It was the television commercial...
Illustration
It was the television commercial many of us loved to hate. A working woman comes
home wearing a business suit, kicks off her pumps, pads into the kitchen in stockinged
feet, and comes out holding a cast-iron skillet. She prances up to her husband, and in a
sultry voice sings these words:
I can bring home the bacon, fry it up in a pan, and never let you forget you're a man! 'Cause I'm a woman -- W-O-M-A-N!
It's not even important what product that commercial was selling. The image of that ridiculous song is burned into the consciousness of many who heard it: ridiculous, because no woman (and no man either, for that matter) can be so thoroughly "all things to all people" as that crooning siren with the skillet in her hand.
Don't think for a moment that the author of Proverbs is talking about that kind of woman! No, read a little more deeply in this chapter, and you'll find that the "capable wife" is beloved by her husband not because she's an expert juggler of home and business and parenting and marriage -- although this woman is all these things -- but for a very different reason.
"She opens her mouth with wisdom, and the teaching of kindness is on her tongue" (v. 26). This faithful woman is a person of true wisdom -- and the wisdom she teaches best is called "kindness."
I can bring home the bacon, fry it up in a pan, and never let you forget you're a man! 'Cause I'm a woman -- W-O-M-A-N!
It's not even important what product that commercial was selling. The image of that ridiculous song is burned into the consciousness of many who heard it: ridiculous, because no woman (and no man either, for that matter) can be so thoroughly "all things to all people" as that crooning siren with the skillet in her hand.
Don't think for a moment that the author of Proverbs is talking about that kind of woman! No, read a little more deeply in this chapter, and you'll find that the "capable wife" is beloved by her husband not because she's an expert juggler of home and business and parenting and marriage -- although this woman is all these things -- but for a very different reason.
"She opens her mouth with wisdom, and the teaching of kindness is on her tongue" (v. 26). This faithful woman is a person of true wisdom -- and the wisdom she teaches best is called "kindness."