"Eve in Exile" | Book Review by Tessa

"Eve in Exile and the Restoration of Femininity" by Rebekah Merkle was recommended by Summer White, host of the Sheologians podcast. So, of course, I had to have my husband Amazon-prime that sucker to my front door as soon as I could. I devoured this book. First, I love critiques of feminism. Second, I love books that help me love and admire the Lord more, and this book helped me see the amazing Creator that the Lord is and how beautifully He has designed women (and men and families). Third, I love books that help me grow in obedience to the Lord. And this book definitely helped with that. It has revealed many areas of my own thinking about my role as a woman which the culture has influenced. "Our culture has come to despise fruitfulness so much that we Christians sometimes don't see how far it has crept into our own thinking as well" (pg 170). And the book showed me how and why these areas of wrong-thinking need to be reoriented in order to line up with the word of God.

Rebekah gives a historical overview of the philosophical development of feminism, which she describes as being one of the most destructive movements for American women and families. In the book, she makes an illustrative point on how the far right and left wings both make useless proposals to solve the problem of widespread unhappiness and purposelessness felt by American women:

"Somewhere along the line, America has swallowed a poisonous lie about what women were for, and by the end of the 50s was starting to feel queasy, but it wasn't until the 60s that the vomiting started....The liberals think the vomiting was necessary and helpful (pay no mind to the fact that our country is now in high fever, quivering spastically on the floor, showing no signs of improvement) and the ultraconservatives argue that this whole situation is terrible, so let's go back to that idyllic and nostalgic day when we ate the bad oyster--and then eat it again" (p. 71).

Additionally, Rebekah rejects the feminist hypothesis which states that in order for women to be successful, they must abandon the home and find fulfillment on the outside. She proposes that in order for women to truly find fulfillment and satisfaction in their work, they must return to their original design, which is laid out in the Bible. This design includes four main points which are expounded on in the book: to subdue, to fill, to help, and to glorify. When women submit to their God-given design, they will flourish.


This book was revealing and challenging to me in many ways. I would recommend it for any and every woman. Especially, young Christian women like myself, who may be out of college, newly married, and faced with some confusing choices about where and how to spend their work and energy in a God-honoring way. In the conclusion of the book, Rebekah leaves the reader with a challenging, but hope-filled exhortation to begin rebuilding our feminist-ravaged nation, through making the choice as Christian women of laying ourselves down for others, namely for our own family, in obedience to the Lord.


"Every family that is laughing together, loving one another, woven together by a strong woman who sees the profound importance of what she's doing--that is enormously significant for the rebuilding of this nation" (p. 203).


I underlined and starred so much in this book, which is why I'm sharing so many quotes and why I want you to read the book as well (since I can't fit them all here)! I will leave you with an abridged version of one of my favorite quotes from the book.


"When we lay on the altar that which is dearest to us, when we bury it in the ground, God gives it back to us, glorified. If we lay our pride down, He gives us incredible dignity. If we lay our dreams down, He gives us unspeakable fulfillment. When we bury our own ambitions, He returns them back to us with interest. That which we put in the ground is a shriveled little seed, and what God hands back to us is a gorgeous handful of flowers--not a bad trade. So we need to stop feeling self-conscious that we've lost our seed...When the culture sneers at us for having so foolishly laid our seed in the dirt....we need to turn and look at the blooms and thank God for His mercy that allowed us to let go" (p. 194).

An Amicable Appeal to the Left and the Right

As a liberty-minded, small-government-promoting, free-market capitalist, yesterday's election was just another benchmark on our journey toward ever larger, more intrusive, over-regulating, freedom-quashing centralizing government that we've been on since Calvin Coolidge (with a short, tempered reprieve from '80-'88). The only slight directional change will probably be a slight turn towards nationalism/statism rather than globalism.

