Chapter 6
Biblical Obstacles to Women's Ordination
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Our discussion thus far leads us to the conclusion that the Bible's teaching on
headship is still valid today--even as it has always been since creation. This
understanding adequately explains the absence of biblical precedent for ordaining
women, not only as priests in the Old Testament but also as apostles and elders/pastors in
the New Testament. To show that the headship principle, not an accommodation to culture,
is also the basis for the specific prohibitions against women having
"authority over men" (1 Tim 2:11ff.; 3:2; Titus 1:6; 1 Cor 14:34-35) calls for
further searching the Scriptures. In this chapter, we will examine certain issues
which raise biblical obstacles to women's ordination. Does the Bible include gender among
the qualifications for the leader of the worshipping community? What are the key Bible
texts which bear on this question, and what do they mean? When these issues are clear, two
other questions which are often asked will need addressing: Was the Bible's instruction on
this theme shaped by the culture of those times (and therefore not applicable outside of
that culture)? and Is the Bible silent on the question of ordination for women?
Qualification for the Office of Apostle or Elder/Pastor
The New Testament teaches that the offices of both apostle and elder/pastor should be
filled not just by human beings of either gender but by males. In discussing the
qualities for apostles and elders/pastors, the New Testament writers made clear that such
an office holder should be a man, not a woman. If they had believed that any person could
qualify, irrespective of gender, they would have used the generic term anthropos, a
word which refers to human beings, male or female, without regard to gender. Instead, they
employed the specific term aner/andros, a word that means a male person in
distinction from a woman (see Acts 8:12; 1 Tim 2:12), a person capable of being called a
husband (see Matt 1:16; John 4:16; Rom 7:2; Titus 1:6).
Replacement of One of the Twelve. The book of Acts records that shortly
before the outpouring of the Holy Spirit, the 120 male and female disciples who were
gathered in the upper room sought guidance to find a replacement
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for Judas. Significantly, they first sought biblical guidance on whether to fill the
vacancy (Acts 1:14-20). Both the 120 and Luke, the writer of Acts, understood the
apostleship as an oversight office; the Greek term used in Acts 1:20, translated
"bishoprick" (KJV), "office" (RSV) and "leader" (NIV), is episkopos,
the very word Paul used to describe the office of elder/pastor (1 Tim 3:1, 2; Acts 20:28;
cf. Acts 20:17; Titus 1:5-7; 1 Pet 5:1-3 for the corresponding term presbuteros).
Notice the qualifications in choosing Matthias as an apostle in place of Judas:
"Therefore it is necessary to choose one of the men who have been with us the
whole time the Lord Jesus went in and out among us, beginning from John's baptism to the
time when Jesus was taken up from us. For one of these must become a witness with us of
his resurrection." . . . [After proposing Barsabbas and Matthias, the 120 prayed,]
"Lord, you know everyone's heart. Show us which of these two you have chosen to take
over this apostolic ministry, which Judas left to go where he belongs" (Acts 1:21-25
NIV).
Why did the 120 men and women in the upper room appoint two men, and no women, as
candidates from which to select an apostle to be added to the eleven? Were there no
qualified women "who have been with us the whole time the Lord Jesus went in and out
among us, beginning from John's baptism to the time when Jesus was taken up from us"?
Was there no woman with a "heart" acceptable enough to God "to take over
this apostolic ministry"? This is not likely. Obviously, there were capable women
among the 120 disciples, since all of them--male and female--were filled with the Holy
Spirit on the day of Pentecost (Acts 2).
The absence of a woman candidate is not happenstance, either, according to the text.
The reason why women were excluded as candidates for the apostleship, even though some of
them undoubtedly met most of the requirements set forth in verses 21-22, is clearly given
in verse 21: "It is necessary to chose one of the men [andron, from aner]
who have been with us." On the basis of Scripture, the 120 male and female disciples
of Christ (including Mary, the mother of Jesus) understood that the oversight (episkopos,
v. 20) function of apostleship may only be exercised by a male (aner), not a
female. This decision by the 120 conformed to the pre-fall headship principle, which
ascribed the leadership role to men. It was also in harmony with the example of Jesus
Christ who, after a long night of prayer, chose twelve male apostles (Luke 6:12-16). The
disciples in the upper room were "with one accord" (Acts 1:14; 2:1) in their
choice of a male replacement, and the risen Christ rewarded their unity and
faithfulness to Scripture by pouring out His Spirit upon them at Pentecost (Acts 2:1-4).
