The
woman is "in all things inferior to the man," said first
century Jewish historian Flavius Josephus.[1] Rabbi
Judah, a contemporary of Josephus, said "a man must pronounce
three blessings each day: 'Blessed be the Lord who did not make
me a heathen; blessed be he who did not make me a woman;
blessed be he who did not make me an uneducated
person.'"[2]
Jewish Rabbis in the first century were encouraged not to teach
or even to speak with women. Jewish wisdom literature tells us
that "he that talks much with womankind brings evil upon
himself and neglects the study of the Law and at the last will
inherit Gehenna [hell]."[3] One reason for the
avoidance of women was the belief that they could lead men
astray: "From garments cometh a moth and from a woman the
iniquities of a man" (Ecclus. 42:13). Indeed, men were often
viewed as intrinsically better than women, for "better is the
iniquity of a man than a woman doing a good turn" (Ecclus.
42:14).[4]
In view of this low status of women, it is not surprising that
they enjoyed few legal rights in Jewish society. Women were not
even allowed to give evidence in a court of law. Moreover,
according to the rabbinic school that followed Rabbi Hillel, a
man could legally divorce his wife if she burned his
dinner.
It was in this oppressive context that Christianity was born.
Many people--both men and women--have hailed Jesus as a
feminist because of His elevation of women in a male-chauvinist
society. Moreover, Paul's statement in Galatians 3:28--"There
is neither Jew nor Greek, slave nor free, male nor female, for
you are all one in Christ Jesus" (NIV)--has been called "the
Magna Carta of humanity."[5] Because of the Christian's
standing in Christ, it is argued, the subordination of women
that was (allegedly) caused by the Fall (Gen. 3) has been
replaced with total equality of the sexes in Christ. Any
apparent biblical teaching of the need for female submission
today is based on misinterpretations by male scholars.
Feminism. To some the word represents liberation and
long-awaited justice; to others, divisiveness. Emotions have
run feverishly high in the debate over women's rights, and the
past few decades have seen the debate move into the theological
mainstream. Today, women are increasingly being ordained as
ministers in many Christian denominations; Bibles are being
published using "inclusive language;" and those who stand
against either of these often find themselves branded as
chauvinists.
Certainly no one can deny that women have suffered abuse at the
hands of males throughout history. This has caused theologian
Duane Litfin to ask some penetrating questions:
What follower of Jesus could ignore the fundamental injustice
of laws that work to the disadvantage of women as women? Who
could fail to be outraged at the prospect of a woman being paid
a fraction of what a man earns for doing the same work? What
fair-minded person is not dismayed when reminded that it has
only been within the life spans of many living Americans that
women have been thought worthy of the vote? And what believer
has not discovered blind spots within his own perspective that,
on closer inspection, caused embarrassment and repentance? Any
who are willing to see can find much in the feminist movement
to be praised and supported.[6]
I think Litfin is right. But alas, as Litfin also notes, "the
worthy goals of the movement do not stand
alone."[7]
In this article, my focus will be limited to examining how
evangelical feminists are arguing their case from the Bible. I
will then show why traditionalists reject this variety of
liberation theology. First, however, it is necessary to
distinguish evangelical feminism from three other varieties of
feminism.
VARIETIES OF
FEMINISM
The different
subgroups among feminists have been categorized variously. For
my purposes, I have chosen to classify them as secular
feminists, New Age feminists, liberal Christian feminists, and
evangelical feminists. These subgroups should not be viewed as
having clearly defined lines of demarcation; rather, they are
more like clusters along the theological-philosophical
continuum. Along this continuum, it is possible that a feminist
may fall between the clusters, thereby sharing some of the
characteristics of two different groups.[8]
Secular feminists are humanists who disallow God, revelation,
and religion in the discussion of feminism. They view the Bible
as a major source of chauvinist ideas and a relic of antiquity
that has no relevance to the ongoing debate over the roles of
men and women in modern society.
New Age feminists are pagans who are typically involved in the
worship of a feminine deity or goddess. (The upcoming Fall
issue of the CHRISTIAN RESEARCH JOURNAL will feature an article
by Norman L. Geisler on neopaganism and feminism.)
Liberal Christian feminists operate within a Christian
framework but approach feminism (and theology in general) from
a very liberal perspective. They believe the Bible writers were
simply men of their times and were limited in their
perspectives. Liberal Christian feminists employ a "hermeneutic
of suspicion"--that is, they "systematically assume that the
Bible's male authors and interpreters deliberately covered up
the role of women in early Christianity."[9] Using such
a hermeneutic, it is easy to sift out from the Bible anything
one finds offensive to one's feminist tastes.