But for many friends and acquaintances of mine (past and present) on the left side of the political aisle, the election of Donald Trump is nothing short of devastating. See, I'm what you might call a Conservatarian (conservative libertarian); while people remotely close to my particular persuasion have felt pressed down, slapped around, and relegated to the fringes of society for a long time (and especially more so during the last 8 years), my friends on the left have felt that real progress for their good was finally taking place. Because of the left-friendly environment that the current administration has cultivated in the media, the universities, Hollywood and D.C., the unexpected result of the election last night is particularly jarring to those who fall left of center. The point of this post is not to argue against your ideals or worldview. The point of this post is to recognize and validate the very real heartbreak and devastation I know you're experiencing today. There are immigrants who, whether supported by reality or not, feel unsafe now that Trump has been elected. There are members of the LGBT+ persuasion who feel that they will once again be seen as miscreants and pariahs in society and fear persecution. There are women who feel offended by this man's existence, much less his ascendance to the highest office in the land. There are blacks, latinos, and middle easterners who perceive this man as a racist xenophobe and fear for their place in American society in the near future. Whether any of these feelings and perceptions are warranted by the facts of reality is not the point right now. The point is that a large portion of our nation is hurting, angry, anxious, overwhelmed by what the future might bring, and generally devastated. So to those of you out there who fall under this description, I want you to know I understand those emotions are very real. I have felt variations of those same emotions on more than one occasion during the last 8 years. It's very difficult having your ideals, sincere convictions, and religious persuasion tossed aside and disregarded by the "elite" as ancient and a false front for bigotry. It's disheartening when the spirit of the age is cold, unwelcoming, and even hostile to your political and/or religious ideology. This, too, shall pass.

To the Trump Supporters (including the “Hold-Your-Nose-and-Voters”): Stop. Wait. Think before you post your snide, triumphalist remarks and your politically provocative memes on social media. Remember what it has been like for the last 8 years, and instead of retribution, practice civility, honor, and grace toward your fellow human beings who are also made in the image of God. I feel the need to warn you, if you decide to smear this victory into the faces of those on the left, the backlash will be severe and worse than what you have experienced these last 8 years. If there is anything this election cycle should teach you, it is that a group of people can only tolerate being under the thumb of an opposing ideology for so long before enough is enough.

To everyone, no matter where you fall on the political spectrum, I want to proclaim to you graciously but confidently that Jesus Christ reigns supreme. If you feel hurt, lost, discouraged, scared, angry by the results of this election, know this: Christ can and will satisfy your every longing and desire. He is the All-Sufficient Healer. He is the All-Providing Bridegroom. He is the All-Sustaining Bread of Life. He is the Fountain of Living Water. If you feel ecstatic, triumphant, elated, euphoric by the results of this election, I humbly urge you to repent of your idolatry, for no earthly ruler deserves that kind of affection from you. That is to be reserved for Christ and Christ alone. Donald Trump did not willingly condescend from his heavenly throne to take on humiliating human flesh in order to be your empathetic High Priest. Donald Trump did not live a sinless life for his righteousness to be imputed to your account at the appointed time. Donald Trump did not suffer the lashes of the cat o' nine tails, the beatings, mocking and derision of Roman guards, and die naked and alone on a Roman cross as the spotless Lamb of God to take away the sins of the world. The Lord Jesus Christ, Creator of the heavens and earth, accomplished these things and He must receive His full reward, which is all of your praise and worship and adoration. I implore everyone on both sides of this political debate to see and savor the sweetness, glory, sufficiency, and supremacy of Jesus of Nazareth, the Christ, the Son of the Living God.

No King but Christ.

Soli Deo Gloria.

One Year Ago...


 
A year ago yesterday, Tuesday, Nov. 10, 2015, I awoke around 7:35 AM CST to my wife, Tessa, standing over me beside the bed.

“Did you see the text your mom sent?” Though I couldn’t see much detail at all without my contacts in, I could tell she had just gotten out of the shower.

“Huh, what? No,” I responded, frustrated I’d just been jolted out of sleep only a few minutes before my alarm was set to go off. “What did she say?”

