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Fundamental
Evangelistic Association
selected
articles from:
©FOUNDATION
A MAGAZINE OF BIBLICAL FUNDAMENTALISM
Dennis W. Costella, Editor; Karel Beyer, Production Manager; Matt
Costella,
Copy Editor
M.H. Reynolds, Jr. (1919-1997), Founding Editor
The Role of Women in the Local Church
Does God’s Word Allow a
Woman to Serve as a Pastor in the Church? A Study in the Pastoral
Epistles
by Matt Costella
©FOUNDATION Magazine, Jul-Aug 2001
The Proliferation of
Female Clergy Within the Christian Church
The role
of women in local Christian assemblies has been a matter of debate
within Christendom for many years. Yet within the past 25 years, this
issue has risen to a climax not only in several mainline Protestant
and Orthodox denominations but also in evangelical churches as well.
The issue of the role of women in the church served as a matter of
contention at the Eighth Assembly of the World Council of Churches in
Harare, Zimbabwe, in December 1998 when the Greek and Russian Orthodox
Churches voiced their displeasure of the fact that the majority of the
WCC's member churches and denominations ordain women as ministers and
priests.1 In the United States, the Presbyterian Church
USA, the Episcopal Church USA, The United Church of Christ, the United
Methodist Church, the Reformed Church in America, the Evangelical
Lutheran Church in America, the Church of the Brethren and the
Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) are only a few of the many
mainline denominations that ordain women into ministry and encourage
them to serve as pastors and bishops of local congregations.
In a
recent study of denominations that ordain women, researchers found
that the number of ordained women ministers in 15 large Protestant
denominations grew exponentially between 1977 and 1994. A Hartford
Seminary study discovered that within this time period, the number of
female clergy increased from 157 to 712 in the American Baptist Church
USA, from 94 to 1,394 in the Episcopal Church USA, from 388 to 988 in
the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ), from 73 to 1,519 in the
Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, from 350 to 2,705 in the
Presbyterian Church (USA) and from 319 to 3,003 in the United
Methodist Church.2 It is also interesting to note that
approximately 25 percent of the female clergy and 19 percent of the
male clergy who participated in the study were divorced. The survey
concludes as follows: "Clergy women are reinventing ministry for the
future, refusing the old definitions and expectations. Clergy women
are expanding the very essence of Christian ministry and guiding the
whole church to rethink and renew its leadership and membership."3
Not only
are clergywomen growing within liberal denominations in the United
States but also within Evangelical and conservative churches and
denominations as well. Notice the following facts about these popular
denominations and associations:
Southern Baptist Convention - According
to one source, the Southern Baptist Convention has approximately
1,130 ordained women filling various roles of ministry.4
The Association of Vineyard Churches -
This group only allows men to fulfill the office of elder and pastor
but allows women to "preach, teach, evangelize, heal, prophesy,
counsel, nurture, administrate, and build up the flock of God."5
The Church of the Nazarene - One
researcher reports that this denomination "has ordained women to the
ministry since its founding in 1908 and supports the right of women
to use their God-given spiritual gifts within the church. Nazarenes
affirm the right of women to be elected and appointed to places of
leadership at all levels of the church."6 It is important
to note that some churches within this denomination have shunned
their denominational title (Church of the Nazarene) for a more
generic, community oriented name (e.g. New Life Community Church,
etc.).
Assemblies of God USA - The Assemblies
of God believes women can serve in all roles of church ministry
including that of pastor. In a position paper entitled "The Role of
Women in Ministry as Described in Holy Scripture," the authors
conclude, "We cannot find convincing evidence that the ministry of
women is restricted according to some sacred or immutable principle.
... The existence in the secular world of bigotry against women
cannot be denied. But there is no place for such an attitude in the
body of Christ. We acknowledge that attitudes of secular society,
based on long-standing practice and tradition, have influenced the
application of biblical principles to local circumstances."7
Free Methodist Church of North America -
This is the denomination in which the previous president of the
National Association of Evangelicals, Kevin Mannoia, is an
ordained bishop. This denomination believes that "the Gospel of
Jesus Christ ... knows no distinction of race, condition or sex. ...