Evangelical feminists are those who generally (not always) hold
to conservative views on the Bible and theology but who
nevertheless embrace the feminist ideal of abolishing
gender-based roles in society, church, and home. They believe
the Bible is authoritative and, rightly understood, supports
their feminist views.
Historically, the first widely publicized book on the role of
women in the church that hinted at the formulation of a
specific feminist theology was published in 1968: The Church
and the Second Sex, by Mary Daly.[10] Following the
publication of this book, the market was virtually flooded with
books and articles on feminist theology, all of which
challenged the idea that female subordination was ordained by
God.
In 1975, a conference of evangelical feminists was held in
Washington, D.C., that attracted 360 participants from across
the United States. The conference formally endorsed the Equal
Rights Amendment and established the Evangelical Women's Caucus
(EWC), a grassroots "consciousness-raising" organization with
chapters in many major cities.[11]
Some traditionalists believe that the emergence of evangelical
feminism may be an example of the negative influence of trends
in the wider culture on contemporary Christianity. However,
Christian feminist Virginia Mollenkott rejects this assessment:
"We did not become feminists and then try to fit our
Christianity into feminist ideology. We heralded the feminist
movement because we were convinced that the church had strayed
from a correct understanding of God's will for
women."[12]
Has the church strayed from a correct understanding of God's
will for women? We shall now examine how evangelical feminists
argue their case from Scripture. To simplify the task, I shall
focus primary attention on the writings of only a few of the
major evangelical feminists. Moreover, because of space
limitations, I shall examine only the major arguments and the
major Scripture passages they cite in support of their
position.
EVANGELICAL
FEMINISM: AN OVERVIEW
We begin with the
observation that evangelical feminists react against the idea
that the male of the human species is most truly representative
of God. E. Margaret Howe, one of the more prominent feminist
theologians today, notes that this idea is largely based on Old
Testament imagery that represents God as "Father," and ignores
the Scriptures which typify God as "Mother." The Lord, for
example, is portrayed as a nursing mother (Isa. 49:15), midwife
(Ps. 22:9-10), and a female homemaker (Ps. 123:2).
In view of the tendency to view God as a male, Howe says the
sexuality of God has often been stressed rather than His
personhood. But "we are in the realm of mythology," she
retorts, "when we conceptualize God as male, rather than
female, just as we would be if we considered him to be female
rather than male. The being of God transcends the limitations
of sexuality."[13]
Jesus Was a Feminist. As noted earlier, many people have
hailed Jesus as being a feminist in a first-century,
male-chauvinist society. That Jesus considered women on an
equal plane with men is clear, we are told, from the manner in
which He taught women. Consider His visit to the home of Martha
and Mary (Luke 10:38-42):
Martha took
the typical woman's role: "Martha was distracted with much
serving." Mary, however, took the supposedly "male" role:
she "sat at the Lord's feet and listened to his teaching."
Martha apparently thought Mary was out of place in choosing
the role of the "intellectual," for she complained to Jesus.
But Jesus' response was a refusal to force all women into
the stereotype: he treated Mary first of all as a person who
was allowed to set her own priorities, and in this instance
had "chosen the better part." And Jesus applauded her: "it
is not to be taken from her."[14] Feminist Gretchen
Hull calls Luke 10:38-42 "the most significant encounter
because it taught that women should prefer studying theology
over a preoccupation with domestic
chores."[15]
Aida Spencer, another feminist writer, discounts the fact that
Jesus chose twelve men to be disciples. "If Jesus' choice of
twelve male [Jewish] disciples signifies that females
should not be leaders in the church, then, consistently, his
choice also signifies that Gentiles should not be leaders in
the church."[16] But, Spencer argues, since Gentiles
are allowed to be leaders in the church, the same should be
true for women.
Feminists also cast Jesus in the role of a feminist in His
first resurrection appearance. Mollenkott notes that "women
were considered too frivolous and untrustworthy to be witnesses
in a court of law, or to teach children--let alone men; yet
Jesus commissioned women to be the first witnesses of His
resurrection and sent them to teach the male disciples that He
was risen."[17]
And because of what Jesus accomplished in His death and
resurrection, it is argued, women have been delivered from the
male domination that was caused by the Fall (Gen. 3).