Choosing an Elder/Pastor. In the action of the 120 disciples in choosing
a replacement apostle, we find a prescription for Spirit-empowered ministry: unity,
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prayer, and fidelity to Scriptural guidelines. This last point was reiterated when the
apostle Paul instructed that an elder must fulfil certain qualifications (1 Tim 3:1-6;
Titus 1:5-9). Among these, an elder/bishop "must be . . . the husband (aner/andros)
of one wife" (1 Tim 3:2; Titus 1:6). [1] In other
words, the elder or pastor should be a man, not a woman. An additional point underscores
this: the elder should be able to exercise spiritual leadership in his home. He is one who
"must manage his own family well" (1 Tim 3:4, 5 NIV; Titus 1:6). [2]
When this qualification for the office of elder or pastor is understood in light of the
pre-fall headship principle, and when we take into account the examples of Jesus Himself
in ordaining the twelve apostles as well as that of the 120 in commissioning Matthias as
an apostle in place of Judas, it is clear that Paul's prescription that an elder be a male
(aner) is not arbitrary. Until it can be shown that the qualification for an elder
to be the "husband of one wife" is no longer valid, women should not be ordained
as elders or pastors of the church. Showing that this qualification is no longer valid
will not be easy for advocates of women's ordination in light of two additional statements
by the apostle Paul in 1 Timothy 2:11ff. and 1 Corinthians 14:34. To these crucial Bible
texts, we now turn our attention.
Crucial Bible Texts: 1 Tim 2:11-14; 1 Cor 14:34-35
The key texts linking the headship principle with the teaching authority of elders and
pastors are 1 Timothy 2:11-14 and 1 Corinthians 14:34-35. Are these texts culturally
conditioned to Paul's time and place (the local situation in Ephesus and Corinth), as some
proponents of women's ordination suggest?
1 Timothy 2:11-14. Central to the debate on women's ordination is 1
Timothy 2:11-14:
Let the woman learn in silence with all subjection. But I suffer not a woman to teach,
nor to usurp authority over the man, but to be in silence. For Adam was first formed, then
Eve. And Adam was not deceived, but the woman being deceived was in the transgression. [3]
As we have shown in chapter 3, the issue here is not muzzling women into silence.
Still, because Paul does place some restriction on women in this passage, radical
proponents of women's ordination argue that Paul could not have written such a text
because it allegedly contradicts his statement in Galatians 3:28, [4] or that if he did write the text it was his own private opinion.
Bible-believing Adventists reject these liberal interpretations, asserting that Paul's
statement "I suffer not . . ." does not express mere private opinion but rather
a divinely inspired judgement (cf. Rom 12:1; 1 Cor 7:25).
Our concern, however, will be whether 1 Timothy 2:11-14 has permanent validity for the
leadership of the Christian church. "Moderate" or "progressive"
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proponents of women's ordination suggest either (1) that Paul's statement is culturally
conditioned to his time and place, or (2) that if it is still valid today, it only applies
to the relationship between husband and wife, not to the male-female relationship in the
church. Both of these objections fail to account for what the text actually says.
First, Paul did not give cultural or sociological factors in Ephesus or in the New
Testament times as the reason he prohibited women from exercising the role of
authoritative teaching. Scholars have ventured myriads of contradictory guesses of
"the real reason" behind Paul's statement. [5]
Interesting though some of them are, these guesses reflect the reluctance of scholars to
accept the explicit reason Paul himself gave in the text. Whatever the cultural or
sociological situation may have been in Ephesus--Gnosticism, witchcraft, worship of the
mother-goddess Diana (Artemis), mysticism, feminism, etc. [6]--the
apostle Paul employed a theological reason to address the specific problem that
occasioned his statement. His stated reason was, "For Adam was first formed, then
Eve. And Adam was not deceived, but the woman being deceived was in the
transgression." Paul pointed back to the pre-fall creation ordinance of headship,
reiterated after the fall. By appealing to the divine arrangement from creation as the
reason why the woman is not to have authority over the man, the apostle dispelled any
suggestion that his instruction in 1 Timothy 2:11-14 was culturally conditioned or
time-bound. (See "The Headship Principle" in chapter 5 above.)
The second argument favoured by "moderate" proponents of women's ordination,
that the prohibition applies only to marriage and not to the church setting, overlooks the
passage's context which deals not only with the relationship of men and women in the home
but also includes the church. Paul stated his purpose in writing the epistle:
"I am writing you these instructions so that, if I am delayed, you will know how
people ought to conduct themselves in God's household, which is the church of the living
God, the pillar and foundation of the truth" (1 Tim 3:14-15 NIV, emphasis added; cf.
1 Cor 11:3-16). Significantly, the context of 1 Timothy 2:11-14 is not a discussion
about husbands and wives but about men (Greek aner) and women (Greek gune),
whether married or not. [7] The immediate context for
the passage is found in verses 8-10, which give instructions on Christian dress and
adornment. In order to deny that verses 11-15 apply to church life, one must limit the
instructions on dress and adornment to apply only to the home setting, a view no
Bible-believing Seventh-day Adventist will support. Moreover, the passage immediately
following verses 11-15 (1 Timothy 3:1-7, describing the qualities of an elder/pastor)
clearly shows that Paul was addressing the church context. Thus, the larger context not
only establishes the headship principle but also applies it to the church setting (3:14,
15)--not just to the local church at Ephesus, but to the Christian church at large. [8]
Paul grounds his restriction on women in Scripture itself, showing by example that
theological issues must be settled by the written Word of God, the Christian's ultimate
source of authority. It is also significant that Paul gave
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this command in the context of church matters, indicating that his prohibition of women
to "teach and have authority over men" goes beyond the home.