With these beliefs, women should be encouraged to take their place
in all areas of church leadership and ministry. "8
Many other churches, fellowships and
denominations including the Open Bible Standard Churches, Inc.;
International Church of the Foursquare Gospel; The Church of God
(Anderson, IN) and others allow women to hold positions of pastoral
authority within the local church.
Not only have
denominations and local churches advanced the cause of women clergy,
but notable religious figures have done their part to popularize this
trend as well. Anne Graham Lotz, daughter of evangelist Billy Graham,
is now one of the most popular woman preachers in the world. Lotz
recently told one television news program that her parents used to
disapprove of her ministry until they heard her preach. "They saw that
my home was clean, my children were well-behaved, my husband was happy
and very supportive," she said, "And they just backed off and could
see that God had called me."9 One group of prominent
"evangelical" theologians has formed Christians for Biblical Equality
(CBE), an organization in Minneapolis, Minnesota, that zealously
promotes equal roles for women in the church and home. Notable
theologians who comprise CBE's Board of Reference include Tony
Campolo, Vernon Grounds, Roberta Hestenes, Millard Erickson, Gordon
Fee, Myron S. Augsburger and John R. Kohlenberger III. The Dallas
Morning News, which recently featured a story on the CBE,
reported that Charisma editor J. Lee Grady is also a supporter
of CBE.10 The article also noted that Promise Keepers,
another "evangelical" parachurch organization, has refused to
take an official stance on the role of women in the church and stated
that, in turn, "CBE leaders are cautious about criticizing Promise
Keepers."11
Clearly, with the growth of
the Charismatic and Pentecostal Movements which advocate female clergy
and the increasing ecumenical inclusiveness of many evangelical
churches, it is vitally important for the Fundamentalist Christian to
know what God's Word teaches regarding this issue so that he might
know how to answer those who question his position concerning the role
of women in the ministry of the local church. It is evident that the
majority of professing Christians and Christian churches today allow
women to fill positions of pastoral leadership in the local church.
This serious issue will remain with the church and continue to
permeate all realms of Christian thought and practice as women's roles
of pastoral leadership in churches and denominations continue to
become more accepted and commonplace in the Christian community.
A Brief Historical Look at Views
Concerning the Role of Women in the Local Church
In their
simplest form, the views concerning the role of women in local church
ministry are most often broken down by scholars into two distinct
groups: those who believe women should be permitted to hold
positions of pastoral authority in the church and those who believe
that only men are permitted to hold such positions in the local
church. Those who believe women should be restricted from holding an
authoritative, pastoral role in the church embrace what is known as
the "historic" or "traditional" view. On the other hand, those who
believe women should possess the ability to occupy all positions of
leadership within the church embrace what is referred to as the
"egalitarian" or "progressive" view.
Obviously,
pastors and theologians do not always subscribe solely to all aspects
of one view or the other. Various nuances of these views exist among
those who have studied the issue. For example, some might hold to the
position that women cannot serve in the local church as senior pastors
but are permitted to serve as assistant or associate pastors. Others
might believe that women should not serve in any form of pastoral role
in the local church but are free to teach men and women in an
adult Sunday school class. In any case, for the purpose of
clarification within this article and due to the limitations of space
and content, this article will simply define those who permit women to
hold any form of pastoral role within the local church as ones
who hold the progressive or egalitarian view and any who forbid women
to hold a position of teaching authority over men as those who hold to
the historic or traditional view.
According
to author Daniel Doriani, those who hold to the historic view of women
in ministry can claim the support of traditional Christian thought and
teaching throughout church history.12 In fact, one author,
Robert Yarbrough, has conducted an insightful study on the
hermeneutics of 1 Timothy 2:9-15 in which he concludes that the
"progressive" view has been shaped more by the social climate of the
mid-20th century rather than the Biblical text itself.13 He
cites, "It strains credulity to the breaking point to maintain that it
is mere coincidence that 'progressive' readings of I Timothy 2,
which were virtually unheard of in church history prior to the women's
movement of the 1960s, are not indebted to that movement in
fundamental respects for their plausibility."14 Although
Doriani did cite three feminist writers from the 19th century who
pioneered a progressive understanding of women's role in the church
(Catherine Booth, Frances Willard and Katherine Bushnell), clearly the
majority of the shift from traditionalist to progressive writings and
beliefs concerning the woman's role in the church appeared during the
20th century.
