Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Created to be His Help Meet -- aka: The book that makes my heart implode and die



I received this book in the mail today: Created to be His Help Meet, by Debi Pearl . I have not been able to put it down. Not because it is good, but because it is so terrible! I received it from a cousin (who obviously does not know me very well...) and I was interested to see what she thought I needed to read, so I perused the table of contents.

The first little tidbit that I came across was: "Successful Wife's Summary" and I thought “this ought to be good.” I had no idea how good. Author, Debi Pearl, has described a few main "categories" of men and how women should cater to them. This passage that made my blood boil seems to sum up the main theme of this book fairly accurately (and it was only the beginning). All italics/ bold/ underline/ etc. are the author’s :

"Successful Wife Summary:

a) The wife of Mr. Command Man can heal her marriage by becoming his adoring Queen, honoring and obeying his every (reasonable and unreasonable) word. She will dress, act, and speak so as to bring him honor everywhere she goes.

b) The wife of Mr. Visionary can heal her marriage by laying aside her own dreams and aspirations and embracing her role as help meet to her man, believing in him and being willing to follow him with joyful participation in the path he has chosen.

c) The wife of Mr. Steady can heal her marriage by joyfully realizing what a friend, lover, and companion she has been given and living that gratitude verbally and actively. When she stops trying to change him, he will grow. She can, then, willingly take up tasks that will fill her time and give her husband joy and satisfaction when he sees her productiveness.” (p.92)

How very charming.

I was astounded that this book was written by a woman (with the approval of her husband, no doubt). Though I consider myself a fairly independent woman, I don’t think you need to be in order to be offended by this book. This woman is stating that women have no worth in and of themselves and they exist only to serve and please their husbands. At some points in this book she says these things verbatim: “God’s ultimate goal for you is to meet your man’s needs” (p. 162).

At first, it filled me with rage—actually, it still fills me with rage—but it fills me with sorrow too. Especially when I read this: “When you married you signed over to become a minister to his needs. Your life’s work is to minister to your husband. Marriage means becoming one flesh. It does not mean being best friends” (p. 165).

I have only been married 1 ½ years and never thought I would feel qualified to give marital advice to anyone, let alone a woman who has been married for 34 years, but my god, she has no idea. Edward and I are best friends. I don’t know how people manage if they aren’t.

Not only is this book extremely sexist, misogynistic, and against Biblical principals, the writing just sucks. She makes liberal use of italics, underlines, bold face print, and exclamation points (all big no-no’s in Brent Cline classes. If you can’t get the reader’s attention with the language alone, stop writing). The only reason I kept reading was for more blog-rant material…and curiosity: could this possibly get any worse? (Usually the answer was yes).

Debi Pearl describes people in her stories as “pretty dumb” and “hillbilly ugly, which is worse than regular ugly.” If this were intended to be a farcical book (which it achieves without trying…) then these names would be a bit more excusable, because the audience would know that the author/ narrator was aware of their own absurdity. That is not the case with this book. I kept waiting for the punch line, but it never came—she’s dead serious.


This is the website that refutes most of what this book claims, comparing it to the Bible: http://createdtobehelpmeet.blogspot.com/

This is the book's website: http://www.createdtobehishelpmeet.org/

Excerpts: http://www.createdtobehishelpmeet.org/excerpts

2 comments:

  1. Wow...I am baffled by the summaries alone. I guess I've always thought that pursuing individual goals along with those you seek together in marriage should be how it works best. That's my plan. If both a husband and wife are not individuals in some capacity neither can bring anything new to the marriage. Why should a wife have to "heal" her marriage constantly. What does that even mean?? Shouldn't you know the person you're marrying enough before you get married to know how your personalities fit together? Why would you marry someone you have to change for? I have always thought that being able to be completely myself with the man I'm marrying is one of the reasons we work so well. I'm marrying my best friend and I couldn't be more thrilled--a Debi Pearl marriage is NOT for me.

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  2. GREAT comment Laurel! I completely agree. :) That must be why I am so appalled by this book... I just can't fathom having to live that way. And I don't understand how someone can honestly believe all of these ridiculous things.

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