Back in early June, when the other thread was only a couple of weeks old, I had no real problems with the idea that women should not be given leadership/eldership roles in the church but couldn’t see any good reason why they should be barred from teaching mixed congregations. That was the result of many years of hardly thinking about these particular issues at all. Since then I’ve done a lot of reading and, as a result, I now see no good reason why suitably gifted and qualified women shouldn’t also be elders. Thank you to all whose comments have worried me enough to go and search these things out, get even more worried, read more and finally make up my mind.
In a review of Wayne Grudem’s Evangelical Feminism: A New Path to Liberalism Kevin Giles writes,
Evangelical Feminism is written to further a cause that has consumed the author’s working life: the permanent subordination of women as God’s ideal. It judges all fellow evangelicals who disagree on this matter to be “theological liberals,” or implicit liberals. The fundamental seismic fault in the author’s thinking is that he cannot differentiate between the interpretation of Scripture and Scripture itself. For him, if anyone rejects his interpretation of the key texts on which he and other hierarchists base their case for the permanent subordination of women, then that believer is by definition rejecting the authority of Scripture. What this means is that the methodological challenge to interpret Scripture rightly in its given historical and cultural context and to apply what is said rightly in another historical and cultural context is solved by assuming and asserting that “my interpretation” tells you exactly what the Bible says. When an author claims that one’s interpretation of God’s word is God’s word without any caveats, then, by implication, one is claiming to speak for God. The author is asserting that what he says the Bible says is what God says, and, thus, if you disagree with him, you are disagreeing with God.
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To begin an honest and open dialogue, we have to agree that the issue is not the authority of Scripture, but how Scripture is to be interpreted and applied. Evangelical egalitarians do not reject the authority of Scripture; they reject an interpretation of the Scriptures that suggests that God’s unchanging ideal is the subordination of women.
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Hierarchists may have the very highest view of Scripture, but, by making their theory the “glasses” or grid through which the Bible’s teaching on women is to be interpreted, they dishonor Scripture by not allowing Scripture to speak in its own terms.
Kathryn wrote that,
Deborah was sent to Israel as a makr of Gods judgment on the men for failing to step up to the plate.
That is an interpretation of the text based on the interpretive principle that God created women to be always subordinate to men. The Bible says only that “the children of Israel cried out to the LORD; for Jabin had nine hundred chariots of iron, and for twenty years he harshly oppressed the children of Israel.” (Judges 4:3)
It is true that there is a great deal in the OT that is descriptive rather than prescriptive, e.g., the story of Judah and Tamar, of the Levite’s concubine and of all those polygamous relationships. Note that in all these, sometimes horrific, stories of sin the parties involved were all sinful human beings. In the case of Deborah, the prophetess, (prophets getting listed after apostles but before evangelists, pastors and teachers in Ephesians 4:11 - for those who are interested in how roles/functions are ordered) it was God, Himself, who chose to speak to His people through her and thereby make a leader of her. Can God go against His own will? Can God do what is wrong? Do you think that God could not have raised up a man to do the job He gave to Deborah if His eternal will was that no woman should ever have a position of leadership/authority/teaching (including over men) among His people?
There was a judgement if you can call being humiliated a judgement. The humiliation was not of all Israel but of Barak and he was not humiliated because of anything Deborah did but because of what Jael did.
And Barak said to her, “If you will go with me, then I will go; but if you will not go with me, I will not go!”
So she said, “I will surely go with you; nevertheless there will be no glory for you in the journey you are taking, for the LORD will sell Sisera into the hand of a woman. (Judges 4:8-9 NKJV)
I will leave you with an article written in 1985 titled Why Evangelicals are Vulnerable to Cults. The author, Harold Bussell, points out that,
A close examination of every major cult today, with the exception of Eastern cults, reveals that they all began in an evangelical church or with a leader from an evangelical background.
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First they all began by defining themselves as being in opposition to their local church, their denomination, or the church at large. ... Their foundation always began with an identity by opposition. Second, in all these systems, the pastor or leader was placed in a position beyond confrontation, coupled with a tight discipleship or shepherding approach to instruction. Third, all these groups placed a high emphasis on group sharing, testimonies, spirituality, devotions, and, in some cases, Bible study. Fourth, in all of these groups the leader had gained some new spiritual insight emphasizing the last days, healing, community, or spirituality. Fifth, all of these groups slowly developed their own subcultural spiritual language.
Those who believe in the eternal subordination of the Son to the Father, and therefore of women to men, identify themselves in opposition to those dastardly “liberals” who allow women to have any sort of position of leadership over men. Their leaders regard their own teachings as so authoritative that all dissenters must be, well, dastardly “liberals”. That kind of put down tends to help leaders avoid confrontation. I don’t know about the group sharing, testimonies thing. But there is definitely the new spiritual insight in relation to the Trinity which says that the Son is eternally subordinate to the Father.
I’m not saying that evangelicals who believe in the subordination of women should all be classed as members of a cult. But I am deeply concerned about where all this is going.