Female Subordination: A Result of the Curse. Evangelical
feminists argue that male headship and female subordination in
the marital relationship is a part of the curse. Indeed, in
Genesis 3:16 God pronounced judgment against the woman: "I will
greatly increase your pains in childbearing; with pain you will
give birth to children. Your desire will be for your husband,
and he will rule over you."
Mollenkott argues that "sin enters the human condition in
Genesis 3. Only after Adam and Eve have substituted their will
for God's will does the specter of male supremacy and female
subordination enter the picture."[18] Feminist Gilbert
Bilezikian thus argues that "it is proper to regard both male
dominance and death as being antithetical to God's original
intent in creation. Both are the result of sin, itself
instigated by Satan. Their origin is satanic."[19]
The good news, feminists say, is that in Christ "the
life-giving law of the Spirit has set you free from the law of
sin and death" (Rom. 8:2). "Theologically speaking," Howe
argues, "the death of Christ released humanity from the curse
brought about by sin. Woman is no longer to be subjugated under
male headship. The mutual and complementary relationship that
Adam and Eve enjoyed before the Fall may now be
restored."[20]
Equal in Christ (Galatians 3:28). One might say that the
theme verse for evangelical feminism is Galatians 3:28: "There
is neither Jew nor Greek, slave nor free, male nor female, for
you are all one in Christ Jesus." Evangelical feminists argue
that Paul is not speaking in this verse about the equality of
men and women in their spiritual standing before God, but of
the practical outworking of that standing in society. Richard
and Joyce Boldrey assert that "Galatians 3:28 does not say 'God
loves each of you, but stay in your places'; it says that there
are no longer places, no longer categories, no longer
differences in rights and privileges, codes and
values."[21] Letha Scanzoni and Nancy Hardesty suggest
that in view of Galatians 3:28, "all social distinctions
between men and women should [be] erased in the
church."[22]
Mutual Submission. Ephesians 5:21-24 instructs men and
women: "Submit to one another out of reverence for Christ.
Wives, submit to your husbands as to the Lord. For the husband
is the head of the wife as Christ is the head of the church,
his body, of which he is the Savior. Now as the church submits
to Christ, so also wives should submit to their husbands in
everything."
How can this passage be interpreted to fit the feminist ideal?
Feminists generally make verse 21--which calls for husbands
and wives to "submit to one another"--the governing verse of
the entire passage. Because of what Christ accomplished at the
Cross, the male domination brought about by the Fall has been
done away with, and now there is to be mutual submission
between husbands and wives in Christ.
(Traditionalists, however, often argue that the Greek pronoun
allelous ["one another"] may carry the meaning "some to
others" [Rev. 6:4; Gal. 6:2]. Understood this way,
Ephesians 5:21--as an introduction to verses 22-24--may be
paraphrased: "Those who are under authority should be subject
to others among you who have authority over
them."[23])
Ephesians 5:22-24--which calls for wives to submit to their
husbands--is problematic for feminists. They explain these
verses in any one of several ways. Some argue that a
hierarchical model of male/female roles may have been
appropriate for New Testament times, but such a model is no
longer binding on twentieth-century Christians. Indeed, "an
interpretation that 'absolutizes a given historical social
order' is unacceptable."[24] Scanzoni and Hardesty
suggest that "passages which are theological and doctrinal in
content [should be] used to interpret those where the
writer is dealing with practical local cultural problems.
Except Galatians 3:28 [which is theological in nature],
all of the references to women in the New Testament are
contained in passages dealing with practical concerns about
personal relationships or behavior in worship
services."[25] Thus, passages such as Ephesians 5:22-24
must give way to Galatians 3:28.
Other feminists say that while Paul taught a hierarchical model
of male/female relations in Ephesians, this was based on his
rabbinic training and he was wrong. Mollenkott is an example of
this line of thought and says that passages that teach a
hierarchical model should be seen as "distorted by the human
instrument."[26]
Still other feminists deal with these verses by appealing to
another possible meaning of the word "head." It is argued that
Ephesians 5:23--"For the husband is the head of the wife as
Christ is the head of the church"--has nothing to do with the
exercise of authority. Rather, the Greek word for "head" in
this verse must mean source, a meaning supported by two pieces
of ancient literature: Herodotus 4.91 and Orphic Fragments
21a.[27]
The meaning of source for "head" is certainly compatible with
the Genesis account, it is argued, for indeed the woman does
have her source in man.[28] Hence, as Herbert and Fern
Miles argue, "there is nothing in the fifth chapter of
Ephesians that would even remotely indicate" that wives are
responsible to submit to their husbands.[29]
(However, New Testament scholar Wayne Grudem researched 2,336
instances of the word "head" [Greek: kephale] in all
the major writings of the classical and Hellenistic Greek
periods, and found no clear instances of such a usage. He says
the two pieces of ancient literature cited by feminists--which
predate the New Testament by 400 years--are not convincing.
