??
Q:
Your book, surprisingly, doesn’t focus on body image.
If women aren’t asking, “Do you think I’m beautiful?” in
regard to their bodies, then what are they asking about?
A: I
think the question is more about acceptance.
The deeper ‘beautiful’ we long for is about being seen and known
deeply, but we often find ourselves looking for that answer in every place
but the right one. I know
because I have been there. Other
people and some things like career and education can give us a part of the
answer, but ultimately, the fullness of being called beautiful can only
come as a shout from God.
Q:
If this question is common to all women, when do they first begin to
ask?
A: From
my childhood, I began to realize that I could not have anything in life
that required me to be beautiful.
I understood almost instinctively that I should keep my head down,
study hard, try to do the right thing and, maybe, life would turn out okay
in the end. When no one
notices, we learn to pretend that it doesn’t matter.
But it matters and it has mattered from our earliest memories.
Q:
So many teenage girls struggle
with feeling unlovely, which sometimes leads to eating disorders,
depression and worse.
How does it harm women to measure their value by physical beauty?
A:
We are wired for
relationship and we can’t help it . . . we want others to validate what
they see in us or about us. But
to believe that complete acceptance will finally come from the words of a
man or a society is harmful. Apart
from the truth of God’s love, we’ll find ourselves spiritually
impoverished.
We become like the prodigal son who has left his father to
pursue pleasure . . . eventually he finds himself empty, broke and almost
dead. But just like the
prodigal, we can come to our senses and watch the Father run to us with His
wild love, assuring us that He has always called us beautiful.
Q:
How do you see grown women, even
Christian women, trying to deal with this question?
A:
Many of us pretend and many of us become functional addicts, trying
to drown out the voices in our heads that tell us we are unworthy and
unlovely. A woman might have
one glass of wine for dinner, but the rest of the bottle after everyone is
gone. Reasonable shopping out
with the girls, but reckless spending later via catalogs.
Responsible Internet use with the children, but late nights in chat
rooms with inappropriate discussions.
We smile a lot, dance around it, hide the pain with some forms of
pleasure. But soon the
pleasure is gone. The thrill
is gone. The desire is gone.
And we are still left with the question, unanswered.
Q: Where does the desire for beauty originate?
Is it merely a cultural phenomenon in our Western world?
A: I truly believe that the longing to be known as beautiful is part of
our design as women. God put
us together this way on purpose. I
have been talking to women, discussing this idea.
I have been in meetings with some of the most brilliant women I’ve
ever known. Women who run
companies, dress like someone out of Vogue
magazine, have engaging relational skills, and just plain intimidate every
other woman they meet. Even
these women are haunted by the question (Am I beautiful?).
Q: There will be women who hear you and think, “I don’t even ask-I know
I’m not beautiful.” What
do you say to these women?
A: Me too. Or at least
that used to be me. But what I most want to tell these women is that God
calls them beautiful; He is enthralled with their beauty.
I am telling you that the God of Heaven and earth is wild about you!
He’s smitten, He’s consumed, He’s so taken with you!
Let Him make you captivating. How
much more of your life do you want to pass?
Q: Angela, do you think you’re beautiful?
A: I finally know for sure what God says about me.
He calls me beautiful!