The Biblical View of Women's Role in the
Local Church
While a
variety of arguments promoting the progressive view exist, the scope
of this article does not allow room for an extensive examination of
each view, nor will it attempt to provide a rebuttal for every
argument. Rather, this section of the article will simply, but
carefully, determine the intent of 1 Timothy 2:9-15 within the
confines of the Pastoral Epistles (First and Second Timothy and Titus)
while referring, as necessary, to other New Testament texts regarding
the Bible's teaching concerning the role of women within the local
church setting. Several principles will be set forth and supported by
the Biblical text as well as by theologians who have carefully studied
the Biblical text and arrived at what the writer believes to be a
sound conclusion.
Yet before
noticing what God's Word says about this important issue, the reader
must decide whether or not he or she will accept the very words of
Scripture as the inspired and inerrant words of God. Many who espouse
a progressive view of women in ministry hold a low view of Scripture,
viewing the Biblical text as the ideas, philosophies and musings of
men (such as the Apostle Paul) rather than the very words of God given
to men by the direct act of inspiration by the Holy Spirit. If one
concludes that the words of the text under consideration simply
reflect the cultural milieu of the apostle Paul and therefore cannot
be considered authoritative for the 21st century, then no other
argument or investigation into the topic can proceed, for one's
beliefs are subject to the conclusions and judgments of men rather
than the absolute and unchanging truth of God Himself.
However,
if one accepts the Bible as inerrant, authoritative and
"God-breathed," then he will know that all Scripture is
profitable for doctrine and he will refrain from discarding those
portions he does not believe to be relevant or applicable to his own
situation.
Principle #1: Women Are to
Teach Other Women
Paul's New
Testament epistle to Titus contains instruction concerning Titus' need
to "set in order the things that [were] wanting" (Titus1:5) in the
local church and his need to "ordain elders in every city" on the
island of Crete. Paul specifically instructed Titus to "speak thou the
things which become sound doctrine" (Titus 2: 1), the very "things"
that were being perverted by the false teachers influencing the church
at Crete. Within the confines of the local church ministry, one area
of "sound doctrine" that Titus was to emphasize was the truth that the
older women of the congregation were to be "teachers of good things"
(Titus 2:3). Specifically, these women were to "teach the young women
to be sober, to love their husbands, to love their children, to be
discreet, chaste, keepers at home, good, obedient to their own
husbands" (Titus 2:4-5). Such teaching concerning obedience and
morality was vitally important to the health of the body of Christ.
Why? So the Word of God would not be "blasphemed" or reproached (Titus
2:5).
From this
text, it is evident that women are to teach other women and that God
has prescribed an order of conduct for women which, if followed,
glorifies Him and causes His name to be glorified rather than
reproached or blasphemed. The exact nature of this "teaching" ministry
of women is not explicitly stated, but certainly this ministry could
be advanced in either a classroom setting or on a personal
discipleship arrangement. Thomas Oden, one who holds an egalitarian
view of women in ministry, notes, "Mature women were specifically
designated in Titus 2:3 as teachers (kalodidaskalous, teachers
of what is good). Mature women are the natural counselors of the
young. Their teaching of virtue is best done by example."15
Whether women teach other women at the local church (as is the case in
many of today's Sunday school class arrangements) or whether they
teach them outside the confines of the local church, the command
remains the same: Women are to teach other women, at the very least by
their own example if not also by verbal instruction as well.
Principle #2: Women Are to
Adorn Themselves With Good Works
In
1Timothy 2:1-15, Paul gives instructions for public worship by
believers. Within this context, Paul instructs women in the
congregation to dress modestly rather than in an ostentatious or
ornate manner (vv. 9-10). But rather than writing simply a legalistic
style manual for women, Paul penned these verses by inspiration of the
Holy Spirit in an effort to lay down a Biblical principle for
corporate worship in the local church. The principle is this: A
woman's character is more important than her apparel. Homer Kent
writes, "She is to adorn herself with good works. Her adorning, that
which gives her attractiveness, is not to be costly array but
exhibitions of Christian character ... Every Christian woman should
prize more highly a testimony to her Christian labors than a
reputation as the best-dressed woman in the congregation."16
Kent cites the Scriptural examples of Phoebe, Lydia and Dorcas as
those whose works were edifying to the body of Christ and left lasting
impressions not only on those with whom they came into contact but
also upon the entire church unto this very day.
