A few years ago women students at Talbot were invited to a luncheon to listen to a couple of faculty women talk about Wisdom Calls. A student coordinator, Angela Song, sent me these questions in advance and here are the answers I jotted down.

1. 聽What does it mean for you to tune your ears to wisdom, to search聽after it as you would for lost money or hidden treasure?

Wisdom is hard earned. It is a constant pursuit鈥攐ne doesn鈥檛 just have wisdom and then sail along. Wisdom requires a lifelong paying attention to what God says, listening humbly to Him, and acknowledging that He knows and you do not. The word wisdom in Hebrew actually means, 鈥渟kill in living, making righteous decisions, living in harmony with God鈥檚 plan.鈥 So it鈥檚 not esoteric鈥攊t鈥檚 highly practical. It鈥檚 righteous living at its best. I think the words, 鈥渟earch,鈥 indicate that it is not just out in the open, but it is somewhat hidden, yet findable, and requiring energy.

I just finished reading 鈥淓at. Pray. Love鈥 because I鈥檓 preparing a message on it for our Women鈥檚 Fall brunch at church. I wanted to see what was in this book that has been captivating for so many women! It has been on the bestseller list for months and now is a popular movie that many women have seen. Anyway, I鈥檓 not recommending the book鈥攊t won鈥檛 give you wisdom. But the author talks about meeting with a wise man in Bali. He just sits on his porch and dispenses advice, reads people鈥檚 palms, etc. But I noticed that he lived by many of God鈥檚 standards. She asks him for advice about sex with a man she is not married to, and he replies that he cannot give her any because he has only had sex with one woman, his deceased wife. But in that statement he gave true wisdom, because that is God鈥檚 call for us鈥攖o have sex only with our husband or to be chaste until marriage. That鈥檚 true wisdom鈥攍iving with skill.

2. 聽If you could reframe one Biblical character鈥檚 experience whose聽transformation or growth has impacted you, who would that be? 聽What聽have you learned from them that鈥檚 spoken into your life?

Well, I love all the Biblical women. In fact, they are my area of interest and study. I teach a course on 鈥淏iblical and Historical Women in Ministry鈥 here at Talbot.

I identify with Eve, she was deceived and she ate. I am like her in my sinfulness. I identify with Leah, raising a large family, trying to follow God in that鈥攁ll the havoc of a large family, an unruly family. I identify with Deborah, leading a nation and leading as a mother. But I guess I may be most impacted by Elizabeth.

Elizabeth is described as 鈥渦pright in the sight of God, observing all the Lord鈥檚 commandments and regulations blamelessly.鈥 That鈥檚 an incredible statement in scripture for any person, male or female. Elizabeth was completely out of sync with her culture; she had not done the one thing that was required for prestige and honor from her community, which was to bear a child, yet in spite of that handicap, she walked with God blamelessly. She was humble enough that she undertook to mentor the mother of our Lord, Mary, who was a slip of a girl, young enough to be Elizabeth鈥檚 daughter, yet when God said, 鈥淵ou, Elizabeth will bear the forerunner to the Messiah, and this little girl, your relative, will bear the Messiah,鈥 Elizabeth said, 鈥淢ay your Name be praised and exalted, King of the Universe.鈥 She accepted what I think should have been a reversed position! She, the wiser, the older, should have borne the Christ child, but instead, she humbly accepted second place and mentored the younger woman who achieved far greater lasting honor.

I am so humbled by this鈥攊t is so not me! But I also see Elizabeth鈥檚 example of mentoring the younger woman, and I am instructed by that. I want to follow in her train.

3. 聽What is one area that has been like a 鈥渢horn in the flesh鈥 that聽has increased your sensitivity to being absolutely dependent on聽Christ?

I think perhaps having 5 children, though I hesitate to say they are a thorn in the flesh鈥攕urely not! Yet they limited me. And at times I chafed against that. And the Lord reassured me again and again that they were His plan for my life. That it was not better for me to work, or write a book or teach a large Bible study. For many years they were the center of my work, but they were limiting. They kept me coming back to the Lord to say, 鈥淪et me free from this dastardly ambition that keeps rearing its head. Let me serve you quietly, humbly here from home.鈥

But that is seeing it all from the wrong perspective鈥攚as Moses limited in his years in the desert? Was Abigail limited by her surly husband? Was Esther limited by her role in the palace? Yes, and no. The limitations that God builds into our life are purposefulthey are intentional. Like Elizabeth, He wants us to walk through them with integrity, yielding to Him instead of fighting Him. Saying yes, Your will鈥攏ot mine. Don鈥檛 underestimate your will---it is strong and it is oppositional to God when we operate in our flesh, our self.