In order for the church to endorse women's ordination to the gospel ministry,
proponents will need to show from Scripture that Paul was mistaken in his teaching
that male headship/leadership was established at creation and reiterated after the fall (1
Tim 2:11ff.). They will also have to justify from the Bible the basis for limiting
the headship principle only to the home or marriage setting when the context does not do
so.
1 Corinthians 14:34-35. Another key text in the debate over women's
ordination is 1 Corinthians 14:34-35:
Let your women keep silence in the churches: for it is not permitted unto them to
speak; but they are commanded to be under obedience, as also saith the law. And if they
will learn any thing, let them ask their husbands a home: for it is a shame for women to
speak in the church. [9]
As noted earlier, Paul's command that women "keep silence" in the church does
not mean that women cannot pray, prophesy, preach, evangelise or teach in the church. For
in the same letter to the Corinthians in which Paul tells women to keep silence, he
also indicates that women may pray and prophesy, provided they are dressed appropriately
(1 Cor 11:2-16). Also, the instruction that women should "keep silence in the
churches," just like the command in the same chapter that tongue speakers with
no interpreter present should "keep silence in the church" (1 Cor 14:28),
suggests that Paul wanted women to exercise their gift to "speak," but within
certain appropriate guidelines.
Our concern in this passage is, therefore, whether 1 Corinthians 14:34 has permanent
validity for the leadership of the Christian church. Just as they do 1 Timothy 2:11-14,
"moderate" or "progressive" proponents of women's ordination want to
consign 1 Corinthians 14:34 to the culture and times of Paul. They interpret "the
law" in this passage as a reference to "a Jewish custom."
Two brief responses will be given. First, if "the law" refers to "a
Jewish custom," how could such a custom apply to the Corinthian church, which
no doubt had Gentile converts? How could such a "Jewish" command be binding
"in the churches," including the non-Jewish churches? Similar questions will
still be raised if one argues that "the law" is a "Corinthian civil
law," for how could a civil law in Corinth be binding on non-Corinthian Christians
"in all the churches"? [10] Would it not be
more consistent biblically to understand "the law" as a reference to the divine
arrangement of role differentiation established at creation (see 1 Cor 11:3, 8-9; 1 Tim
2:13)? In fact, in an earlier verse (1 Cor 14:21) Paul uses "the law" to mean
the Old Testament Scriptures, suggesting that when he sees "the law" in verse
34, he has in mind the pre-fall headship principle recorded in the Old Testament (Gen
2:20b-24). This principle or "law" the apostle now applies to women (including
married women [v. 35]) "in the churches."
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Second, in Paul's prohibiting women to speak, the key phrase "but they are
commanded to be under obedience" indicates that the kind of speaking Paul ruled out
is one which involved not being "under obedience," that is, one which
constituted an exercise of authority inappropriate to them as women or wives. Thus, 1
Corinthians 14:34-35, like 1 Timothy 2:11-14, prohibits women from exercising the
authoritative teaching function entrusted to leaders of the worshipping community. This
explains why Paul restricts the teaching and leadership role of elder or pastor to males (aner,
1 Tim 3:2; Titus 1:6).
Significantly, Paul supports his restriction on women on the basis of Scripture
("the law," 1 Cor 14:34; cf. 14:21) and not on socio-cultural barriers; this is
in harmony with the view that the Bible must always remain the ultimate authority on
issues of faith and practice. It is also worth noting that the command was given to govern
the conduct of women, whether at church or at home (1 Cor 14:33-37). Paul saw a connection
between the pattern of authority in the church and in the home.
In order for the church to approve ordaining women as elders or pastors, proponents
must show that Paul's prohibition (in 1 Cor 14:34-35) of women exercising the
authoritative teaching function is not grounded theologically on God's divine arrangement,
but rather on a socio-cultural basis.
Conclusion. As we have seen, these two texts have permanent validity
because the headship principle which they teach is established on the creation
arrangement. Consequently, the principle is valid today for both the home and church
families.