Moreover, "all the major lexicons that specialize in the New
Testament period give [the] meaning ['authority
over'], whereas none give the meaning
'source.'"[30])
Speaking in the Church. Evangelical feminists eagerly
point out that Paul allowed women to prophesy in the church at
Corinth (1 Cor. 11:2-16). However, the apostle Paul added a
qualification: "Every woman who prays or prophesies with her
head uncovered dishonors her head; the woman ought to have a
sign of authority on her head" (1 Cor. 11:5, 10). Howe takes
this to mean that Paul's only concern in 1 Corinthians 11 was
that women maintain their sexual identity as women, and that
this should be reflected in their manner of dress. "A woman
appointed to a leadership position in the church is not
adopting a male role; nor, on the other hand, does she stand
before the congregation as a sex object. Her hair and shoulders
are to be covered because in the redemptive order she stands
before God as man's equal, not as the object of man's desire.
Thus the veil is a symbol of her 'authority,' authority
invested in her by God as a result of the redemptive work of
Christ in whom 'there is neither male nor female' (Gal.
3:28)."[31]
In light of these careful instructions, Howe argues, "it would
be presumptuous to argue that Paul's later comments in this
letter (14:34-35) preclude a woman from ordination on the basis
that she is not permitted to speak in the
church."[32]
Silence in the Church. In 1 Corinthians 14:34-35, the
apostle Paul said that "women should remain silent in the
churches. They are not allowed to speak, but must be in
submission, as the law says. If they want to inquire about
something, they should ask their own husbands at home; for it
is disgraceful for a woman to speak in the church."
Most Christian feminists say the word "speak" in 1 Corinthians
14:34 refers only to general talking or idle chatter and does
not include formal lectures, exhortation, or teaching. Hence,
women were prohibited by Paul from chattering or disturbing the
meeting, but not from formal public teaching or leading.
A more difficult passage for feminists is 1 Timothy 2:11-12,
where the apostle Paul said: "A woman should learn in quietness
and full submission. I do not permit a woman to teach or to
have authority over a man; she must be silent." One popular
feminist theory for explaining this passage is that Paul was
prohibiting women from speaking or teaching because they had
not been properly educated.[33] Hence, "because
twentieth-century women are better trained and qualified to
teach, Paul's directive doesn't apply. His prohibition was
meant to gradually fade away along with the disappearance of
social distinctions between men and women."[34]
Other feminists interpret Paul's prohibition as pertaining to
women who were teaching error or false doctrine in the church.
Seen in this light, the prohibition was not intended to be
universally applied. Paul was simply dealing with a specific
local problem in Corinth in which some misled women were
leading others astray.
The Feminist Approach. From our brief survey above, we
may conclude that evangelical feminists sometimes argue their
case from the biblical text (e.g., Gen. 3:16; Gal. 3:28). Other
biblical texts, they say, deal with local cultural situations
of the first century and thus must not be seen as normative for
modern society (e.g., Eph. 5:21-24; 1 Cor. 14:33b-36; 1 Tim.
2:11-15).
Evangelical feminists marshal many other arguments besides
those we have cited to support their case. But the above is
sufficient to illustrate their basic approach. We shall now
turn our attention to how traditionalists respond to this brand
of liberation theology.
A
CRITIQUE
Feminist liberation
theology has without doubt made some important, positive
contributions. I can only mention a few of the more notable
here. First, feminist theology has called attention to the
invaluable role women have played in the church throughout
Christian history. Second, feminist theology has rightly
pointed to the failure of many men in fulfilling their
God-appointed roles of loving their wives as Christ loved the
church. If Christian husbands through the centuries had been
consistently faithful in following this one injunction, the
controversy over gender-based roles in the church could have
been avoided (or at least substantially diminished). And third,
feminist theology serves as an indictment against the abuse and
oppression that women have all too often suffered at the hands
of chauvinist men. I consider these contributions important and
extremely relevant.
Despite these contributions, however, there are some serious
problems that must be addressed. Space limitations regrettably
do not allow for a response to each of the passages cited
above. I shall therefore limit my critique to a pivotal premise
of feminist theology--that is, that female subordination is a
result of the Fall, and that in Christ all social hierarchy has
been obliterated. If this premise is shown to be in error, then
the feminist position on many New Testament passages--including 1 Corinthians 11:2-16 and 14:33b-36, Galatians 3:28,
and 1 Timothy 2:11-15--is in serious jeopardy.