Even
today, women have a responsibility within the local church to minister
to others through their good works and to be known for who they truly
are through their Godly Christian character. Women can demonstrate
their good works within the local church body through a variety of
ways. Showing hospitality, encouraging others, teaching other women
and keeping believers up-to-date on the ministries of the church and
the church's missionaries are just a few ways in which good works and
Godly character can be revealed in the local assembly on the part of
Christian women.
Principle #3: Women Are to
Be Active Learners
Not only
are women in the local church to teach other women and maintain good
works and Godly character, but Paul also commands them to be learners.
In his second epistle to Timothy, Paul states that the false teachers
had influenced some of the women in the Ephesian church (2 Tim.
3:6-7). Ann Bowman notes that "it seems [Paul] knew it was important
that they be well grounded in the Scriptures."17 Of course,
in order to be grounded in the Scriptures, it was imperative that the
women learn sound doctrine and obey that which they had learned.
First
Timothy 2:11 delineates how the women were to learn in the local
assembly: "Let the woman learn in silence with all subjection." It
is important to note that this statement does not imply that the
woman is to completely keep silent within the entire public worship
service of the local church. Rather, the woman is to keep silent only
in the process of learning, that is, when the male leader of the
church is authoritatively teaching the doctrine found in the Word of
God. Schreiner says, "The focus of the command is not on women
learning, but the manner and mode of their learning."18
Bowman describes the manner of learning as having two parts: First,
women are to learn in silence, or quietness, which denotes outward
manner. Second, they are to learn in all submissiveness, which denotes
the attitude of the heart that must accompany leaming.19
This in
unction demonstrates Christianity's high regard for women in contrast
to much of the New Testament culture as well as the Judaic tradition.
In many cultures, women were prohibited even from learning, much less
teaching or reading in public. Donald Guthrie writes that "the
equality of the sexes... received little recognition in ancient times.
Not only was the prevailing Greek attitude against it, but Hebrew
thought was equally unsympathetic."20 For example, Guthrie
states that "Rabbinic prohibitions were much more severe than the
Christian prohibitions," for women were not even allowed to teach
small children. In contrast, the apostle Paul commands women in the
local assembly to listen attentively and to quietly submit their
thoughts and hearts to the teaching of the Word of God.
It is
evident from the aforementioned principles that women possess a role
and function in the church that brings glory to God and benefits the
entire body of Christ. In his book, What's a Woman to Do …In
the Church?, David Nicholas lists a variety of ministries
that women could fulfill not only in the church but also in the
community as they teach other women, learn God's Word and adorn
themselves with good works. Such roles could include:
A Ministry in Christian Education
A Ministry in Christian Schools
A Ministry in Christian Higher Education
A Ministry in Personal Evangelism and Discipleship
A Ministry of Child Evangelism
A Ministry in Missions
A Ministry to Women
A Ministry in Christian Publications
Certainly a woman can fill a variety of roles that would bring
honor to God and would edify the entire body of Christ. Yet while
women can serve in a variety of areas in the church, the Word of God
sets forth a final principle that forbids women to exercise one
particular function in the church.
Principle #4: Women Are
Prohibited From Exercising Authoritative Leadership or Teaching of the
Word of God Over Men in the Local Assembly
An
accurate understanding of 1Timothy 2:12-14 is the key to a proper
understanding of a woman's role in the local church. Verse 12 states,
"But I suffer not a woman to teach, nor to usurp authority over the
man, but to be in silence." At this point it is necessary to note two
prevalent, but inadequate, arguments that promote an egalitarian view
of women in the local church. First, some claim that this verse is
simply an opinion of the apostle rather than an authoritative
proclamation of God for all ages. However, as previously noted, such a
view falls short and must not be tolerated by those who accept the
inerrancy and inspiration of Scripture. Nicholas does a superb job
addressing this issue in his book, What’s a Woman to Do … In the
Church?, and concludes by stating that "what really is at stake in
the evangelical egalitarian controversy is not women's liberation"
but, rather, "the trustworthiness of the Scriptures, since the most
ardent advocates of egalitarianism in marriage and the church reach
their conclusions by denying the infallibility and inerrancy of the
Bible."21
A second
argument prevalent among egalitarians is that Paul was simply giving a
temporal, local command only for the church at Ephesus due to the
culture in which this church was enveloped. In other words, this
injunction only applied to the local church at Ephesus. Some argue
that Paul's command was issued to the church as a result of the status
of women within the Ephesian culture and the prominence of the pagan
fertility cult within the city. S. M. Baugh answers this argument in
an article entirely devoted to the question of whether or not Ephesus
was as "feminist" as many think. He compellingly debunks this view of
Ephesus and the egalitarian argument by concluding,
Paul's injunctions throughout 1 Timothy
2:9-15, then, are not temporary measures in a unique social setting.