This discussion of the key scriptural passages governing the male-female relationship
has pointed out some major biblical and theological obstacles to ordaining women as elders
and pastors. Besides the absence of biblical precedent for women in headship roles
such as priest, apostle, elder, and pastor in the worshipping community of God, specific
texts of Scripture seem clearly to forbid women "to teach or to have authority
over men" (1 Tim 2:11, 12; cf. 1 Cor 14:34) and restrict the offices of elder and
pastor to males (1 Tim 3:2; Titus 1:6). These prohibitions are not addressed to the
specific cultural situations in Ephesus and Corinth, but to the Christian church at large;
they should not be explained as "God's adaptation to sinful human conditions,"
but rather as God's pre-fall creation ordinance for all humanity. [11]
Until it can be shown otherwise, our deliberation on the crucial biblical texts on the
relationship of man and woman in both the home and the church settings leads us to
conclude with the British evangelical scholar John Stott that "all attempts to get
rid of Paul's teaching on headship (on grounds that it is mistaken, confusing,
culture-bound or culture specific) must be pronounced unsuccessful. It remains stubbornly
there. It is rooted in divine revelation, not human opinion, and in divine creation, not
human culture. In essence, therefore, it must be preserved as having permanent and
universal authority." [12]
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Cultural Accommodation or Biblical Principle?
Advocates for women's ordination do not accept the permanent validity of the headship
principle as the most biblically consistent explanation for the lack of scriptural
precedent for ordaining women to certain leadership roles in the church, such as priests
in the Old Testament and apostles and elders/pastors in the New Testament. They argue that
this lack of biblical precedent should be understood as cultural accommodation to
oppressive structures (race, gender, religion, etc.) in existence during the Bible times.
Thus, they claim, the failure of Jesus to ordain women as apostles, the New Testament
church's failure to ordain women as elders and pastors, and the statements of Paul
prohibiting women from "having authority over men" were concessions they had to
make to accommodate the (supposedly) insensitive, male-chauvinistic or anti-women cultural
practices of their times so as not to jeopardise their ministries prematurely.
One cannot deny that in New Testament times (just as in our day) there were oppressive
structures that often treated women and some races as inferior. For this reason, some try
to compare the headship issue to slavery, which was also current in Bible times. But the
headship principle is different from slavery in two major ways: (1) the headship principle
was a creation ordinance, while slavery was never instituted by God; and (2) as a pre-fall
creation ordinance, the headship principle is morally right and therefore morally binding
on all God's people, irrespective of the place and time in which they live; but slavery,
as a post-fall distortion of God's will for humanity, is morally offensive and cannot be
justified under biblical Christianity. [13] (The book
of Philemon shows this.)
Despite any existence of oppressive structures in Bible times, the real question is,
Can we place the headship principle on a par with racial or gender insensitivity? Did the
New Testament writers and Jesus, who accepted this biblical principle of headship, give in
to the racial and gender injustice of their day in order not to jeopardise the spread of
the gospel?
To argue that in Old Testament times women could not be priests because their culture
would not have allowed it fails to recognise that most of Israel's neighbours had both men
and women serving as priests in their religions. [14]
Thus the culture of Old Testament times would have welcomed women priests in Israel. The
reason women in Israel were not ordained as priests was not because of their culture, but
rather because Israel understood the pre-fall headship principle that permitted only men
to be spiritual leaders within the worshipping community.
Similarly, to argue that women were not ordained as elders and pastors in the New
Testament churches because their culture could not have permitted the apostles to do so
overlooks the fact that women were active in gospel ministry in the New Testament
church--in spite of the "patriarchal culture." We have already noted the
significant roles of women such as Mary, Martha,
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Joanna, Susanna (Luke 8:2-3; Acts 1:14), Tabitha (Acts 9:36), Lydia, Phoebe, Lois,
Eunice, Priscilla, Tryphena, Tryposa, Persis, Euodia, Syntyche, and Junia (Acts 16:14-15;
18:26; 21:8-9; Rom 16:1-4, 6, 7, 12; Phil 4:3). There is no evidence that the religion of
the Bible adopted the views of some rabbis who looked down upon women as physically weak,
intellectually feeble, and emotionally unstable, as some have claimed. Rather, the New
Testament writers express abundant appreciation for the labours and contributions of women
such as those named above. Yet these women were not ordained to the roles of apostle,
elder or pastor because the New Testament church understood the headship principle that
precluded women from exercising the leadership function in the worshipping community. [15]
Furthermore, to suggest that Paul's statements prohibiting women from having
"authority over men" (1 Tim 2:12; cf. 1 Cor 14:34-35) were concessions he had to
make to accommodate the (supposedly) anti-women cultural practices of his times is to
ignore Paul's own clear explanation of his reasons and to charge him with theological
inconsistency, if not religious hypocrisy. Since in 1 Tim 2:11ff., the apostle himself
gave a theological reason as the basis for his prohibition ("For Adam was
formed first, then Eve. . . "), those who attempt to explain Paul's statement on the
basis of cultural accommodation are in effect saying that Paul misconstrued or misapplied
the Old Testament in order to justify his lack of moral courage to stand against unjust
cultural norms. How can the apostle Paul, the champion of the "neither male nor
female" principle (Gal 3:28), be so characterised by proponents of women's
ordination? Only a few verses before the one in question, the apostle himself protests,
"For this I was appointed a preacher and apostle (I am telling the truth, I am not
lying), a teacher of the Gentiles in faith and truth" (1 Tim 2:7,
emphasis added). Paul's reason for prohibiting headship authority to women was not
culture; rather, he understood clearly the permanent validity of the Old Testament
principle of headship.