“Amanda collapsed,” she said. “She’s unconscious but still breathing.”

“What?” I said incredulously, but suddenly alert. I sat up in bed, put my glasses on, and unlocked the screen on my phone to confirm what my wife just told me. Tessa hurriedly left my side, taking her usual spot in front of the full-length mirror to start on her hair and make-up. She was visibly shaken.

“Please pray right now – Amanda has collapsed and is unconscious on the floor but breathing,” read the text from my mom.

“Whoa, what could’ve happened,” I wondered to myself.  I was taken off guard to say the least. My brother, Davey, and his wife, Amanda, have been the pictures of physical health and fitness, so whatever happened, it’s so unusual that it must be serious. Did she hit her head? Severe blood sugar or blood pressure drop?

“Praying! Keep us updated!” was Tessa’s reply.  Just then I realized I was letting my thoughts and speculation and growing anxiety sweep me away from the moment.  As I was about to respond in agreement with Tessa, Mom sent another text: “She is pregnant – pray also for the baby.”

My heart dropped.

I didn’t know how long it was before I drew another breath, but when I finally did it was like I had been underwater and finally resurfaced for air. We had no idea. Davey and Amanda must have been waiting to tell us over Thanksgiving when we’d all be together.

“Oh, God,” I prayed silently, “Please have mercy on Amanda and the little one she’s carrying! Preserve life today.”

Tears welled up in my eyes.

I knew the horrible illnesses that could accompany a pregnancy gone wrong, and now my mind was racing.  At length, though I don’t know how long, my panic-stricken thoughts were interrupted by Tessa turning off her hair dryer. But I still didn’t know how to respond to this new revelation.

Just then, “Praying” came the text from Tessa. Why didn’t I think of that?

I needed to start getting ready for work. I got up and raced to the bathroom, adrenaline now pumping. Standing in the warm shower for the first few minutes, I cried out to God, appealing to his merciful omnipotence to intervene and protect my sister-in-law and my brother’s second child, still not knowing at all what happened, or how severe the injury.

After getting out of the shower and throwing on some clothes, I checked the texts again.

Mom: “He’s called 911 – they are taking them to Methodist hospital.”

Tessa: “My small group wives are praying too”

Mom: “Thanks so much!!”

Tessa: “Are you with them? Or in NC?”

Mom: “In NC – it is so hard being so far away from all of our kids!”

Tessa: “Yeah :(  I’m sorry! Is Amanda still unconscious or did she wake up? How many weeks pregnant is she?”

Mom: “I don’t know if she has woken up. We only know that she was taken to the hospital because [Grandpa] told us that. Haven’t heard anymore from Davey.  She just finished her first trimester. So I think she is 13 weeks.”

Tessa: “Okay thanks.”

“Should we go up to Indy?” Tessa asked me, apparently seeing I had caught up on the news.

“I don’t know. We don’t need to make that decision yet. We don’t even know what’s going on or how bad it is,” I replied.

We hastily finished getting ready for work, saying a few words back and forth, praying together a couple times, but mostly I was just caught up in the tsunami of thoughts about possible scenarios of what might have occurred in Amanda’s and/or the baby’s body to cause this emergency.

Just as we were headed out the front door, another text update:

Mom: “She is in critical condition – she has a head wound. Davey doesn’t know what happened. He had come home from a workout this morning and found her on the living room floor, and things had fallen – the ladder in the living room and the lamp. Don’t know if there was a break in or if something else happened. We are leaving to go up there. Please keep praying. They are doing a CAT scan right now. Baby still has a heartbeat. Davey is a mess.”

What? A break-in? The realization of the nature of Amanda’s injury and the events that could have transpired hit me with such force I had to catch my breath again.

Tessa: “I can’t imagine! Praying! Where is Weston? Is he okay?”

(My nephew was 15 months old at the time).

