Hey! My name is Ndanu, a Kenyan by birth, a daughter, wife, and mom to two beautiful children.
Daughters, Not Sons: Wrestling with Identity in Christ
Hey! My name is Ndanu, a Kenyan by birth, a daughter, wife, and mom to two beautiful children. These titles are most important and honorable to me as a child of God, with my identity hidden in Christ. I believe this is so, so that I can keep on pursuing Him to be first revealed to who He is and as a reward, be given a name that no one knows! And I look forward to it all. Praise God! Recently, I had a little misunderstanding with someone on Instagram after I mentioned that she’s a daughter of God, not a son of God. She didn’t take it too well and ended up blocking me. It made me smile a bit and think, “Maybe it’s better to share my thoughts openly rather than in private messages.” Soinstead of DMs, I decided to write about it, and here we are!
But honestly, I think it’s correct to recognize ourselves as daughters. In fact, Genesis 6 paints an interesting contrast: “That the sons of God saw the daughters of men that they were fair” (Genesis 6:2 KJV). The Bible clearly distinguishes sons from daughters, showing that God’s Word did not flatten the genders into one.
So how did we end up with women calling themselves “sons of God”?
Questioning Pauline Sonship
So at what point did we read Paul’s letters and assume he mistook women to be sons? I do not think Paul, who was so deliberate and precise in doctrine, would make such a grave mistake. So then, what is the true identity we as women carry in Christ? I think there is a hidden dispensation somewhere in God’s Word that speaks about the daughter ship in Christ, a mystery yet to be revealed in its fullness. And I believe this revelation would help women pursue God in the rightful place of being daughters, affirmed in who we are, without feeling the need to borrow an identity never meant for us. The reality is that the Bible is deeply patriarchal in its cultural setting. In the Temple, the women’s court was on the outer part, while the men could go further in. Yet even this structure might carry meaning for us. Perhaps it was not simply about exclusion, but about function, showing us that women have a role in helping the sons of God step into the holy of holies. For when they do, the glory of God is revealed upon the earth.
In that light, Paul’s frequent addressing of “the brothers” may not mean women are left out, but that his
focus was primarily on guiding the men into their place of sonship, kingship, and priesthood. Our role as
daughters may then be to strengthen, nurture, and support that journey so that the fullness of God’s order can be revealed. This tension is also seen in Acts 21:27–29, where Paul was accused of polluting the temple by bringing Greeks into it:
“And when the seven days were almost ended, the Jews which were of Asia, when they saw him in the temple, stirred up all the people, and laid hands on him, crying out, Men of Israel, help: This is the man, that teacheth all men every where against the people, and the law, and this place: and further brought Greeks also into the temple, and hath polluted this holy place. (For they had seen before with him in the city Trophimus an Ephesian, whom they supposed that Paul had brought into the temple.)” —Acts 21:27– 29 (KJV)
learly, temple identity and gendered spaces mattered deeply in that time.
The Bible’s Use of the Feminine
Another point we cannot ignore: the Bible frequently uses the female image for structure and meaning.
- The Bride of Christ is a central metaphor for the Church (Ephesians 5:25–27; Revelation 21:2).
- Cities are often portrayed as women—Jerusalem is called a woman in Isaiah 66:10–13,and the New Jerusalem is described “as a bride adorned for her husband” (Revelation 21:2).
- Wisdom is personified as a woman: “Wisdom hath builded her house, she hath hewn out her seven pillars” (Proverbs 9:1 KJV).
This shows that femininity in Scripture is not erased—it is exalted for symbolic and structural purposes. Sons may inherit, AND daughters give identity and life. The bride gives covenant meaning. The city gives belonging. The mother gives comfort and birth. So perhaps the tension is not that women are excluded from spiritual inheritance, but that God deliberately reserved certain metaphors, sonship for legal inheritance, daughterhood for nurture, bridehood for covenant, and womanhood for birthing and building. Both male and female imagery together give us the fullness of God’s household.
Wrestling with Identity
Perhaps our role is not to wrestle the title of “sons” from Scripture but to embrace the fullness of being daughters of God, which is no less powerful. Perhaps our part is to guide men to live in obedience as kings and priests, as Jesus commanded, while we stand in our God-given place of birthing, nurturing, and multiplying life, both physically and spiritually. Even Eve’s act of eating from the tree can be read as a disruption of order, reaching for something before it was given. Could this mirror the danger of women trying to claim a form of sonship that was never theirs to begin with?
Maybe the point is not whether we are called “sons” or “daughters” but whether we live faithfully in the
family of God. Still, it stirs my heart to think: perhaps heaven does not erase daughterhood after all. If God has a family in heaven and on earth (Ephesians 3:14–15), then daughters must be as much a part of that household as sons. And yet, I cannot ignore one thing: this whole sonship/daughterhood issue is deeply tied to submission.
It speaks to how we as women struggle to be submissive because we want equality so badly, we want to be at the front with the men. And therefore, calling ourselves “sons of God” may be part of our struggle with submission. But that’s another conversation for another day… and it’s an article I’ll be writing very soon.