Some argue that Jesus could not ordain women as apostles because the culture of His
time would not have permitted Him to do so without prematurely jeopardising His ministry.
Are they, in effect, charging our Lord Jesus Christ with insensitivity or accommodation to
the "injustice" women suffered in His day? How could this be, when Scripture
clearly teaches that Jesus never yielded to sin (Heb 4:15)? "Sin" surely
includes the sin of gender injustice.
While Jesus attempted no political reforms to correct the corrupt and oppressive
structures of His day, He was not "indifferent to the woes of men." He
understood that the remedy for any form of injustice (race, gender, religious, etc.)
"did not lie in merely human and external measures. To be efficient, the cure must
reach men [and women] individually, and must regenerate the heart" ( The
Desire of Ages , p. 509). He established the church as a counter society in which
freedom and justice would truly reign. If Jesus had considered the restriction of the
apostleship to males to be an issue of injustice, He would not have chosen only men.
Christ attempted no civil reforms, but He surely did attempt to establish his own church
on clearly different principles.
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To suggest, as proponents of women's ordination do, that Jesus' choice of male apostles
was a mere concession to the "male-dominated" social structure of His time is to
misunderstand who Jesus really was and what He stood for. The gospels clearly reveal that
Jesus' teaching and actions rebuked the pride that leads men and women to belittle each
other because of race, gender, religion, social status, and any other type of class
bigotry. Christ was not afraid to break social customs when they conflicted with
Scripture. Against custom, he ministered to Gentiles, spoke to a Samaritan woman, and ate
with tax collectors and sinners. He condemned the social injustices of His day when He
spoke out against divorce and remarriage (Matt 19:8); when He drove from the temple those
who were profaning it and exploiting others (John 2:14-17; Matt 21:27); and when He
criticised religious leaders to their faces for their hypocrisy (Matt 23:13ff.). Christ's
own life, as well as the thrust of His Sermon on the Mount, reveals that our Lord would
not bow to any cultural pressure when moral issues were at stake. He denounced the scribes
and Pharisees and all those who accommodate biblical principle to their cultural norms
when He demanded, "Why do you break the command of God for the sake of your
tradition?" (Matt 15:3 NIV).
Christ could easily have chosen and ordained six men and their wives as apostles, since
the wives of apostles frequently accompanied them (1 Cor 9:5). But He did not. Christ
could have chosen and ordained at least one of the women who were actively involved in His
ministry, travelling to the places He was teaching and supporting Him and His disciples
with their own money (see Luke 8:1-3). But He did not. He could have ordained His own
mother, since she already had heaven's certification as "highly favoured" (Luke
1:28, 30). But He did not. He could have chosen and ordained Mary, just as He commissioned
her to bear witness to His resurrection (Mark 16:9ff.; John 20:11ff.). But He did not.
Christ could have ordained the Samaritan woman as an apostle, since she defied several
"cultural" stigmas (a woman five times divorced, living unlawfully with a man,
and a Samaritan) to become a powerful and successful evangelist (John 4). But He did not.
Instead, after spending all night in prayer (Luke 6:12), Christ appointed twelve men as
His apostles (Matt 10:2-4; Mark 3:13-19). Why? Not because He lacked the courage to stand
against gender injustice in His culture, and not because women were not capable or
qualified, but because Jesus understood the headship principle of Scripture and submitted
to its authority.
Conclusion. The "cultural argument" is a futile attempt to
explain the lack of biblical precedent for ordaining women to headship roles in both the
Old and New Testament worshipping communities. [16]
The Holy Spirit's role in the inspiration of Scripture ensured that the Bible writers were
not prisoners of the oppressive structures of their day (race, gender, religion, etc.).
"No prophecy of Scripture came about by the prophet's own interpretation. For
prophecy never had its origin in the will of man, but men spoke from God as they were
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carried along by the Holy Spirit" (2 Pet 1:20-21 NIV). The Holy Spirit's
inspiration was more powerful than cultural force in the writing of the Scriptures. Led by
the Spirit, the prophets and apostles as well as Jesus did what was right on this issue.
The headship principle is the most biblically consistent explanation for the absence of
Bible precedent for ordaining women to leadership roles in the church--as priests in the
Old Testament, and as apostles and elders or pastors in the New Testament. And this
principle has permanent validity.
