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Just recently the Episcopal Church elected its first woman
presiding bishop over the objections of a sizable minority of
Episcopalians. A spokesman for the dissenters explained their
concerns were not over a female to lead the church but over her
support for openly gay bishops. There are so many issues here it
is hard to know where to start. But I want to discuss whether or
not it is right for a woman to take a leadership role in the
church.
I know that even raising this issue places me on the "kook
fringe" with many professed Christians. So be it. If you've
never taken an unpopular stand and been called insulting names,
you had better question whether or not you are really a
Christian (Matthew_10:25; John_17:14).
If you truly follow Christ, the world and its standards are not
your standards. Rather, the will of Christ as revealed in the
New Testament is the rule by which you live (John_12:48-49;
Matthew_28:18; Colossians_3:17; John_16:13-15; 2Timothy_1:13).
Thus, we will let the New Testament settle this question.
The apostle Paul revealed, "But I want you to know that the head
of every man is Christ, the head of woman is man, and the head
of Christ is God" (1Corinthians_11:3). How does the New
Testament apply this principle?
In the same letter Paul commanded:
Let your women keep silent in the churches, for they are not
permitted to speak; but they are to be submissive, as the law
also says. And if they want to learn something, let them ask
their own husbands at home; for it is shameful for women to
speak in church. (1Corinthians_14:34-35).
What restrictions do these verses place on women as teachers of
the Bible?
It is obvious that "churches" in verse 34 and "church" in verse
35 refer to the public worship assemblies of the local church.
The immediate context pertains to tongue speakers and prophets
addressing the worship assemblies (verses 27-33).
Does this mean no woman may utter a word in the public worship
assemblies? If so, women cannot sing (Ephesians_5:19), confess
their faith (Romans_10:9-10), or confess sin (James_5:16) in
church. The apostle prohibits women from engaging in the kind of
speaking of the context - authoritatively addressing the public
worship assembly. By doing this women cast off their role of
subjection to man. From the very beginning the principle of
feminine submission has been true (verse 35; cf. Genesis_3:16).
Women must not speak in the assembly in such a way that their
subjection to man is violated.
The apostle later wrote:
Let a woman learn in silence with all submission. And I do not
permit a woman to teach or to have authority over a man, but to
be in silence. (1 Timothy 2:11-12)
The purpose of First Timothy is to teach an evangelist how to
conduct himself relative to the church (1Timothy_3:14-15). These
principles fulfilled in the local congregation, the only
organized relationship divinely authorized for the church.
1Timothy_2:9-15 gives divine legislation peculiar to godly women
and reasons for these commands. Verses nine and ten regulate the
dress of women. These requirements apply both in and out of the
assembly. Verses eleven and twelve limit the woman in her roles
of learning (verse 11) and teaching (verse 12). Verses thirteen
and fourteen state the reasons for the woman's subjection, and
verse fifteen assures her she can be saved. These truths do
primarily apply to her relationship to the local congregation,
in light of the general context, but their application is not
limited to the public worship assembly.
Verse eleven regulates a woman's learning. Her activities as a
Bible student have two limitations not placed on men: "in
silence with all submission." In short, in all the woman's
learning activities in the local church, she must be submissive
to male leadership.
Verse twelve forbids women to "teach" or "exercise dominion over
men in the church. The principle is the same as that of
1Corinthians_14:34-35. Women, in their roles as students and
teachers of the Bible in the church, must be submissive to men.
Thus, a woman may not be a preacher. Evangelists are to speak
"with all authority" (Titus_2:15). The woman in her teaching
role, relative to man, must be under authority; whereas the
preacher, in his teaching, is to be in authority over the
audience.
Furthermore, the fact the woman must be submissive to man in her
teaching forbids her to take any leading role in the assembly of
the church when men are present. This is the reason the apostle
makes special reference to woman's submission when he forbids
her to do the kind of speaking some women were doing at Corinth
(1Corinthians_14:34-35). Everything done in the assembly of the
church is to be for edification, i.e., building up by teaching
(verse 26; cf. Hebrews_10:24-25). By taking a leading role in
the assembly where men are present, the woman would be teaching
over a man. This is the reason women must not make
announcements, wait on the Lord's table, lead prayers, lead
singing, or take the collection in worship assemblies where men
are present.
Additionally, a woman must not be the teacher in charge of a
Bible class where men are present. This would place her in the
role of exercising dominion over men, in violation of
1Timothy_2:11-12.
The New Testament teaches that elders are to be appointed in
each congregation to rule the church (Acts_14:23; Titus_1:5;
1Timothy_5:17). An elder, also called an "overseer"
(Acts_20:17,27; 1Peter_5:1-2) or a "bishop" (Titus_1:5-7), must
be "the husband of one wife" (1Timothy_3:1-2; Titus_1:5-6). If a
woman can be the husband of one wife, she can lead the church.
God has placed the man in the role of leader over the woman
(1Corinthians_11:3). The Lord specifically applies this
principle to the home (Ephesians_5:22-24) and to the church
(1Corinthians_14:34-35; 1Timothy_2:11-12). This is not
"politically correct", but Christians follow the will of Christ
regardless of what is popular in the world (Galatians_1:10).
Keith Sharp
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