Mom: “He is at the hospital with Davey.”

Relief swept over me. At this point we had made it to the car and were coasting down the alley that runs beside our carriage house toward the main road. I had a sickening feeling we wouldn’t be at work very long today.

Me:  “Let us know if we should come up too. Please.”

Tessa: “Yes. Let us know and we’ll come up.”

Mom: “Okay – we will – thanks! Love you!”

Tessa: “Love you!”

On the six-minute drive to UAB campus, we wondered out loud to each other what could have possibly happened. Mom’s text mentioned a break in.  A break-in? Things were on the floor – the wooden decorative ladder they kept propped up against the wall-length bookshelf, and a lamp. Could she have been on the ladder hanging Christmas decorations and fallen? Maybe a drop in blood pressure due to something with the baby and she blacked out and hit her head, bringing the ladder and lamp toppling with her? It didn’t necessarily have to be a malicious, intrusive act like a break-in, right? Whatever it was, if she was still unconscious that’s definitely not good. She would have come to almost immediately if she had only blacked out. Even if she had hit her head, she wouldn’t be out this long if it wasn’t serious.

I dropped Tessa off at her building on campus before parking in the remote lot about 9 blocks away from my lab, and waited for the bus. It didn’t take long to arrive. I climbed on the bus and found my seat among maybe a dozen other passengers, and the bus started toward the next stop.

Shortly after leaving the bus terminal, I received another update from Mom. When I read this message, my heart sank, my head reeled, I felt the blood leave my cheeks, and for a split second I thought I would vomit all over the shuttle bus floor.

Mom: “Just talked to Davey – there was a break-in / there were bullet wounds to the head and arm – they don’t know if she is going to make it. Need a miracle right now!”

Me:  “We’re coming.”

I was shell-shocked. Bullet wounds? Amanda, my sister for the last 7 years, was shot in the head and arm? In her own home? I bolted out of the bus at the very next stop and rushed back toward the car only a block and a half away.  I needed to call my boss to let him know that I wasn’t coming in. Before I could, Tessa called.

“Are you on your way to get me?” came the broken voice from the other end.

“Yeah, I just got off the bus at the second remote lot. I’m walking back to our lot now,” I replied.

“Who would do something like this, Jono? Who would want to hurt Amanda?” Tessa questioned me through tears and fits of sobs.

“I don’t know, babe. Just pray. Hard.”

So we did. We prayed aloud in the car on the way home, we prayed aloud with wails of sorrow and petition at home while packing and waiting on a rental car, we prayed on the way to Enterprise, we prayed at Enterprise, we prayed on the way back home from Enterprise. November 10, 2015, I spent more consecutive hours than ever before boldly approaching the throne of the Most High, by the merits of Christ alone as intercessor, with tears of desperation, faith, and raw emotion, pleading for that which only He could give. A miracle. Healing. Life.

It was around noon (CST) before we finally got on the road headed toward Indianapolis. About an hour after we left our house for Indianapolis, we got another update from Mom.

Mom: “They are still trying to stabilize her before they do any surgery. She is in a coma. Gunshot to the back of the head, bounced off the skull and is lodged behind the forehead. Need her vital signs to get better.”

Tessa: “Okay praying praying praying.”

Less than an hour later, more bad news:

Mom: “We need everyone to pray right now. Amanda’s vital signs have turned for the worse. Her blood pressure has spiked, which means the swelling in the brain has increased and is putting pressure on the brain stem. If this does not stop, her heart will stop. They are asking Davey if he wants her to be resuscitated if this happens.”

We pled with God even more, pouring out praise, worship, and adoration for His name, His unlimited power, His sovereignty, His faithfulness, His steadfast love, His mercy… His sufficiency… His beauty…His goodness.

About an hour later:

Mom: “The swelling is happening rapidly and pressing on her spinal cord, increasing her blood pressure, which will cause her heart to stop. The doctor says she won’t come back from this. Davey has made the decision, along with her parents, not to resuscitate her if it gets to that point.”