The Alleged "Silence" of the Bible
Our discussion in chapters V and VI, highlighting biblical and theological obstacles to
women's ordination, should put to rest the argument that the Bible is silent on the
question of ordaining women as elders and pastors. As we have shown in this document, the
Bible is not silent on the issue of women's ordination to the leadership role of the
worshipping community. The lack of Bible precedent, as well as the presence of clear
prohibitions in Scripture against the practice, speaks loudly against the so-called
argument of silence. The only silence in Scripture on this issue is the same kind of
silence awaiting those who search the Bible fruitlessly for a justification for Sunday
keeping. Thus, with respect to the attempt to ordain women, just as with the bid to change
the Sabbath from Saturday to Sunday, we respond that the testimonies of Scripture indicate
that God the Father did not do it; the Old Testament is clear that the patriarchs,
prophets and kings never did do it; the gospels reveal that Jesus, the Desire of Ages,
would not do it; the epistles and the acts of the apostles declare that the commissioned
apostles could not do it; Ellen White, with
a prophetic vision of the great controversy between Christ and Satan, dared not do it. [17] Should we who live at the turn of another
millennium do it?
The Bible is not silent on the issue of women's ordination. It teaches clearly that men
and women have equal standing before God as created beings, as sinners in need of
salvation through Christ, and as people called to the same destiny. The Bible is equally
emphatic in upholding role differentiations between male and female. Within the
complementary relationship of male and female equality, male headship charges the man to
be the Christ-like spiritual leader/overseer in both the home and church families, while
the corresponding female role calls upon the woman to support/assist him willingly and
nobly in his leadership function. This arrangement is not an indication of
superiority of one over the other. "When God created Eve, he designed that she should
possess neither inferiority nor superiority to the man, but that in all things she should
be his equal" ( Testimonies
for the Church , 3:484).
Any attempt to ignore or even reverse this divine arrangement will ultimately lead to a
fate similar to that of our first parents when they yielded to Satan on this same kind of
temptation. "Eve had been perfectly happy by her husband's side in her Eden home;
but, like restless modern Eves, she was flattered with the hope of entering a higher
sphere than that which God had
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assigned her. In attempting to rise above her original position, she fell far below it.
A similar result will be reached by all who are unwilling to take up cheerfully their life
duties in accordance with God's plan. In their efforts to reach positions for which He has
not fitted them, many are leaving vacant the place where they might be a blessing. In
their desire for a higher sphere, many have sacrificed true womanly dignity and nobility
of character, and have left undone the very work that Heaven appointed them" (
Patriarchs
and Prophets , p. 59). This statement does not condemn women's aspirations for
self-improvement or a better life. Rather, it calls for all to seek to live according to God's
plan.
Conclusion. In this chapter and the previous one we have found that the
headship principle was not a result of sin, but was instituted at creation, reiterated at
the fall, and can only be truly realised "in the Lord." As a part of the
creation order, it is still valid today. The example of Jesus and the apostles and the
instruction of Paul show that the principle applies to the church and not just the home.
The New Testament consistently indicates that the ones chosen for the leadership role in
the church are to be males. The Bible texts from Paul's writings which speak most directly
to this issue give a theological reason for the restriction, tracing it to Creation
and to "the law." The culture of both Old and New Testament times would have
accepted female leadership in the church. Neither Paul nor Jesus lacked the courage to
stand for the right in this matter; their actions were not cowardly accommodation, but
fearless fidelity to God's established order. In light of these things, though the Bible
nowhere uses the expression "women's ordination," it is far from silent on the
issue, giving clear instructions regarding the leadership of the church.
So wherein does our problem lie? What obstacles do we still have in our
way that would prevent us from finding solutions that honour both women in ministry and
the instruction of Scripture? Since all problems trace their origin back to when the man
and the woman first took the forbidden fruit, perhaps we will find some answers in a
"forbidden issue" that involves them both. This will shed some light on how
some are searching the Scriptures.
NOTES
[1] The word aner (translated "man" in the English translations)
means a male of the human race. Therefore, the Greek phrase, mias [of one] gunaikos
[woman] andra [man], literally translates as a "man of one woman," or
"one-woman-man," meaning "a male of one woman." When used of the
marriage relation it may be translated "husband of one wife" (KJV) or
"husband of but one wife" (NIV). Because in this passage the words for
"man" and "woman" do not have the definite article, the construction
in the Greek emphasises character or nature. Thus, "one can translate, 'one-wife sort
of a husband,' or 'a one-woman sort of a man.' . . . Since character is emphasised by the
Greek construction, the bishop should be a man who loves only one woman as his wife."
(See Kenneth S. Wuest, The Pastoral Epistles in the Greek New Testament for the English
Reader [Grand Rapids, Mich.: Eerdmans, 1952], p. 53.) Also, because the word
"one" (mias) is positioned at the
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beginning of the phrase in the Greek, it appears to emphasise this monogamous
relationship. Thus, the phrase "husband of one wife," is calling for monogamous
fidelity--that is to say, an elder must be "faithful to his one wife" (NEB).