Feminists appeal to God's judgment against the woman in Genesis
3:16--"[man] will rule over you"--in their attempt to
prove that female subordination was caused by the Fall. A more
thorough look at the biblical evidence reveals, however, that
this is not the case. Male headship is clearly established in
the creation account in Genesis 2--before the Fall even took
place. Man was created first. And the woman was created from
Adam's rib to be his helper (Gen. 2:18). Certainly, both male
and female were created in God's image and were accorded
personal dignity, but God in the creation narrative set them in
a nonreversible relation to one another--male in loving
headship over the female.
Adam's headship is illustrated in many ways in the creation
account. For example, as soon as the woman was created, Adam
named the woman: "She shall be called 'woman,' for she was
taken out of man" (Gen. 2:23). This is significant, because to
name someone or something in ancient times implied having
authority over the one named (e.g., Gen. 17:5; 2 Kings 23:34;
Dan. 1:7).
It is also highly revealing that when God gave instructions
about moral responsibility, He gave these instructions to Adam
(Gen. 2:16-17). And after the Fall, God first summoned Adam,
not Eve, even though she was the one who had led him into sin.
"Adam, where are you?" God said immediately following the Fall
(Gen. 3:9). In Romans 5:12, Adam was held solely responsible
for the Fall, even though Eve played a significant role.
Certainly one of Adam's failures in the Fall was his abdication
of responsibility for leadership. Instead of obeying God and
leading his wife, he disobeyed God and followed his wife's lead
(by eating the fruit). For this reason, God begins His sentence
against Adam, "Because you have listened to the voice of your
wife" (Gen. 3:17). In the Fall, therefore, God's intended order
of authority was reversed. As Gordon Wenham puts it, "Eve
listened to the serpent instead of Adam; Adam listened to Eve
instead of God."[35]
In view of all this, God's judgment against the woman in
Genesis 3:16 cannot be viewed as the source of hierarchical
social order. Rather it points to the reality that with the
entrance of sin the hierarchical order remains (having been
established in Genesis 2), but sin's effect will now be
experienced within that order. Hence, God's statement in
Genesis 3:16 was simply a divine description of what would
occur (male domination and oppression as opposed to loving
headship), not a mandate which obedient servants of God should
attempt to carry out.
Equal in Christ (Gal. 3:28). When Paul says "there is
neither Jew nor Greek, slave nor free, male nor female" in
Christ (Gal. 3:28), he seems to be alluding to the morning
prayer of Jewish men in which they thanked God that they were
not born a Gentile, a slave, or a woman.[36] These
three classes had severely limited privileges in society.
Contextually, the verses that precede Galatians 3:28 pertain to
justification by faith and how a person comes to be included in
the blessings promised in the Abrahamic covenant (vv. 15-25).
Then, in verse 26, Paul says "you are all sons of God through
faith in Christ Jesus." For Paul, the term son implies heir
(cf. 4:7, 31). "In society these three pairs--none of which
were ontologically unequal by creation [that is, they were
not unequal in their essence or being as created by God]--are unequally privileged, but in Christ's offer of salvation,
Paul argued, there is no distinction. So then, in Galatians
3:26-28, Paul was saying that no kind of person is excluded
from the position of being a child of Abraham who has faith in
Jesus Christ."[37] That Paul was referring solely to
one's position in Christ is evident in the words "sons of God,"
"Abraham's seed," and "heirs according to the promise." It
takes a great leap in logic to say that positional equality
must necessitate functional equivalence.
Elimination of gender-based roles is therefore not a legitimate
inference from Galatians 3:28. Ontological equality and social
hierarchy are not mutually exclusive. The doctrine of the
Trinity illustrates this: Jesus is equal to the Father in terms
of His being, but He voluntarily submits to the Father's
leadership. There is no contradiction in affirming both an
equality of being and a functional subordination among the
persons in the Godhead. Likewise, there is no contradiction in
Paul saying that "there is neither male nor female in Christ"
and "wives, submit to your husbands."
The question we must now address (though very briefly) is, How
does the hierarchical order established at creation relate to
the "female subordination" passages: 1 Corinthians 11:2-16,
14:33b-36, and 1 Timothy 2:11-15?
