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Yes, for those groups you mentioned.First - this thread is NOT about a women being the Senior pastor of a local church.
However, should a women be ordained -say for women's, music, or children's ministries?
First - this thread is NOT about a women being the Senior pastor of a local church.
However, should a women be ordained -say for women's, music, or children's ministries?
Excellent questionWhy ordain them? What purpose does it serve?
We affirm the call of both men and women to ministry. According to our understanding of Scripture, the role of the Senior Pastor/leading elder is limited to men (I Corinthians 11:2-6, I Timothy 2:8-14).
Ordination...an act of the local church in recognition of the call of God upon a person’s life
It is designed specifically for those involved in pastoral ministry as Pastor/Leading Elder, Associate Ministers, Vocational Directors of various ministries within the church, Chaplains, Counselors, Evangelists, Missionaries, Seminary Professors and Denominational Executives
For me, the question is not about gender, but about ordination itself. Before I can answer, I need to know what ordination is, who performs it, and what is its purpose.However, should a women be ordained -say for women's, music, or children's ministries?
Sounds good to me!Answer of the North American Baptist Conference (JesusFan/DaChaser/Yeshua1's denomination):
http://www.nabconference.org/sites/default/files/files/resources/Credentialing Guidelines Final_1.25.16.pdf
Basically, to validate/agree/recognize tha the person is gifted and functioning as the Lord intended tem to do in local church!Excellent question
This sounds like a regular member of the body of Christ. In your opinion, what would be grounds for ordination?Basically, to validate/agree/recognize tha the person is gifted and functioning as the Lord intended tem to do in local church!
(1) Any believer can baptize, but it is best done under the oversight of the local community of believers who will be responsible for discipling the new convert into spiritual maturity.
Communion may be shared as an ordinance of the church. Ordination has nothing to do with these ordinances.
(2) Persons are ordained by the local body of believers (by the individual members together - no matter if they are personally "ordained") and the ordination does not necessarily travel with a person from church to church. It is a statement by a local body (whether done wisely and with discernment, or done hastily and thoughtlessly) about a person's suitability and character for a certain type of kingdom activity.
(3) Ordination is a statement by a community of faith that a person has been set aside by God to kingdom service and has the blessing of a group of Christians who will vouch for and support their ministry.
Ordination is an acknowledgment from both the Denomination and local church person auth to do tat ministry nowThis sounds like a regular member of the body of Christ. In your opinion, what would be grounds for ordination?
In the Book of Acts, we see deacons being ordained for a specific ministry in the church. I tend to see ordination as acknowledgement and support of a particular calling for ministry.
Let me offer a few comments.
I would go so far as to suggest that it "must" be under the oversight of the congregation. I am aware of the arguments that would allow any "disciple (as the First London Confession says) to baptize, but I think that as a practical matter the entire congregations must give its consent because it has the job of discipling the convert.
I agree.
I general I agree. It was the belief of the early English Baptists that "ministers" should come from within the local bodies. I suspect this was partly principle — Baptist ecclesiology posited that each congregation had been endowed by God with the gifts it needed — but I suspect it also was practical: There was not exactly an abundance of Baptist ministers available (a problem that continue to plague the English Baptists for decades).
But let me offer this: Baptists, with their emphasis on autonomy of each congregation can easily become atomized and out of touch with other congregations. I do not see it as a fault that a congregation should reach out to other congregations to help decide if a candidate passes muster. Of course, the final decision will be with the congregation.
I could agree, perhaps, but we both know that's not what it has come to represent.
And a few words on the portability of ordination. The standard practice, I believe, is that pastors' ordination follows them as they move from church to church, while a deacon's ordination is strictly with the local church and may even expire. (I'm not going to get into my belief that deacons more often than not function as elders in many Baptist churches and not really as deacons as outlined in the New Testament.) This is something of a problem because no one seems to have the authority to revoke ordination should the minister prove to be a rogue or worse.
To get back to the original question, I would suggest that many Baptist churches will not ordain people (read women here) because they recoil from ordaining them even though they are tasked with pastoral duties and simply want to call them "directors" or some such to avoid the whole ordination question.
If you define ordination as in point three, I'm with you. But it's become so wrapped up in churchism that I think some other term would be better.
Ordination is an acknowledgment from both the Denomination and local church person auth to do tat ministry now ...
In Baptist life, I have never heard of anyone being ordained by a denomination. That is a local church activity.Ordination is an acknowledgment from both the Denomination and local church person auth to do tat ministry now.
They do not like the term, but SBC fits the bill!In Baptist life, I have never heard of anyone being ordained by a denomination. That is a local church activity.
Does anyone else have a different experience or information I don't have?
They do not like the term, but SBC fits the bill!
The other SBC churches do recognize it as being valid, correct?In terms of being a denomination, I agree. But there is no such thing as an SBC ordination. The individual churches ordain.
The other SBC churches do recognize it as being valid, correct?
Yes, that's right. In the SBC, there would be many churches that would not accept a woman who was ordained. Yet many of those same churches would get upset about it, which is a bit of a strange thing since it indicates that they still find it meaningful, even if they don't believe it is real.Typically, yes, but they are not required to do so.
Not with Baptist churches- it is strictly a local church action.
In Baptist life, I have never heard of anyone being ordained by a denomination. That is a local church activity.
Does anyone else have a different experience or information I don't have?