For an excellent summary of the various interpretations of this text, see Ronald A. G. du
Preez, Polygamy in the Bible with Implications for Seventh-day Adventist Missiology
(D.Min. project dissertation, Andrews University, 1993), pp. 266-277. Some have questioned
whether Paul's instruction requires that the elder or pastor be married. While most likely
the congregational leaders were married, two lines of scriptural evidence suggest that
marriage was not an inflexible requirement. First, the apostle Paul himself seems not to
have been married during his ministry (see 1 Cor 7:7-8). Second, he recommends the
unmarried state to those who can accept it, so that they may be "anxious about the
affairs of the Lord, how to please the Lord" (v. 32; see vv. 25-35). These
considerations lend support to the idea that we may understand 1 Timothy 3:2 as referring
to a "one-woman kind of man," one who, if married, is faithful to his one wife.
[2] The effort by some to see the "aged
women" (presbutidas) of Titus 2:3 as referring to women elders is misdirected
for two reasons. First, the usual word for elder is presbuteros (Acts 11:30; 14:23;
15:2, 4, 6, 22ff.; 16:4; 20:17; 21:18; 1 Tim 5:17, 19; Titus 1:5; James 5:14; 1 Pet 5:1,
5); the word refers to older men but also to those holding the office of elder. If Paul
had intended to speak of "women elders" he could easily have used the
corresponding feminine form, presbutera, though no office of "woman elder" is
attested. Second, the context of Titus 2 makes it clear that Paul is not addressing those
holding the office of elder but rather the different groups of people in the church:
"aged men" (v. 2, presbutas, plural from presbutes, not from presbuteros),
"aged women" (v. 3), "young women" (v. 4-5), "young men" (v.
6) and "servants" (v. 9). Having addressed "aged men" in verse 2 (cf.
Luke 1:18; Philemon 9), Paul employs a related word, presbutidas, in verse 3 for
"aged women," making it clear that he was speaking about older women and not
"women elders." Hence the reinterpretation is invalid. The only kind of elder
the apostle Paul recognised is the person who, among other things, is the "husband of
one wife" (Titus 1:6; 1 Tim 3:2). The idea of a "woman elder" is thus an
oxymoron.
[3] On the different methods of interpretation
applied to this passage and their implications for Seventh-day Adventists, see Gerhard F.
Hasel, "Biblical Authority and Feminist Interpretation," Adventists Affirm
3/2 (Fall 1989): 12-23.
[4] See the discussion of Galatians 3:28 in chapter
V under the heading "Realised 'in the Lord'" (p. 48).
[5] Even though the epistle to Timothy informs us of
false teaching in the church of Ephesus, Paul did not give much detail regarding the
specific nature of the false teaching. Some were engaged in speculative theologies based
on "myths and interminable genealogies" and were creating confusion (1 Tim
1:3-7; 6:3-5; cf. 2 Tim 2:14, 16-17, 23-24; Titus 1:10; 3:9-11); other false teachers were
stressing asceticism--e.g., abstinence from certain foods, marriage, etc. (1 Tim 4:1-3,
8); some convinced women to follow them in their false doctrines (1 Tim 5:15; 2 Tim
3:6-7), including usurping the role of men (1 Tim 2:11ff.). Beyond this general picture of
the false doctrines being spread in the church, scholars have attempted to reconstruct
what they think occasioned Paul's writing. Christians should be cautious about accepting
any of these hypotheses, however enlightening they may appear to be. In the text under
consideration, the apostle Paul stated clearly his reason for prohibiting women from
having authority over men (see 1 Tim 2:13, 14).
[6] For a recent attempt to establish the setting of
1 Timothy 2:11ff., see Sharon Marie Hodgin Gritz, A Study of 1 Timothy 2:9-15 in Light
of the Religious and Cultural Milieu of the First Century (Ph.D. dissertation,
South-western Baptist Theological Seminary, 1986).
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[7] The Greek words used, aner and gune, refer to men and omen
respectively. When used of the marriage relation, they may be translated as
"husband" and "wife" (cf. 1 Pet 3:5, 6 and Eph 5:22-24). The context
of 1 Timothy 2:11ff. is the church, suggesting that Paul was not just speaking to husbands
and wives within the marriage institution but to men and women in the church, whether
married or not (see a parallel instance in 1 Cor 14:34-35).
[8] Clearly the instructions given in 1 Timothy are
not meant merely for the local church in Ephesus but for the whole Christian church. The
nature of subjects discussed in the book demonstrates this. From the first chapter to the
last, Paul covers themes such as the proper use of the law in character development, the
work of Christ (chapter 1), prayers for rulers and worship procedures for men and women
(chapter 2), qualifications of church leaders and practical suggestions for ministry
(chapters 3 and 4), and how Timothy, and hence all leaders, should relate to old and young
members, widows, elected elders, false teachers, and worldly riches (chapters 5 and 6). In
light of these things, it is illegitimate to confine 1 Timothy to the local situation of
Ephesus, and hence, to argue that the prohibition in 2:11ff. is of temporary or local
application.
