Men Couldn’t Have Written Jesus
The Bible isn’t about men. They’re just the weather — the cold front that makes the real story necessary.
The argument that Christianity was invented by men to control people gets passed around as if it were a devastating insight. It is not. It mistakes the backdrop for the subject. The Bible is not centered on men. Men are the occasion for what actually matters — the cold front of cruelty and indifference that makes the real story necessary. The people they overlooked, dismissed, sold, abandoned, and failed to feed: those are the center. The text knows exactly what it is doing. It always has.
Esther and Ruth do not have their own books as footnotes to a male narrative. They have their own books because their stories are the point. Ruth is a foreign widow — two categories of person that the ancient world considered marginal by definition — and the book bearing her name is a story of loyalty, provision, and redemption that requires no male hero to resolve it. Esther saves her entire people through courage that the men around her conspicuously lack. These are not supporting characters. They are what the tradition is actually about.
Meanwhile, the men who nominally lead the story are almost uniformly instructive in their failure. David is an adulterer and a murderer whose kingdom fractures under the weight of his own appetites. Moses never reaches the promised land. The disciples argue about status while Jesus is predicting his death. The great men of the Bible are not great in the way the word usually means. They are present. They are named. And they are repeatedly, almost tenderly, shown to be insufficient.

















