OldRegular
Well-Known Member
"In Christ there is no male nor female."
That has nothing to do with women as pastors. I am sure some would use that passage to justify sexual perverts being pastors or bishops!
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"In Christ there is no male nor female."
I agree...I stated that at the top of page 2 as well.If one takes the verse that strictly, then it also forbids leaders from being single, since they are not husbands of one wife. A person can't say it excludes women unless they also claim it to exclude single males.
I give you credit for being consistent. Respectfully submitted.I agree...I stated that at the top of page 2 as well.
There are many passages that indicate a woman should not be a pastor but I think 1 Tim. 2 is the most clear:
We see from this it is not a cultural issue, but is based on the order of creation: "For it was Adam who was first created, and then Eve."
And also, the woman was deceived.
God is a God of order.
Also, from Eph 5:23:
God also teaches that a man has spiritual headship over his wife. This is another reflection of the order God set up. It has nothing to do with superiority or intelligence. It's just the order God has set up.
If a husband has spiritual headship over his wife, how can a woman, married or not, have spiritual headship over all the men in the church?
I think it's crystal clear.
"Of the second sort are the hours appointed for public prayers, sermons, and sacraments; quietness and silence under sermons; the singing of hymns; the places appointed for these services, and the days fixed for the celebration of the Lord's supper; the prohibition of Paul, that women should not teach in the Church, and the like; . . .
. . . these things are not necessary to salvation, and ought to be applied to the edification of the Church, with a variety suitable to the manners of each age and nation, therefore, as the benefit of the Church shall require, it will be right to change and abolish former regulations, and to institute new ones." ---John Calvin, Institutes, vol. 4, ch. 10, sec. 29-30.
If we are going to get technical, the passage that deals with husband of one wife is talking about bishops.. not pastors..
..
If God calls them.. and a church chooses them.. .so be it.
I know churches that are thriving, that have women pastors.
I know churches that are dying that have men pastors...
And for the record, Baptists have had women pastors for over 100 yrs..
And for the record, Baptists have had women pastors for over 100 yrs....
Well, I've been attending Baptist churches since I was about 4 years old, that's over 50 years, I've been in countless Baptist churches over those years, and I have NEVER, EVER seen, heard, or even hinted at Baptists' believing women can be pastors. Just the opposite as a matter of fact. And I believe the Bible makes that perfectly clear as some of these posts plainly show.
Well, I don't believe a woman should be in ANY role as a pastor, even an associate, but absolutely NEVER a senior pastor.
God has defined His requirements in His Word very clearly. How can you "side-step" those?
THE CALLING OF WOMEN AS PASTORS AND DEACONS
The granting or denial of recognition to qualified women as pastors and deacons is one of the
most visible markers of the church’s theology and practice. It has long been an issue among Baptists.
The first General Baptists in 1609 accepted women deacons, but when hyper-Calvinist theology soon
came to dominate Baptist teaching, the office almost disappeared from Baptist practice. Women were
perceived as second-class church members and not worthy of ordination. Instead, a more humble
classification of “deaconess” came into use, whose role was clearly delineated as that of service rather
than leadership.
With the ordination of May C. Jones on July 9, 1882 by the Baptist Association of Puget Sound
as a pastor in the Northern Baptist Convention (the parent body of American Baptist Churches), attitudes
began to slowly change, assisted by a decline in the 20th century of the previously rigid Calvinism. A
greater sense of freedom began to pervade Baptist life.
But the number of women ordained as pastors remained very low until the 1970s, after the
American Baptist Convention in 1965 adopted a resolution affirming the equality of women and
advocating their ordination. Still, the overall percentage of women pastoring American Baptist churches
has remained in single digits. The latest available statistics indicate that around 400 women are serving as
pastors, or less than 10% of all ABC-USA pastors. About one third of all associate pastors are women.
No statistics are available for women deacons.1
The current resurgence of Calvinism among some evangelicals in the 20th century is a throwback
to the 17th and 18th centuries. The same proof-texts in support of the hyper-Calvinist position appear in
the modern debate that appeared before, such as I Timothy 2:12 and Titus 2:1-10, arguments aimed at a
specific 1st century social context, while little is made of Paul’s other statements of gender equality such
as Galatians 3:28, nor of his teaching on how the gifts of the Spirit are for the benefit of the whole body
of Christ. Southern Baptists, for example, refuse to ordain women pastors.
The New Testament can be proof-texted to support many kinds of ecclesiastical supervisory
leadership, all the way from popes and bishops to a total ban on pastors in favor of consensual leadership
by the whole congregation. Baptist churches should be free to follow their conscience and the guidance
of the Holy Spirit in these matters, being careful to avoid the undue influence of cultural pressures, and
equally careful to enable the fullest possible implementation and use of all the gifts of the Spirit to the
church. The elimination of women from some ministry callings should raise a red flag of warning about
the patriarchal theology and practice that lies behind that policy, whether implicit or explicit. We need all
the leadership gifts that women can offer for the ministry of the community of faith.
It appears that some male pastors have become so paranoid about this issue that they have even
eliminated women’s societies within the church, for fear that they might constitute a power bloc in favor
of women exercising spiritual leadership. This is surely a sign of weakness, rather than strength.
It is true that in many of our churches, women are elected to a Board of Deacons or Elders, but
for a limited time of office along with their fellow board members. Though this election and appointment
may be confirmed by an act of consecration and blessing before the congregation, it does not constitute
ordination in the classical sense which, as in the case of pastors, is generally considered a life-time
calling. But even in this limited sense, some churches have banned the election or appointment of women
to such offices.
By Dr. Wilbur Skeels
October, 2007
Dr. Skeels served for 36 years in the American Baptist Churches of the Pacific Southwest, retiring from the pastorate of the First
Baptist Church of Ojai, California after 40 years of pastoral ministry in five churches.
In view of this, I guess I will start a new thread. Sorry, I don't know how to do a poll.Its [the church's] scriptural officers are pastors and deacons. While both men and women are gifted for service in the church, the office of pastor is limited to men as qualified by Scripture.