[9] For a critique of the many interpretations of
this text, see D. A. Carson, "'Silent in the Churches': On the Role of Women in 1
Corinthians 14:33b-36," in Recovering Biblical Manhood and Womanhood, pp.
140-153.
[10] See 1 Corinthians 14:33b, which most
translations connect to v. 34.
[11] We therefore reject the suggestion that in 1
Corinthians 14:34 and 1 Timothy 2:11-12, God was adapting to sinful human conditions,
specifically the cultural situation at Corinth and Ephesus (e.g., see Andrew Bates
[pseudonym], "The Jerusalem Council: A Model for Utrecht?" Ministry,
April 1995, p. 22).
[12] John Stott, Decisive Issues Facing
Christians Today (Old Tappan, N. J.: Revell, 1990), pp. 269-270.
[13] For more on this, see Samuel Koranteng-Pipim,
"Saved by Grace and Living by Race: The Religion Called Racism," Journal of
the Adventist Theological Society 5/2 (Autumn 1994):37-78.
[14] Some have also argued that the reason why
Israelite women were prohibited from serving as priests was that God did not want them to
engage in the kind of immorality that the pagan priestesses engaged in. Besides lacking
any basis in Scripture, such an argument implies that women are more prone to sexual
immorality than men--a sexist argument that is yet to be proven.
[15] In an effort to show that women may exercise
headship/leadership in the church, some who favour women's ordination have suggested that
when Paul commends Phoebe in Romans 16:2 as "a servant of the church" and as
"a succourer [prostatis] of many, and of myself also," the Greek term prostatis
(translated "succourer" [KJV], "help" or "helper" [RSV,
NASB, NIV]) should be rendered "leader." Translated in this way, Paul is made to
say that Phoebe was "a leader [prostatis] of many, and of myself also"
(Rom 16:2b). Two brief responses should be made. First, while the related masculine noun
prostates may mean "leader" in some later Christian literature, the feminine
noun used here (prostatis) is never attested with the meaning "leader"
but is defined as "protectress, patroness, helper" (see Walter Bauer, A
Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament an Other Early Christian Literature, 2nd ed.,
trans. William F. Arndt and F. Wilbur Gingrich, rev. F. Wilbur Gingrich and Frederick W.
Danker [Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1979), p. 718. But a more important
consideration is the context. Translating prostatis as "leader" makes Paul say
that Phoebe was "a leader. . . of myself also." The suggestion that Phoebe held
a position of authority over Paul is highly unlikely, given Paul's insistence that with
the exception of Christ, no other person (not even the Jerusalem apostles) had authority
over him (Gal 1:6-
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9, 11; 2 Thess 3:14; 1 Cor 14:37-38). Also, this same Paul prohibits a woman to have
"authority over men" (1 Tim 2:11ff.). Thus, prostatis can only be
translated legitimately as "helper" (not "leader") in Romans 16:2. The
reason why Paul urges the church to "help [paristemi] Phoebe" was because, as
"a servant [diakonos] of the church," she has been such a help [prostatis]
to others and to me" (Rom 16:1, 2, NIV). See chapter 3, note 2 above for a discussion
of the term diakonos.
[16] Some have also claimed that the headship
principle is no different from God's alleged accommodation or concession, in Old Testament
times, to sinful human conditions such as polygamy, and divorce and remarriage. Two brief
responses are in order. First, the pre-fall creation ordinance of headship that was
instituted to govern the male-female relationship should not be equated with a post-fall
distortion of the marriage institution (polygamy, and divorce and remarriage); the former
is morally right, the latter are not. Second, the fact that God gave people freedom to
choose and live in sin should not be interpreted as God's toleration of these sinful
practices. Bible students will benefit from the following two works which challenge these
"accommodation" hypotheses: Ronald A. G. du Preez, Polygamy in the Bible with
Implications for Seventh-day Adventist Missiology (D. Min. project dissertation,
Andrews University, 1993); J. Carl Laney, "Deuteronomy 24:1-4 and the Issue of
Divorce," Bibliotheca Sacra 149 (Jan-Mar 1992):3-15. Both works offer biblical
evidence showing that God at no time tolerated polygamy, divorce and remarriage.
[17] For a detailed discussion of
what Ellen G. White taught regarding the
ministry of women in the church, see William Fagal, "Ellen White and the Role of
Women in the Church," a document that also discusses the statements of Ellen White regarding the ordination of women.
Copies are available from the Ellen G. White
Estate at a cost of $1.20 [US Dollars], which includes postage in the U.S.A.
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