I'm having a really tough time writing exactly what I thought about this book. Mostly because, while I agree with the basic message Crabb was intending to convey, I disagree with his execution. I guess I should also mention that there might be spoilers but with a book like this, is that possible?
Length- This book is 219 pages with 27 chapters. While 219 pages is typically not a very large book, it sure felt long. Crabb is pretty redundant. There are several chapters in a row that are short and repeat the previous chapter's contents almost exactly. There was a lot of talk with the same two messages repeating over and over and over. I understand he wants to emphasize his message but, in my opinion, he fails to elaborate very articulately what to do about it.
Content- This is where rubber hits the road so to speak and where I failed to agree with Crabb's execution. On pages 218 and 219, he summarizes his basic messages in neat little boxes. Which makes me wonder why I had to read 217 pages for something that could fit inside a little box to include two paragraphs. Basically, Crabb states that everyone is either male or female. But we are not all feminine women or masculine men.
The Feminine Woman- A unfeminine woman lives closed off from others, controlling others, guarding herself, living defensively or protectively of herself. Her motivational fear is invisibility. Crabb says "She relates with one embraced purpose in mind: to encourage others to be consumed and transformed by the beauty of the God who sees, invites, nourishes, and enjoys His people." There are several finer points Crabb details in his book about women that I found odd and of which I was unable to articulate my exact feelings. Suffice to say, if I pointed them all out, this review would be too long. So I will stick with the main points. According to Crabb (pg 42) a woman will not be a feminine woman unless "she relates in a way that invites others to see something about God that is irresistibly attractive, something about the relational nature of God that she was created to enjoy and reveal." Crabb never moves beyond this thought. He talks about how women live in the fear of invisibility (which I do not agree with) and need to live in an inviting and open way; never articulating what he means by that exactly.
The Masculine Man- A masculine man hears the struggles of others, moves towards others, and sacrifices himself to serve others. To take directly from Crabb: "He relates with one embraced purpose in mind: to encourage others to trust and to rest in the beauty of the God who is always moving toward others in in love". Crabb also says on pg 108 " In their aloneness, men fear weightlessness. Do I what it takes to move into community, into soul-to-soul connection? To risk that my moving will have no visible impact? To move toward other who might not value my movement?" Not sure if this resonates with the guys or not. I'm leaving it at that since I can't speak for the dudes.
What does this mean to me? I certainly believe, as a Christian, that God created us to live in community with each other. We need to live beyond selfishness/ourselves and consider others as more important than ourselves. Which I think Crabb was trying to point out but failed to write very well. But my biggest problem is that he does not point us to the Bible as our source for living a Christ-driven life. As a woman, myself, I believe that femininity is not exclusive to living in "an inviting way". As a woman, I believe I am inherently feminine because God created me to be a woman. I am feminine, not just in spirit, but also in body. The physical description of a woman is feminine, something which Crabb openly denies as true. Crabb is attempting to make masculinity/femininity and gender mutually exclusive. Furthermore, I think Crabb is wrong about female and male fears. I do not live in fear of being invisible. I believe everyone has fears of all different types that can motivate certain behavior. It is not just one blanket fear for women and another for men. At the end of his book, Crabb does not tell the reader to study the Bible and work towards a "circumcised heart". Philippians talks about this very subject especially in 2:3-4: "Do nothing from rivalry or conceit, but in humility count others more significant than yourselves. Let each of you look not only to his own interests, but also to the interests of others." And 2:13 "for it is God who works in you, both to will and to work for his good pleasure". No matter how we screw things up, and we will, God is always working in us.
The better question, in my mind, would be to ask "How can I live in a way that shares the gospel?" or "How can my reaction to this situation share the gospel?" I guess when it comes down to it, for me anyway, I don't struggle with not feeling feminine. I feel like a feminine woman, made in God's image, who just wants to live a more God-centered life. Thus, I don't feel this book resonated with me in any meaningful way. Maybe it would to someone else. I finish my review with these exhortations from the apostle Paul: "There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither slave nor free, there is neither male nor female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus." Galatians 3:28 And also Colossians 3:11 "Here there is not Greek and Jew, circumcised and uncircumcised, barbarian, Scythian, slave, free; but Christ is all, and in all." I do not believe that there is particular set of characteristics that define women or men who reside in Christ. The fruit of the spirit will be evident in those who are walking in the Lord. Biblically, we all live under the same laws, which are applied equally to everyone. God's law, gospel, love and grace is not gender specific.