Ephesus's society and religion-even the cult of Artemis Ephesia-shared
typical features with many other contemporary Greco-Roman cities.
... Hence, we have every reason to expect Paul to apply the
restriction of women from teaching and exercising official rule over
a man to "every place" (v. 8). ... Exegetical treatments can
proceed with the assumption that Ephesus was not a unique society as
we read today .... 22
Another author agrees and
notes that the context itself reveals that Paul's statement is not
directed only to a local assembly, for Paul supports his command
regarding a woman's role in the church by way of a universal
principle. T. David Gordon writes,
It is crucial to note the causal relation of verses 13
and 14 to the preceding verses. Paul grounds his comments in a
reality that exists outside of Ephesus: "For Adam was first formed,
then Eve; and Adam was not deceived, but the woman was deceived and
became a transgressor." This is sufficient reason to recognize that
some enduring principle is applied to this specific situation. The
convergence of norm and occasion that we expect to find in Paul's
letters is expressly communicated in the present passage. There is a
command, and there is a norm, and these are connected by a causal
particle (gar).23
So what
does 1 Timothy 2:12 mean? The answer lies in the word teach (didaskein). Bowen writes that the word "refers
almost exclusively to public instruction or teaching of groups."24
She cites a study by Roy B. Zuck in which he found that out of
approximately 100 occurrences of the word in the New Testament, only
three times does the word refer to the teaching of individuals (Jn.
8:28; Rom. 2:21; Rev. 2:14). So in this instance, to "teach" involves
the public pronouncement of the Word of God.
Yet the
word teach is even further confined to its meaning within the
Pastoral Epistles. Robert L. Saucy penned a helpful article detailing
the meaning of teach in 1 Timothy 2:12 and its meaning
within the entire context of the Pastoral Epistles .25
Although Saucy falls short of actually concluding that women should
refrain from any pastoral role in the church, he aptly argues that to
"teach" in this verse involves the passing down, guarding and keeping
of the doctrine that had been entrusted to the church. That which was
to be taught is described in the Pastorals as "doctrine" (1 Tim. 1:3;
2 Tim. 3:10), a "faithful saying" 1 Tim. 1:15; 4:9; 2 Tim. 2:11; Titus
3:8), a "true saying" (1 Tim. 3:1), "faith" (1 Tim. 4:6; Titus 1:13),
"sound doctrine" or "good doctrine" (1 Tim. 4:6; Titus 1:9; 2:1),
"wholesome words" or "sound words" (1 Tim. 6:3; 2 Tim. 1:13), "the
truth" (2 Tim. 2:18; 4:4), "the word" (2 Tim. 4:2) and "the faithful
word" (Titus 1:9). It is important to note that these vital truths
from God Himself were to be taught "with all authority" (1 Tim. 3:2;
Titus 2:15). Saucy writes, "The emphasis on teaching and the vital
importance of its function in maintaining true Christian doctrine
already suggest that considerable authority is attached to this
ministry in the pastoral letters."26 He adds, "The strong
relationship of the function of teaching to the leaders in the
pastorals clearly suggests that there is an authoritative element
attached to it."27 Kent agrees yet broadens the scope of
the term to relate to its context within the entire New Testament. He
writes, "The role of teacher in New Testament days was an
authoritative office."28 This understanding of "teaching"
in the pastoral epistles is tied to the further injunction to refrain
from "usurping] authority over the man." It is evident, then, that
women are prohibited from preaching, that is, exercising the ministry
of authoritative proclamation of the Word of God over men in the local
worship assembly. This would, however, allow for women to fulfill
a variety of ministry opportunities in the church as long as they
did not authoritatively teach the Word of God to men.
