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WOMEN
(A
SECOND RESPONSE)
Cameron Rhoads (July 9, 2000) did not like
my response to his earlier letter on the place of women
in public Christian work. He believes that there should
be nearly unrestricted public involvement,
including authority over the man, whereas I believe Scripture
teaches a limited and private participation of
Christian women. He plainly holds to a radical egalitarian or feminist
position, which has become popular in
our day, and thinks that God has eliminated the gender-role
distinctions that have prevailed for many centuries.
The Christian must base all of these considerations
on the Word of God. Let me briefly review his faulty arguments,
using the Biblewhich interested readers can check
for themselves.
Cameron admits that the twelve apostles were
all males but says some of the seventy sent out by Jesus
may have included women (Luke 10:1). This is pure speculation, with
no Biblical evidence. While it is true that women were "disciples" of
the Lord (Luke 8:2-3), they were not "apostles" in
the sense of authoritative position.
Second, Junia (Romans 16:7) may be understood
as an "apostle" in the sense of "one sent
on a mission" rather than viewing this as an authoritative
position on a par with Peter and Paul (we would say "missionary";
the Greek term often has this meaning2 Cor. 8:23;
Phil. 2:25).
Third, both 1 Timothy 3:2 and Titus 1:6 state
that overseers (bishops), shepherds (pastors), or elders
must be the husband of one wife (not wife of
one husband). The Greek for "husband" here
is "andra," from "aner" (males), and
not "anthropos" (generic). Further, 1 Timothy
3:12 specifies that deacons must also be the husband of
one wife. It is true that neither Paul nor Timothy could
have filled this position (they were unmarried men). They
were evangelists and apostles (Paul in a primary sense
and Timothy in a secondary sense), which required much
travel, and wives would have been a burden in such circumstances
(1 Cor. 7:32-35). Furthermore, 1 Timothy 3:11 does not
use the Greek term for the female "deaconess," thus
we cannot use this as evidence for a womans authority,
as Cameron does. Let us allow Paul himself to name the
conditions for the position of the male overseers and deacons.
Fourth, Romans 16:1-2 simply refers to Phoebe
as a "servant of the church." Leading translations
(NASB, NIV, TEV, KJV, NKJV) render this as "servant" or "serve" rather
than "deaconess" (although the NRSV and JB do
have "deaconess"). It need not denote an office
in the sense of an authoritative position. One can "serve" without
being in a position of leadership over menand many
women admirably serve the Lord in this capacity.
Finally, Rhoads suggests that women may participate
in any of the "spiritual gifts" in the church.
It is true that women are given gifts by the Lord. But
would God give a gift to a woman and then forbid her to
use it? Women are forbidden to have authority
over the man (1 Tim. 2:11; 1 Cor. 11:3), to teach over
a man (1 Tim. 2:12), or even to speak publicly in the church
(1 Cor. 14:33-36). Paul says that this is not merely a
cultural matter but is "the Lords commandment" (1
Cor. 14:37) and based on facts true since the creation
of man and woman (1 Tim. 2:13-15; 1 Cor. 11:3, 8-10). This
shows why we must have a proper and Scriptural view of
the womens role in Christian work as well as society
at large!
The womens role generally does not
rest on cultural context, geographical location, or temporal
considerations. It rests on the timeless will of God.
God allows women to freely engage in many vital works of
Christian service. But He has the divine right to place
clear limitations on their position and work.
Richard
Hollerman
(Fort Worth Star-Telegram) |