It’s hard to think of a more polarizing issue in recent days
than the appointment and confirmation of Justice Kavanaugh—and in our
increasingly divided culture, that’s saying something. The events surrounding
his confirmation and the accusations made against him have brought out some of
the strongest feelings in people across the political spectrum. I have my own
opinions on the specific matter of the accusations and subsequent decisions
made in this instance, but the following post is not about that. Rather, I want
to speak to some of the broader, deeper, more general issues that this whole
debacle has brought to light, or at least that it should bring to light.
We’ve seen the calls, ranging from genuine pleading to
shrill demanding, that victims of abuse be heard. As someone who has many dearly
loved ones who have been abused in one way or another and to varying degrees, I
agree that the abused most certainly should be heard. We must take care not to
heap trauma upon trauma. In the past weeks, though, we have seen this call for
the abused to be heard expanded to include the assertion that women should be
heard—and believed—period. As a woman, I agree that women should be respected
and heard. I also agree that they should be believed—if they are telling the
truth.
The concerning problem with the trajectory we have seen of
late is that the message seems to assert that women should be believed simply
because they are women, and it equates women with victims (or, alternatively
“survivors”) and vice versa. This assertion and equating of terms is problematic.
First, it’s a problem for a very a practical reason: it’s simply not logically
sustainable. Here’s why:
Victims are not always women, and perpetrators of abuse are
not always men. Or, put another way, women are capable of abusing and
manipulating others because we have the same inherited corruptness that men do.
So whether we equate victimhood and womanhood or whether we rate womanhood over
victimhood in the scheme of who should always be believed, we leave no room for
two categories—male victims of female abuse and female victims of female abuse.
Some might think it’s absurd that I even bring up male
victims of female abuse, since they certainly seem to be the minority. (I
haven’t done any studies on statistics in this area.) But they do exist (see Genesis
39 for an ancient example), and they are no less worth caring for than female
victims. In our cultural "war on patriarchy," must we therefore ignore,
disbelieve, and disrespect men who have been ill-treated by women? Should we
have no care for the trauma they have experienced?
But perhaps you’re not ready to go there yet. Perhaps you
still have a bad taste in your mouth where men are concerned and believe that
to recognize male victims of abuse is to take the focus off of women, spitting
in the face of womankind and adding insult to injury. Even so, there is still a
problem with saying women should always be believed. If women are to be
believed without question, who do we believe in a she-said/she-said
scenario? (Check out 1 Kings 3:16-28 for
a doosy of a case.) If two women tell
contradicting stories, they can’t both be right; to believe one woman is to
disbelieve the other. So the principle
of always believing women is one that cannot be followed in the most basic,
practical sense.
The second problem with asserting that women are to be
believed simply because they are women is the corresponding implication that
men are to be disbelieved/distrusted simply because they are men. Just as
perpetrators of abuse are not always men, men are not always perpetrators of
abuse. Yes, some men are abusers. But many are not. And just as we women would
not want the actions of some women to be used to characterize all of us, we
should not characterize all men by the actions of some.
Newsflash: men are no more inherently evil than women are,
and women are not inherently good. All of us have the imprint of corruption on
our souls. And any woman who does not recognize her own capacity to manipulate,
lie, and abuse needs to take a good, long look in the soul-mirror. Our female
forebears have given us a myriad of case studies for these vices: Sarah,
Rebekah, Rachel, Potiphar’s wife, Delilah, Jezebel, just to name a few. These
women’s lives should be cautionary tales to all of us, for we have the same
seed of sinfulness buried deep within us, and unless we get a spiritual heart
transplant from God himself, we are not free to conquer our depravity, and our
default remains corruption.
Having established that women are capable of lying and/or of
misrepresenting the truth, we see another, philosophical problem with this idea
of believing women solely because they are women: adhering to it requires that
sometimes we believe things that are not true. For postmodernists, this won’t be a problem,
because when truth is relative, there can be no untruth. Thus, what is true for
you doesn’t have to be true for me, and if two people tell contradicting
stories, no one has a right to say that one is correct and the other is not.
Explaining the unsustainability of a postmodern view of truth is a topic for
another day, but for the sake of argument, let’s say that we’ve already had
that discussion and established that truth is not relative.
If we accept that truth is not relative, then we can posit
that only things that are true should be believed. This does not mean that only
true things are believed, just that
only true things should be believed. In
other words, we should care that what we believe is actually true. Citing a
person’s gender as the sole basis for believing them, with no concern for
discerning the truth, is thus an assault on the very foundation of truth
itself.
The challenge is that when it comes to people, sometimes it
can be difficult to discern who is telling the truth or who is giving an
accurate account. Some things we will
never know the truth about this side of eternity. But thankfully, there is
Someone who has told us the truth about Himself and about ourselves, and He is
completely trustworthy. He has told us that all of us—female and male—are both made in His image and
afflicted with an inherited corruption from our first ancestors. This two-sided
reality means that we should both respect every individual (because of his or
her inherent dignity as God’s image-bearers) and accept that every individual
is imperfect and thus cannot be blindly assumed to be trustworthy.
As imperfect humans, we are not unfailingly trustworthy. We
will hurt each other, and we will let each other down. So we must earn each
other’s trust, not demand it. And this must be done at an individual level—for
men and women alike. Furthermore, as seekers of truth, we need to be
discerning, using our minds to evaluate the veracity of someone’s statements.
After all, if we believe that all are created equal, then all deserve to have
their claims evaluated by the same standard, not prejudged one way or the other
based on the claimant’s gender. Men and women are different, yes, but we are
both human. Let’s not forget that.
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