As
Mary Zeiss Stange sees it, women are being denied their rightful place
of leadership in American religious life. Her logic is clear, and she
writes with a mixture of exasperation and energy. Her op-ed column in
today's edition of USA Today, "Do Women Have a Prayer?," reflects the way many people naturally frame the issue of the role of women in the church.
Women report far higher rates of religious belief and participation
than do men, according to studies as recent as The Pew Forum's 2008 U.S. Religious Landscape Survey.
Women are indispensable to the life of our congregations and are more
likely than men to participate in church life in some congregations and
denominations.
This leads Professor Stange to write:
One would think that these facts would translate into women's
rise to positions of spiritual leadership — surely the mark of genuine
equality — in the various denominations. Alas, as a glance at some of
the largest organized religious groups in the country shows, the
picture is at best mixed when it comes to women's ability to break that
stained-glass ceiling.
Mary Zeiss Stange is Professor of Religious Studies and Religion at
Skidmore College in New York. In the paragraph cited above, she refers
to "that stained-glass ceiling" that, in her view, keeps women from
positions of church leadership. In her understanding, full access to
all positions of leadership is "the mark of genuine equality" that is
missing from most American churches.
Thus, this article gets right to the heart of the issues at stake.
Professor Stange writes from a recognizable point of view. She sees
equal access to leadership as integral to genuine equality for women.
If any office in the church is limited to men, women are treated as
unequals. Following her logic, this pattern can only be explained by
prejudice and intractable tradition -- thus the stained-glass ceiling
as a religious form of the so-called "glass ceiling" that has limited
the role of women in other sectors of society.
Professor Stange points her argument toward the Roman Catholic
Church and the Southern Baptist Convention as examples of denominations
that illustrate the "stained-glass ceiling." She does recognize that
both the Roman Catholics and the Southern Baptists base their
understanding on theological commitments, but she sees this pattern as
rooted in prejudice that should be overcome.
"The better news is that among the so-called mainline Protestant
denominations, women have made considerable progress in attaining
positions of religious authority," she reports. She cites the fact
that, for example, the United Methodist Church has ordained women to
the ministry for decades now. Yet, as she also notes, "in a pattern
familiar among churches that do ordain women — few of these women hold
senior positions in large congregations."
Accordingly, Professor Stange declares her verdict:
It is a truth so familiar as to have become cliché: Women are
the driving force behind organized religion. They fill the pews, they
bring their children into the fold. The Pew data help make sense of
these facts. But the same data highlight the cruel irony that in far
too many religious contexts in this country, women remain second-class
citizens.
Like all of us, Professor Stange operates out of a set of
presuppositions and intellectual commitments -- a worldview. In her
worldview, any limitation of leadership to men is based in prejudice
that must be overcome in the name of liberating women. Churches are
seen as human institutions marked by human prejudice, pure and simple.
Completely missing from her analysis is any concession that God
might actually have ordered this pattern of leadership restriction for
our good and His glory. Her perspective on the issue is fundamentally
secular in approach. In this view, where men alone can hold positions
of authority and responsibility, prejudice must be the cause and access
to these positions for women must be the solution.
We live in a society that considers itself pledged to equality as a
basic principle. We also live in a society that is, indeed, marked by
many prejudices that are evidence of human sinfulness, pure and simple.
Nevertheless, those who believe that the church is an institution
established by Jesus Christ and who believe that the Bible is our sole
final authority for belief and practice must obey what the Bible
teaches. This means that we must also follow the pattern set out in
the Scripture as the pattern set out by God himself.
Men and women are indeed equally created in the image of God,
equally in need of the Gospel, and equal in terms of salvation. Both
men and women are called to lives of discipleship, service, and
witness. Mary Zeiss Stange is surely right when she suggests that
churches depend upon the dedicated service and faithfulness of women.
But this does not mean that the pattern for the church set forth in the
Bible is to be rejected in light of current conceptions of gender
equality. Those who believe that the Bible is indeed the inerrant and
infallible written revelation of God are obligated to perpetuate and
honor the pattern of leadership ordered within the text of Scripture.
Furthermore, we must see this pattern, not as evidence of human
prejudice, but as God's revelation to us -- a revelation by grace that
is for the good of both men and women and the pattern by which God
brings glory to himself.
Two very different worldviews stand at the intersection where this
issue is now debated. In her own way, Mary Zeiss Stange helps to
clarify what is at stake, and to show how different worldviews lead to
very different (even diametrically opposed) conclusions.
Opportunities for this quality of clarity are not to be missed.