First
Timothy 2:13-14 gives the reason why this command is set forth and
necessary in the local church: "For Adam was first formed, then Eve.
And Adam was not deceived, but the woman being deceived was in the
transgression. " The Divine command in no way denotes any form of
inferiority of women. Rather, this text reminds the reader that God
has determined an order for the institutions that He has established.
Paul's reasons for prohibiting a woman from authoritatively teaching
the Word of God to men in the local assembly were based upon two
historical events: the creation and the fall. Concerning creation,
Kent writes, "The very chronological order of creation proves that Eve
was not intended to direct Adam."29 Bowen agrees, noting
that Adam's "chronological primacy in creation carried with it some
degree of authority."30 Notice Brown's observation
concerning the theology of the Progressives in relation to their view
of women in the church:
The rejection of the special and separate
creation of man and of woman is so common in our day that many may
not even notice the psychological pressure placed on them to deny
every principle of order derived from it. It is in this climate that
rejects (or ignores) the fundamental doctrine of creation in which
egalitarian (re)interpretations of 1 Timothy 2:12 have flourished.
It seems hardly promising to dispute the details, for it is often
the fundamental principles that effectively control the outcome of
one's interpretation.31
Such is
certainly the case! If the Progressives do not even accept the
literal, special and separate creation of man and women, then the very
underlying principle of why men hold a position of authority
within the home and church is worthless, and no practical implications
can be built from it.
Yet not
only are women to refrain from authoritatively proclaiming the Word of
God to men due to the very order established by God from the time of
creation, but they also must heed God's order as a result of the very
nature of the fall. Again, verse 14 does not in any way denote the
idea that women are less intelligent or even more easily deceived than
men. Such is obviously not always the case, for men and women are
equal as individuals in the sight of God, though each has been
entrusted with a differing function or role. Rather, this verse
relates the fact that Eve usurped authority over her husband by
partaking of the fruit in disobedience to the clear command of God.
Kent writes, "Thus the fall was caused, not only by disobeying God's
command not to eat, but also by violating the divinely appointed
relation between the sexes. Woman assumed headship, and man with full
knowledge of the act, subordinated himself to her leadership and ate
of the fruit (Rom. 5: 19)."32 Bowen calls this the
"reversal of roles" and says that "Paul's point is that this role
reversal that caused such devastation at the beginning must not be
repeated in the church."33 While such a standard of male
headship might not be popular or politically correct within today's
culture, such are the norms God has established for His church, and
those who are His children will only honor and glorify Him by
subscribing to His standards with a willing heart and mind.
In Conclusion ...
If one
accepts the inerrancy and historical accuracy of Scripture and
correctly interprets 1 Timothy 2:9-15, then all portions of New
Testament Scripture that address the role of women in the local
assembly will fall into place. For example, one will understand what
Paul meant when he commanded women to "keep silence" in the local
church (1 Cor. 14:33-34). One will also understand why the
proscriptive nature of the Pastoral Epistles declares that a
pastor/bishop/elder must be "the husband of one wife" (1 Tim.
3:2). The reader of the Pastoral Epistles must understand that Paul is
giving direct, divine revelation concerning the roles and behavior of
men and women in the local church, and women and men both possess
certain ministries and responsibilities to fulfill. However, the woman
is forbidden from preaching, or authoritatively proclaiming the truth
of the Word of God, to men in a local assembly of believers. Today,
this authoritative proclamation of the Word of God would include any
form of pastoral ministry or the holding of any ordained office. The
reasons for this divine injunction stem from God's prescribed order in
creation, in the family and in the local church.
.
End Notes
1 Eva Stimson, editor. Together on Holy Ground.
Geneva, Switzerland: WCC Publications, 1999, p. 21.
2 The book which contains the citation as well as the
conclusions of the Hartford Seminary study is Clergy Women: An
Uphill Calling by Barbara Brown Zikmund, Adair T. Lummis and
Patricia M. Y. Chang. Louisville, KY: Westminster John Knox Press,
1998, p. 138.