The anger had to be suppressed. I was attempting to drive on an interstate at 80 mph trying to see through tears that wouldn’t stop coming; anger wouldn’t help this situation. At this point I was in a battle with anxiety, hopelessness, and despair, and I was losing ground. That is, until my wife, in a soft, tender voice, weakened by the hours of sobbing vocal petitions to heaven, spoke another prayer of praise and worship to Almighty God, and then another, and another. Each softly spoken sentence lifted my spirit, encouraged my heart, and refreshed my faith in the Lord who giveth and who taketh away by His own authority, according to His own counsel and pleasure.

Half an hour went by. We sang worship songs and hymns together in the car.

Another half an hour, another update from Mom:

Mom: “Just got word that her blood pressure is dropping – we need to keep praying.”

Tessa: “Praying hard.”

When we arrived at the Methodist Hospital in Indianapolis (after turning an 8-hour drive into a 7-hour one), we took the elevator up to the Neurocritical Care unit. My dad was the first person I saw when I stepped out of the elevator into the lobby. I caught his eyes as I began walking to him and we embraced, tears once again breaking the barrier of my eyelids and flowing freely down my face.

“Where’s Davey?” I asked my dad, after he and Tessa greeted each other with hugs.

“He’s around here somewhere. He needed some fresh air after being in the room by Amanda’s side all day. Oh, here he comes.”

I looked down the hallway and saw my big brother approaching, his eyes red and glassy, his hair disheveled. That was the longest hug we’d ever shared. A memory from over 7 years before came bursting to the surface of my consciousness of embracing my brother at his wedding, when he had pledged to love, honor and cherish Amanda Grace Byars until death do them part. More tears ran freely. I didn’t even know what to say as we stood in the lobby embracing. “I’m so sorry,” was all I could manage before uncontrolled sobbing threatened to arise from deep within my diaphragm.

We pulled away from each other and he and Tessa also shared a hug.

“Thank you both for coming,” he said to us wiping tears from his face and sniffling. “Do you want to come see her?”

“If we’re allowed, yes,” I replied, and Tessa voiced her agreement with a soft, “Yeah.”

“Yeah, you’re allowed. Um, just to give you an update,” he said as he, Tessa and I started walking down the corridor to the room,  “I don’t know how much you know already, but the prognosis is not good at all. Without God performing a miracle,” he seemed to ever so subtly swallowed a sob, “the doctors say she’s likely not going to make it.” Reality check; I was tempted to pinch myself. I wanted to wake up from this nightmare. “I know God is able, but at present the reality is grim.” He said this with such confidence and grief. His eyes were watering a little, but he was holding himself together remarkably well.

“Yeah, we’ve been getting updates from Mom all day,” I said. We passed through some double doors to enter the Neurocritical Care unit.

“Okay, that’s good,” he replied.

“How’s the baby?”

“The baby still has a heartbeat, incredibly. We don’t know if it’s a girl or boy yet. We were supposed to find out in about 3 weeks.” He slowed his pace a little. “Hey, look, just to give you a heads up, she took quite a beating. Don’t be startled when you see her.”

“A beating? She was beat up, too? How bad?” I asked, the horror of this event growing more and more evident as gaps in my understanding continued to be filled in.

“Bad,” came his simple reply as we approached her room. I could see her through the sliding glass doors, lying there on the hospital bed, intubated, face and neck swollen. I wouldn’t have known it was her had I not been led by my brother and seen my mom, my Aunt Diane, and Aunt Esther in the room with her.

As we entered the room, I got a better look at my usually warm, charming, jovial, sister-in-law who now lay unresponsive, all but lifeless, in that hospital bed. To my shame, and only for a brief moment, what I saw made my blood boil with rage. The top of Amanda’s head was completely wrapped in bandages, her face and neck were badly bruised and swollen, other scrapes and abrasions could be seen on her face neck and arms, one eyelid was bright purple, at least 3 or 4 top front teeth were missing, and her left arm was swollen and lacerated from near her elbow where the other bullet had entered to her shoulder where it was lodged. Who would do something like this? Especially to this sweet, kind, joyful blonde-haired 28-year-old girl who had been like a sister to me for the last 10 years?

