This is a strange interpretation of the world when we consider that it does not actually apply to most human persons over the course of human history.
Most work undertaken by both men and women over the course of history, especially free owners of property, has been done at or very close to home./
Dear aspirant,
Cordial greetings and a very good day. Thankyou for your response and apologies for the delay in replying but I was otherwise engaged and so could not post yesterday.
Whatever situation may have pertained at certain periods in the pagan world, dear friend, this does not necessarily mean that it was the ideal family model from a Catholic standpoint. The papal teaching (Casti Connubii), which I cited in a previous post, clearly frowns upon liberating the married woman from domestic home life and the godly rearing of children - “the task assigned her for the good of society,
by nature and by marriage” (Pope Pius XII, added emphasis mine). The pagan world has, and continues to do, many things which are at variance with our most holy religion and which do not promote happy and healthy home life.
In a still very highly relevant passage Pope Pius XI says the following concerning a living family wage:
“In the first place, the wage paid to the working man must be sufficient for the support of himself and of his family…Intolerable and at all costs to be abolished is* the abuse whereby mothers of families, because of the insufficiency of the father’s salary, are forced to engage in gainful occupations outside the domestic walls, to the neglect of their own proper cares and duties, particularly the upbringing of their children*” (Encyclical
Quadrigesimo Anno, pp. 71-4, added emphasis mine).
First, you will observe that Pope Pius terms married women working outside of the home an “abuse” that results in the neglect of her “proper cares and duties”. Second, please note here Pope Pius’s use of the words “proper cares and duties” in relation to the married woman, which are manifestly not the same as the working man’s, the family breadwinner. This is anathema to our present age, which has been brainwashed by the false egalitarianism of radical feminism into believing that a woman does not have her own specific “proper cares and duties”. However, the magisterial teaching of the Encylical
Quadrigesimo Anno cannot be squared with this subversive feminist ideology, which is dedicated to wrenching a married woman away from domestic life and into the working world so that she does not have to be reliant upon a man.
As regards the virtuous woman of Poverbs chapter 31, dear friend, it is true that she spends some time beyond the borders of her home, providing from all quarters maintenance for her household. However, we are told in that lovely passage (v. 27) that this godly women
carefully watches over the conduct of her family and domestics, which she simply could not have done had she been absent from the home for any great length of time. Moreover, it is perfectly clear that her home is the centre of all her operations because she is fully aware that this is her
proper care and duty, unlike many women today. If, as Sacred Scripture tells us, “Man goeth forth to his work and to his labour until evening” (Psalm 104: 23), a married women finds her true work as a “keeper at home” (Titus 2: 5), which is “the task assigned her for the good of society, by nature and by marriage” (Pope Pius XII). If the role of being a full-time wife and mother has been assigned to women by the divine providence, then surely they should embrace it wholeheartedly. The pious woman of Proverbs does not live a life of self-indulgent inactivity at home, but is occupied in personal and domestic industry, ready and will to undertake any work that befits her sex and station. What you have here is actually a godly and industrious home-builder and therefore a true model for all married women to emulate.
It is so easy, dear friend, to come to this elegant passage and then seek to impose upon it our 21st. century notions respecting the role of women and their ‘emancipation’ from allegedly unfulfilling domestic duties and child rearing. Of course one can take isloated texts and use them as pegs on which to hang our own particular avant garde opinions, but that is not the approach of an authentic Catholicism. We look at the context of a passage and then the perenial teaching of the Church
throughout the ages to determine its meaning. At any rate, I have yet to see any Catholic exegete, ancient or modern, use this lovely Proverbs passage for polemical purposes to lend support to married women working beyond the borders of the home. It is the subversive ideology of radical feminism which has unrelentingly stressed the emancipation of womanhood and the place of women beyond the home in every sphere of life that a man occupies. This false and toxic ideology has asserted that a woman has the ‘right’ to make for herself a career as well as her husband, notwithstanding that this means the sacrifice of the divine pattern for home home life and healthy family relationships.
God bless.
Warmest good wishes,
Portrait
Pax