3 Ibid, p. 133.
4 Ibid, p. 155.
5 Bruce A. Robinson, "Women Clergy in Orthodox and Protestant
Christianity, and Other Religions." An essay published at http://www.religioustolerance.org/femclrg4.htm.
6 Shelly Steig, Finding the Right Church: A Guide to
Denomination Beliefs. Iowa Falls, LA: World Bible Publishers, Inc.,
1997, p 110.
7 Assemblies of God position paper. "The Role of Women in
Ministry as Described in Holy Scripture." August 1990. This document
can be found at http://ag.org/top/ position_papers/0000_index.cfm.
8 Steig, p. 166.
9 Interview with Anne Graham Lotz on CBS's "60 Minutes," June
3, 2001.
10 Susan Hogan/Albach, "The Bible Tells Them So: Evangelical
Group Embraces Gender Egalitarianism as the Only Scriptural Way."
The Dallas Morning News, June 16, 2001.
11 Ibid.
12 Daniel Doriani, "A History of the Interpretation of I
Timothy 2,"Appendix 1 in Women in the Church: A Fresh Analysis of
1Timothy 2:9-15, Andreas J. Kostenberger, Thomas R. Schreiner and
H. Scott Baldwin, eds. Grand Rapids: Baker Books, 1995, pp. 213-267.
13 Robert W. Yarbrough, "The Hermeneutics of I Timothy
2:9-15," Essay in Women in the Church: A Fresh Analysis of 1Timothy
2:9-15, Andreas J. Kostenberger, Thomas R. Schreiner and H. Scott
Baldwin, eds. Grand Rapids: Baker Books, 1995, pp. 167-171.
14 Ibid., pp. 169-170.
15 Thomas C. Oden, First and Second Timothy and Titus.
Louisville: John Knox Press, 1989, p. 116.
16 Homer A. Kent Jr., The Pastoral Epistles. Winona
Lake: BMH Books, 1986, P. 106.
17 Ann L. Bowman. "Women in Ministry: An Exegetical Study of
1 Timothy 2:11-15," Bibliotheca Sacra, April-June 1992, p. 198.
18 Thomas R. Schreiner. "An Interpretation of 1 Timothy
2:9-15: A Dialogue with Scholarship," Essay in Women in the Church:
A Fresh Analysis of 1Timothy 2:9-15, Andreas J. Kostenberger,
Thomas R. Schreiner and H. Scott Baldwin, eds. Grand Rapids: Baker
Books, 1995, p. 122.
19 Bowman, p. 198.
20
Donald Guthrie, The Pastoral Epistles. Tyndale New Testament
Commentaries. Grand
Rapids: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1990, p. 86
21 David R. Nicholas, What's a Woman to Do... In
the Church? Scottsdale, AZ: Good Life Productions, Inc., 1979, p.
107.
22 S. M. Baugh, "A Foreign World: Ephesus in the First
Century," Essay in Women in the Church: A Fresh Analysis of
1Timothy 2:9-15, Andreas J. Kostenberger, Thomas R. Schreiner and
H. Scott Baldwin, eds. Grand Rapids: Baker Books, 1995, pp. 49-50.
23 T. David Gordon, "A Certain Kind of Letter: The Genre of I
Timothy," Essay in Women in the Church: A Fresh Analysis of
1Timothy 2:9-15, Andreas J. Kostenberger, Thomas R. Schreiner and
H. Scott Baldwin, eds. Grand Rapids: Baker Books, 1995, p. 61.
24 Bowen, p. 200.
25 Robert L. Saucy, "Women's Prohibition to Teach Men,"
Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society, 37:1 (March
1994), pp. 86-97.
26 Ibid., p. 88.
27 Ibid., p. 89.
28 Kent, p. 108.
29 Ibid., P. 109.
30 Bowen, p. 205.
31 Harold O. J. Brown, "The New Testament Against Itself: 1
Timothy 2:9-15 and the 'Breakthrough' of Galatians 3:28," Essay in
Women in the Church: A Fresh Analysis of 1Timothy 2:9-15, Andreas
J. Kostenberger, Thomas R. Schreiner and H. Scott Baldwin, eds. Grand
Rapids: Baker Books, 1995, p. 204.
32 Kent, P. 109.
33 Bowen, p. 206.
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