September 8, 2008
Over at "On Faith," the project of The Washington Post and Newsweek magazine, a debate is raging over this question:
Women are not allowed to become clergy in many conservative religious groups. Is it hypocritical to think that a woman can lead a nation and not a congregation?
As you might expect, that question has unleashed a torrent of response. The essays range across the spectrum.
From retired Episcopal Bishop John Shelby Spong:
It is not a hypocritical sign so much as it is a uninformed sexism in the Christian Church as well as a sign of how irrelevant many parts of Christianity are in the world of today. Great Britain had a woman prime minister before the Church of England had a woman priest. How absurd can a people be?
and
It is time for the dated prejudices of human beings based primarily on the fear of being different, to cease receiving the dignity of a cover from either the Church or the Bible. We need to call those prejudices what they are - evil!
Spong is one of the most outspoken characters on the religious left of our day. He has embraced every heresy imaginable and rejects the deity of Christ and the inspiration of Scripture. Thus, he can only be repulsed by people who hold the Bible to be a binding authority. It is "evil" to restrict modern humanity by means of biblical authority.
From Brian McLaren, author and leading figure in the "emerging church:"
I just talked to a leading conservative religious leader about this the other day. He believes that the New Testament texts regarding women only apply to the church and not the secular world. I find that line of interpretation very convenient for conservative churches, and impossible to justify theologically. My guess is that more and more of the daughters of today's religious conservatives will decide to a) abandon their parent's approach to interpreting the Bible, b) decide the "secular" world is a more hospitable place and spend more time there and less in the church, or c) change churches.
This short post is interesting for what is absent as much as what is present. McLaren suggests that he finds the distinction between the church and the secular world "impossible to justify" in terms of the New Testament texts, but he offers no explanation as to why. Does McLaren think that the Apostle Paul's list of qualifications for pastors found in 1 Timothy 3 is to be applied equally to positions of secular political office? This would be a fascinating argument to see him make. Given the tone of this argument and his other writings, it would seem that he would see these texts as basically inapplicable to both contexts.
Paul is talking here about two objects, the Church and the family, not about governments, corporations and all other secular organizations.
This does not mean that woman are not allowed to proclaim the gospel or teach a bible class.
The final dissision in Church or family has to be made by the man, and therefore the leadership.