Speaking in the Church. 1 Corinthians 4:8-10 tells us
that the Corinthians had made much of their newfound freedom in
Christ. It is possible that the Christian women in Corinth felt
that their new position in Christ was incompatible with wearing
a "sign of authority" on their heads in church services when
praying or prophesying.
Paul emphasized in chapter 11, however, that the woman's
spiritual equality with the man does not in any way do away
with the male headship and female subordination established at
the Creation. In arguing his case, Paul stated that man "is the
image and glory of God; but the woman is the glory of man. For
man did not come from woman, but woman from man; neither was
man created for woman, but woman for man" (1 Cor. 11:7-9). Paul
based his argument for female subordination on the order of
creation and the purpose of the woman's creation--not on God's
declaration to Eve at the Fall. He indicated that the woman
brings honor to the man by fulfilling her role of functional
subordination, while man brings glory to God by fulfilling the
functional role of leader.
In view of this, Paul's argument in 1 Corinthians 11:2-11 may
be summarized as follows: (1) Man is the head of the woman,
just as Christ is the head of the church, and as God is the
head of Christ. (2) Thus, every woman who prays or prophesies
in church must do so in a way that preserves the hierarchical
social order given by the Creator, and this is to be
accomplished by wearing a "sign of authority" on her head.
Silence in the Church (1 Cor. 14:33b-36). How do we
relate 1 Corinthians 11, in which Paul allows for women praying
and prophesying in the church, with chapter 14, in which Paul
commands women to be silent in church? We noted earlier that
many feminists say Paul in chapter 14 was merely forbidding
disorderly chatter. Seen in this light, Paul was not
prohibiting orderly preaching by women.
This interpretation, however, does not fit the context. Paul
instructed women to remain silent because they were women, not
because they were engaged in idle chatter or were disorderly.
In order to be subordinate, Paul said, women must be silent--just as the law says. Scholars differ as to what passage(s)
Paul may have been referring to with the word
"law,"[38] but that is beside the point. The important
factor is that Paul was clearly using this word in reference to
Scripture--whether he was speaking of the Mosaic law (Rom.
7:22, 25; 1 Cor. 9:9) or to the Old Testament as a whole (Rom.
3:10-19; 1 Cor. 14:21).
Paul's appeal to the law therefore shows that he was not simply
repeating something he had learned from rabbinic literature,
but was teaching something backed by God's Word. That Paul
cites the law shows that his argument for the silence of women
in church was theological and universal, not sociological or
cultural.
1 Timothy 2:11-14. Another passage in which Paul calls
for the silence of women in church is 1 Timothy 2:11-14: "A
woman should learn in quietness and full submission. I do not
permit a woman to teach or to have authority over a man; she
must be silent. For Adam was formed first, then Eve. And Adam
was not the one deceived; it was the woman who was deceived and
became a sinner."
Paul here builds his argument for female subordination on the
order of creation and the order of the Fall. Paul's reasoning
is something like this: "Adam was created first as the head;
Eve was created second and she fell first; therefore, women are
under some restriction." More is involved here than mere
chronological priority. Paul saw the priority in time as
indicative of the headship of the male, to which the woman, the
"helper suitable for him" (Gen. 2:18), should respond.
We gain insight about Paul's prohibition by noting that
teachers in New Testament times exercised substantial authority
over learners.[39] Teaching doctrine in church was
therefore reserved for those men whom God placed in authority
to represent Him in spiritual matters. Women are not allowed to
teach a church congregation, Paul indicated, for this--by the
very nature of teaching--would place them in spiritual
authority over men.
How, then, does Paul's command to silence relate to his
allowance of women prophesying in 1 Corinthians 11? In 1
Corinthians 11 the women were speaking divine utterances,
whereas in 1 Corinthians 14 and 1 Timothy 2 they were not.
Women who spoke under divine control and who were appropriately
attired were not exercising their own authority over men and so
were not in violation of Paul's injunctions in 1 Corinthians 14
and 1 Timothy 2.
I recognize that the question of how to harmonize 1 Timothy
2:11-15, 1 Corinthians 11:2-16, and 1 Corinthians 14:33b-36 has
been answered variously by scholars. In my understanding of
Paul's theology, it would seem that though women are completely
equal with men in their standing before God, they are forbidden
to be in a functional position of ecclesiastical authority over
men, teaching them in a congregational setting. This implies
neither the superiority of the male nor the inferiority of the
female. Paul's theology simply reflects the creation order
established by God in which man was appointed to function as
spiritual head.