I sensed some movement around me and my mind came back to the present. It was my mom standing up from her seat next to Amanda’s bed and walking over to me. She greeted Tessa and me with hugs and thank-you-for-comings and I-love-yous. Davey sat down next to his bride and held her hand. Tessa stood next to me and grasped mine. My rage melted away. Only sorrow remained.

And we waited.

And we prayed.

And we cried.

More family and close friends came in and out. Amanda’s parents arrived, having had to catch a last minute flight from California where they were on vacation. Each time someone else showed up, the tears and prayers started back up.

And we waited some more, the ping of the vitals monitor and the airy compression and decompression of the ventilator sometimes being the only sounds filling the silence.

And we prayed even more.

We thanked God for the blessing of 28 years of Amanda Grace. We begged for a miracle. We appealed to God as Moses did, to have mercy on Amanda, on the baby, and on us, “For the sake of Your Name.” But we praised Him regardless, as Job did, “Though You slay me, I will hope in You.”

The doctors needed Amanda’s vitals to stabilize before they could run the brain functioning tests to determine if she was brain dead. That could take a while. Some of us got food from the 1st floor cafeteria around 1 AM. Around 3:00 AM, Davey gave into the urges of others to try to get some sleep. The family waiting room was just outside the double doors that we had walked through earlier, connected to the lobby where we had first met up with Dad and Davey. He hit up a recliner and soon fell asleep, though I’m sure it was a fitful sleep.

Tessa and my parents and I joined him around 4 AM. Using my coat as a pillow, I settled into a loveseat with bare wooden arms and a wooden divider down the middle. About 2 hours later I arose for some hot breakfast down in the cafeteria.

The attending physician began the brain function tests shortly after 7 AM. The tests were supposed to take about an hour and a half, the longest hour and half of any of our lives. By this time, we were all prayed out. Not in the sense that we were giving up on prayer in any way, but rather there was literally nothing else we could pray for. It seemed we had already exhausted all possible pertinent requests three times over already. God had heard our cries. It was now time to simply trust Him in His sovereignty.

We all gathered just outside of Amanda’s hospital room while the doctor and nurses were finishing up the tests. Some family had come back after having left for homes or hotel rooms for a few hours sleep. We were all so tired, emotionally and spiritually drained.

Finally the doctor came out and conveyed the news everyone expected but had hoped and prayed against. Our Amanda Grace was gone. Her brain activity had probably quickly deteriorated throughout the night and early morning. We cried, we thanked the doctor and especially the nurses who had been so attentive to Amanda and warm to us all throughout the night.

We all gave Davey time alone with her to say one last goodbye. When he finished, all the family (both Byars and Blackburns) and a few friends gathered around Amanda’s bed and participated in the most heavenly, solemn chorus of musical worship to our Triune God for His faithfulness and mercy in His saving grace, His purpose in life, and the hope He provides in the life to come. It was a powerful moment standing around the deathbed of one so young, so loved, so cherished, and so faithful in life, worshiping the King of Glory with extended family with songs like “It Is Well With My Soul,” “Holy, Holy, Holy,” and “How Great is Our God.” And I like to believe that whole hospital unit knew that day where the hope and joy of this family was resting, and that the gospel met with the quickening activity of the Holy Spirit and brought spiritual resurrection to someone dead in their sins. That would have been a fitting way for a missionally-minded saint like Amanda to leave this world.

November 11, 2015, Amanda Grace Blackburn finally beheld with unveiled face the glorious face of the risen, victorious, and reigning Christ. And Evie Grace's first conscious experience was of that same beatific vision.

Soli Deo Gloria