The Girl Who Baptized Herself
How a Lost Scripture About a Saint Named Thecla Reveals the Power of Knowing Our Worth
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- £8.49
Publisher Description
This riveting exploration of a nearly lost first-century scripture tells the story of a courageous saint named Thecla and offers us a road map to knowing our worth.
“Meggan Watterson writes with a prophet’s vision and a mystic’s heart.”—Arianna Huffington, founder and CEO, Thrive Global
A teenage girl named Thecla is sitting at her bedroom window listening to a man share stories nearby. Her mother and fiancé order her to stop. But Thecla, trapped in a world that expects her to marry and have children, refuses. This man, Paul, is talking about a world she wants to believe in: an inner world of freedom to define her own life. And he’s talking about a kind of love she hasn’t known before—a love that asks her to be true to who she is within.
For Meggan Watterson, a Harvard-trained feminist theologian, Thecla’s story in The Acts of Paul and Thecla has everything to do with power. Thecla’s refusal to be controlled, as well as the authority she reclaims by baptizing herself, reads like a lost gospel for finding our own source of power within—a power that allows us to know who we are and to make choices based on that knowing. This hidden scripture suggests that Christianity before the fourth century was about defying the patriarchy, not deifying it. But early church fathers excluded The Acts of Paul and Thecla, along with other sacred texts such as The Gospel of Mary, from the New Testament.
Watterson synthesizes scripture, memoir, and politics to illuminate a story that has been left out of the canon for far too long, one that follows a girl freeing herself from a life predicated on the expectations of others—a path that made her feel unworthy. Thecla’s story offers us a path to take back the power we often give to others and live based on the truth of who we are.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In this dynamic treatise, theologian Watterson (Mary Magdalene Revealed) excavates the egalitarian roots of Christianity via the life of a largely forgotten saint. In the fourth century, the emperor Constantine declared Christianity the official religion of the Roman Empire, and the council of Nicaea ordered the destruction of the Gospel of Mary, the Acts of Paul and Thecla, and other texts that cut against notions of "an exclusively male succession of divine authority." Drawing on these scriptures, which were saved by monks and rediscovered between the late 19th and mid-20th centuries, Watterson recounts the story of Thecla, who lived in the first century, refused marriage to follow the apostle Paul, dedicated her life to spreading Christ's teachings, and baptized herself in a moment of crisis—an act that illustrated a profound self-belief rooted in God's love. According to Watterson, Thecla's story reflects a Christianity that existed before the fourth century less as a religion than "an ancient version of an equal rights movement." Though some of the book's scriptural lessons veer off-topic, Watterson perceptively analyzes the links between power, authority, and embodied faith (she contends that Christian spirituality has often ignored the "sweaty, messy, bloody reality of the... human body"). The result is a vibrant and creative reframing of traditional Christian power paradigms.