Women are not prohibited, however, from teaching men on an
individual basis--as apparently Priscilla, with her husband
Aquila, taught Apollos (Acts 18:26). (Priscilla was evidently
teaching under the headship of Aquila, to whom the authority
belonged.) Nor are women forbidden to prophesy in a respectful
and submissive manner (1 Cor. 11:5-6). Nor are women forbidden
to personally address fellow believers, male and female, to
their "edification, exhortation, and comfort" (1 Cor. 14:3).
Nor are women forbidden to teach women (Titus 2:3-4) or
children (2 Tim. 1:5; 3:14), or take part in other fruitful
ministries (e.g., Rom. 16:3, 6, 12). In short, women are
privileged to serve God in many different ways within the
authority structure He designed.
We gain perspective on this issue by recognizing that the
biblical world view is based on the assumption that a personal
God sovereignly designed an ordered universe to function in a
particular way. Crucial to this world view is the concept of
authority. Romans 13:1 tells us that God is the source not
simply of all authority but of the very concept of authority.
"That the universe should be ordered around a series of
over/under hierarchical relationships is His idea, a part of
His original design. He delegates His authority according to
His own pleasure to those whom He places in appropriate
positions and it is to Him that His creatures submit when they
acknowledge that authority."[40]
Within that authority structure, both men and women are given
the privilege of serving Him--but in different ways. Simply
because Scripture says women can't teach men in a position of
authority does not mean that their ministries are unimportant.
To Paul, all ministries were significant: "The eye cannot say
to the hand, 'I don't need you.' And the head cannot say to the
feet, 'I don't need you.' On the contrary, parts of the body
that seem to be weaker are indispensable, and the parts that we
think are less honorable we treat with special honor" (1 Cor.
12:21-23a).
So, should women be involved in ministry in the church?
Absolutely! "That women are gifted for and called to service in
the church is plain," said J. I. Packer, "and gifted persons
are gifts that the churches must properly value and fully
use."[41] However, as Packer also notes, this call to
service (according to Scripture) is not to involve
ecclesiastical authority over men.
BIBLICAL
MANHOOD AND WOMANHOOD
It is deplorable that
so many men throughout history have misused and abused God's
ordained authority structure by oppressing and dominating women--sometimes justifying their actions by misapplications of the
passages discussed in this article. Such misapplications must
be condemned as a gross (and sinful) distortion of God's
original design for man and woman.
In an enlightening essay, John Piper said that manhood and
womanhood are the beautiful handiwork of a good and loving God.
Indeed, God "designed our differences and they are profound.
They are not mere physiological prerequisites for sexual union.
They go to the root of our personhood."[42]
Addressing the need for a return to biblical masculinity and
femininity, Piper suggests that "at the heart of mature
masculinity is a sense of benevolent responsibility to lead,
provide for and protect women in ways appropriate to a man's
different relationships. At the heart of mature femininity is a
freeing disposition to affirm, receive and nurture strength and
leadership from worthy men in ways appropriate to a woman's
different relationships."[43]
This call for a return to biblical masculinity and femininity
led Elisabeth Elliot to comment that "true liberation comes
with humble submission to God's original design."[44]
Indeed, the noblest achievement of any human being--male or
female--is to discover God's design and fulfill it. Let this
be our goal.
NOTES
1 Flavius Josephus,
Against Apion (Grand Rapids: Kregel Publications, 1974),
622.
2 H. L. Strack and P. Billerbeck, Kommentar zum Neuen Testament
aus Talmud und Midrasch (Munchen, 1893), 2:495; cited by Werner
Neuer, Man and Woman in Christian Perspective (Wheaton, IL:
Crossway Books, 1990), 93.
3 M. Aboth 1.5; cited by Neuer, 93.
4 R. Nicole, "Women, Biblical Concept of," Evangelical
Dictionary of Theology, ed. Walter A. Elwell (Grand Rapids:
Baker Book House, 1984), 1177.
5 Paul King Jewett, Man as Male and Female (Grand Rapids:
William B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1975), 142.
6 A. Duane Litfin, "Theological Issues in Contemporary
Feminism," in Walvoord: A Tribute, ed. Donald K. Campbell
(Chicago: Moody Press, 1982), 334.
7 Ibid.
8 I am indebted to Litfin for this observation: 349-50.
9 Kenneth L. Woodward, "Feminism and the Churches," Newsweek,
13 Feb. 1989, 61.
10 Mary Daly, The Church and the Second Sex (New York: Harper
& Row, 1968).
