on to her children. It never occurred to her that she might have a God-given purpose too. What a waste of human talent.

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Georgia Patrick's avatar

Have you noticed, Walter, that wisdom seems to take over when the painfully obvious facts abound? This is not a competition. It better be a collaboration. Eventually, one of you will be the caregiver because one of you can only go from point A to B in a wheelchair. Life and death is equal opportunity. The universe doesn't care one bit about the stories and justifications you made up along the way. Your article shows the benefits of focusing on human needs (other) and not just your own (ego) to the exclusion of those needing your gifts and talents.

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