Ph: 25071968
[image][image][image][image][image][image][image][image]
[image]
[image]
Subscribe to Christianity Today
Subscribe to Christianity Today
[image]
[image][image][image][image][image]
October 11, 2008
[image][image][image][image][image][image][image]
Free E-mail Newsletters:
[image]RSS Feed | More Feeds | RSS Help

Unplanned Parenthood
Amy Laura Hall argues that in God's design, family is a pretty messy thing.



ADVERTISEMENT

Amy Laura Hall's Conceiving Parenthood (4 stars) might well be seen as science fiction in reverse.

Her journey into the cultural history of reproductive biotechnology reads like an eerie voyage into the future. Yet rather than pushing readers to the outer limits of human progress, Hall urges us to find joy in the inner limits of creatureliness.

Hall's wide-ranging work looks at Protestant families and the germ-free home; childhood progress and the production of infant food; the eugenics movement and associating heritage with salvation; and finally, the relationship between the orderly domestic family and atomic progress. She examines these themes as they appear in such popular magazines as Parents, Ladies' Home Journal, National Geographic, and the Methodist journal Together, and thus reminds readers that today's biotechnological developments grow out of distorted ideals of childhood, family, gender, race, and normalcy.

Hall's research is exhaustive; her analytical acumen profound. Each provocatively titled chapter (such as "The Corporate Breast") includes many illustrations, mostly from the 1930s to the 1950s, of perfect babies, women, and families alongside images of technological growth. The illustrations depict what she calls "anti-icons of a eugenic era"—images that draw us away from the "untidy, creaturely, incarnate family" held together by a good God with vast, loving arms.

Hall's book slows at points because of the sheer number of historical examples. And at times, one loses sight of Hall's overarching claim that mainline Protestantism had a prominent voice in defining and upholding misconceptions of family.

Nevertheless, Hall's style keeps the book accessible, and her personality is refreshingly present throughout. Indeed, Conceiving Parenthood reads as though she is narrating a family history with a passion for God's story as it resists "meticulously planned parenthood."

Ironically, American Protestant thinking on parenthood in the 20th century seems far from planned. For all of Hall's appropriate disdain for the detailed planning that goes into the perfect American family, readers walk away with the sense that parenthood deserves more, rather than less, intentional Christian reflection.

Hall offers a faithful reconception of parenthood that resists notions of the "progressive family" and instead summons the church to lovingly and actively incorporate all children. She uses the doctrines of Creation, salvation, and eschatology—namely, that all children bear the image of God, that adoption is God's form of salvation, and that God secures the future of the church—to move the church beyond mere biology and more deeply into its baptismal identity.

While in the end Hall grounds her conception of family in triumphant moments in God's saving history, her book is largely about ordinary time—those everyday moments when the church learns to follow Christ in the repetition of daily life.

Michelle A. Clifton-Soderstrom, assistant professor of theology and ethics at North Park Theological Seminary.



Related Elsewhere:

Arend's previous columns include:

Conceiving Parenthood is available from ChristianBook.com and other retailers.

Other reviews are in our books section.





[image]E-mail this page [image] [image]Write CT [image] [image]Print this article [image] [image]Post a comment



[image]


  


Subscribe to Christianity Today and get 3 free trial issues. No credit card required.

Please allow 4-6 weeks for delivery. Offer valid in U.S. only.

If you decide you want to keep Christianity Today coming, honor your invoice for just $19.95 and receive nine more issues, a full year in all. If not, simply write "cancel" across the invoice and return it. The three trial issues are yours to keep, regardless.


Click here for international orders[image]2-for-1 Gifts!

[Reader Reviews]
[image]
Average User Rating: [image]

Displaying 1 - 3 of 9 comments. See all comments
Amy Laura    Posted: July 24, 2008 5:13 PM
[image]
I am more interested in the ways that women respond to this review than the ways that men with time apparently on their hands respond to this review. How difficult is it to be a mother of a child with a disability today? How difficult is it to be a mother of a child who is African-American today? Why are A-A mothers not easily represented in CTI readers? Are they? How many African-American mothers have time to read any website? Maybe I am wrong, but I fear that the people with time to read websites these days are not representative of the people who Jesus most sought out to save. We all need saving. We all need time to be with real people: our children (one of whom is waiting for me now), our spouses, our neighbors, the children of our neighbors. Give us strength. Come Lord Jesus, Come.

John Holecek    Posted: July 21, 2008 1:51 PM
[image]
This Friday, 25 July 2008, marks the 40th anniversary of Pope Paul VI's encyclical letter "Humane Vitae" which reitereated traditional Catholic teaching on marriage and family and which radically separated the Church not only from popular culture but also from the vast majority of Protestants. It is a beautiful work in its description of married love. Pope Paul VI spoke prohetically when he described what would be the outcome of widespread use of artificial means of contraception. Here's a link to the document for those who would care to read it: http://www.vatican.va/holy_father/paul_vi/encyclicals/documents/hf_p-vi_enc _25071968_humanae-vitae_en.html

Raymond Takashi Swenson    Posted: July 21, 2008 3:51 PM
[image]
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints ("LDS Church" or "Mormons") opposes abortion except under the most extreme circumstances. It does not forbid use of contraceptives, but encourages bringing children into the world. According to the recent Pew survey, Mormons have a much higher birth rate than Catholics and Protestants. One of the theological factors for Mormons is that they believe that all humans live as spirit children of God before birth, and that coming into mortal life is a necessary step in our progression to fully becoming "joint heirs with Christ." Just as Christ the Son of God was born, obtained a physical body, died, and was resurrected, Mormons believe that God's intent is for us to follow Christ and obtain a glory similar to his when we are resurrected. Mormons also believe that the family bonds of man and wife, and parents and children, were intended by God to be eternal in nature, and eternal marriage in the LDS temples is the means to that end.

[image]
sponsors 








[Browse More Christianity Today]

Search
[image]
[image]

[image]
[image]
[image] [image]


[image]

[image]
[image]
[image]
[image] [image]

[image]
[image] [image]

[image]
[image]
Search by Name
Or use Advanced Search to search by program, region, cost, affiliation, enrollment, more!

Search by:
[image]

[image][image] [image]

[image]
[image] © 2008 Christianity Today International  
About Us | Privacy Policy | Contact Us | Customer Care | Advertise with Us | Job Openings | Help  
[image]


You are viewing a mobilized version of this site...
View original page here

Mobilized by Mowser Mowser