4. 聽In what ways do you rejoice and fully embrace your gender as a聽woman? How has it been difficult for you to love the ways you are聽different from a man?

I love being a woman. The feminine body is complex and beautiful鈥攋ust visit any museum in the world and you will see feminine beauty glorified. I feel connected to women鈥擨 understand what they are going through. I can empathize and encourage. Women are internal. Our body teaches us that. We are not all on the surface. We don鈥檛 even understand ourselves, yet we expect the men in our lives to understand us. That鈥檚 pretty much impossible.

In my day, coming of age in the 60鈥檚 when women鈥檚 liberation began to have such an effect on society, I found that I envied the autonomy of men鈥攖hey could have it all鈥攎inistry, family, travel. And I was confined by my large family and a very busy husband who traveled a great deal. We lived far from our families of origin so I didn鈥檛 have a mom or sis to help me with the kids. So God had a lot of work to do in my heart to cleanse me of so many jealousies and ambitions. To teach me to be happy in a quiet place at home.

Today men and women are probably regarded as too similar. The idea of woman鈥檚 work is pass茅, yet I still love women鈥檚 work. I鈥檓 grateful not to have had the responsibility of a lifelong financial support of a family. But I had to really work on releasing the autonomy thing to God.

5. 聽What does it look like for you to be in submission to your聽husband, and in what ways has that posture changed or been challenged聽throughout your marriage?

Submission was an issue for me before Don and I were even married. I grew up in a family where my mom ruled the roost, and she didn鈥檛 do it well. She was overbearing with my dad and even unkind to him at times. It made me long for something different in my marriage, but then I had this model of the wife getting her way! That was probably not going to happen with Don Sunukjian who had his own plans, thank you very much!

So God had to change my heart, quiet my heart, and give me the desire to follow my husband鈥檚 plans for our lives even before we were married. I can tell you the place on the 5 freeway where God spoke to my heart and made me willing to love and yield to Don as my husband. There have been many times that I鈥檝e rebelled, but in the main, Don has known that he could eventually count on me to follow his leadership. He took me places I didn鈥檛 want to go, but in every circumstance, God was faithful.

As we have aged together, our marriage has been much more sharing in household activities. He made dinner more often than I did during the last 11 years that I worked full-time. He did most almost all of the grocery shopping, he cleans up after meals more often than I do. He accommodated my schedule and encouraged me in every way he could while I was pastor to women at Ev. Free.

6. 聽How important is it for you to practice the discipline of rest or聽the commitment to seek beauty in your life as a woman?

I鈥檓 deeply committed to both practices. I rest daily on a regular schedule of going to bed and rising. I don鈥檛 cheat on sleep. It doesn鈥檛 pay. I always take a day off from my responsibilities鈥攖o spend time with my husband, to be outdoors, to get up without an alarm, to have a long conversation with a friend.

I need beauty in my life and seek it regularly. I see it in my garden, in daily walks through my neighborhood, in regular vacations with my husband, in being outdoors, roses and many flowers, and in the faces of my beautiful grandchildren. Nothing could be more beautiful than they are. I relish sunsets, walks on the Huntington Beach pier, quiet mornings with fog in my backyard, Sunday worship music and the mountains when they are covered with snow.

7. 聽What are the roles you find most satisfaction in and how have they聽been areas of growth for you?

My role as mother has been the most satisfying in my life. And it has required constant growth in time management, anger control, prayer, and the practice of giving thanks.

I also found enormous satisfaction in serving as pastor to women for 10 years. I loved the planning, leading a team, praying for the people of our church, and teaching the scriptures. It was profoundly satisfying and certainly required tremendous reliance on the leading of the Holy Spirit.

Being a pastor鈥檚 wife was also very satisfying to me. I liked having a 鈥榤om and pop鈥 operation, as Don called it, with both of us deeply involved with the church and the lives of the congregation, and then hearing him preach every week.

Teaching at Talbot now is a bonus and joy and very satisfying, too. Getting to mentor young women is the frosting on my cake!