11 Richard Quebedeaux, The Worldly Evangelicals (San Francisco:
Harper & Row, 1978), 122.
12 Quoted in Phyllis E. Alsdurf, "Evangelical Feminists:
Ministry Is the Issue," Christianity Today, 21 July 1978,
47.
13 E. Margaret Howe, "The Positive Case for the Ordination of
Women," in Perspectives on Evangelical Theology, eds. Kenneth
S. Kantzer and Stanley N. Gundry (Grand Rapids: Baker Book
House, 1979), 268.
14 The Post American (1972); in Richard Quebedeaux, The Young
Evangelicals (San Francisco: Harper & Row, 1974), 114.
15 Gretchen Hull, Equal to Serve: Women and Men in the Church
and Home (Old Tappan, NJ: Fleming H. Revell, 1987), 115.
16 Aida Besanion Spencer, Beyond the Curse: Women Called to
Ministry (Nashville: Thomas Nelson Publishers, 1985), 45.
17 Virginia Mollenkott, "What is True Biblical Feminism?"
Christian Life, Sept. 1977, 73.
18 Ibid., 72.
19 Gilbert Bilezikian, Beyond Sex Roles: A Guide for the Study
of Female Roles in the Bible (Grand Rapids: Baker Book House,
1985), 56.
20 E. Margaret Howe, Women and Church Leadership (Grand Rapids:
Zondervan Publishing House, 1982), 139.
21 Richard and Joyce Boldrey, Chauvinist or Feminist? Paul's
View of Women (Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1976), 33.
22 Letha Scanzoni and Nancy Hardesty, All We're Meant to Be
(Waco, TX: Word Books, 1974), 72.
23 John Piper and Wayne Grudem, eds., Recovering Biblical
Manhood and Womanhood (Wheaton, IL: Crossway Books, 1990),
494.
24 Elizabeth Clark and Herbert Richardson, eds., Women and
Religion: A Feminist Source Book of Christian Thought (New
York: Harper & Row, 1977), 20.
25 Scanzoni and Hardesty, 18-19.
26 Virginia R. Mollenkott, Women, Men, and the Bible
(Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1977), 104.
27 Wayne Grudem, Appendix 1: "The Meaning of Kephale ('Head'),"
in Piper and Grudem, 425.
28 Manfred T. Brauch, Hard Sayings of Paul (Downers Grove, IL:
InterVarsity Press, 1989), 139.
29 Herbert and Fern Miles, Husband-Wife Equality (Old Tappan,
NJ: Fleming H. Revell, 1978), 31.
30 Grudem, 425-68.
31 Howe, "The Positive Case for the Ordination of Women,"
273.
32 Ibid.
33 Scanzoni and Hardesty, 71.
34 Mary A. Kassian, Women, Creation, and the Fall (Westchester,
IL: Crossway Books, 1990), 116.
35 G. J. Wenham, "The Ordination of Women: Why Is It So
Divisive?" The Churchman 92 (1978), 316.
36 S. Lewis Johnson, "Role Distinctions in the Church," in
Piper and Grudem, 158.
37 H. Wayne House, "Neither Male nor Female in Christ Jesus,"
Bibliotheca Sacra, January-March 1988, 54.
38 See H. Wayne House, "The Speaking of Women and the
Prohibition of the Law," Bibliotheca Sacra, July-September
1988, 301-318.
39 Ibid., 314.
40 A. Duane Litfin, "Evangelical Feminism: Why Traditionalists
Reject It," Bibliotheca Sacra, July-September 1979, 267.
41 J. I. Packer, "Let's Stop Making Women Presbyters,"
Christianity Today, 11 Feb. 1991, 21.
42 John Piper, What's the Difference (Wheaton, IL: The Council
on Biblical Manhood and Womanhood, 1989), 8-9.
43 Ibid., 12.
44 Ibid., 3.
Glossary
chauvinist: A
person who in a prejudiced way believes in the superiority of
his or her group. A "male chauvinist" is a sexist who assumes
an innate male supremacy in most important areas of
activity.
feminist: Broadly speaking, a person--female or male--that advocates equal rights, equal status, and equal
opportunity for women in a male-dominated world; a person who
favors the abolishment of gender-based roles in society, the
home, and church.
hermeneutic: A method of interpreting Scripture.
"Hermeneutics" is that branch of theology that prescribes rules
and guidelines by which the Bible should be interpreted.
inclusive language: language that eliminates or greatly
reduces male-centered terms in an attempt to be more
"inclusive" of both genders.