Women
In Curch Leadership: An Introduction
By Joseph Tkach
In
2003, we announced in the WN that the
Worldwide Church of God would be formally considering the role of
women in the church. We invited members and pastors to send us their
research. As we expected on this controversial issue, we received a
variety of responses. Some were well thought out; others gave opinions
without any particular support.
Members of our doctrinal team read
these papers and discussed the issue for several months—and several
more months of discussion are scheduled. In this issue of the WN, we
are publishing an introduction to the topic. This article is a
committee product, and although not every member of the doctrinal team
sees this issue in exactly the same light, we present here some
introductory matters that we agree on.
The question is sometimes phrased as “women in ministry,”
but we should note that we have always had women in ministry. That is,
we have always had women who served in the church, in a variety of
roles, and we’ve had women who were leaders of groups within the
church (although their role as leader was not always acknowledged with
a specific title).
The question before us is whether women can be ordained as
elders. A related question would be whether women can serve in
leadership offices that are generally reserved for elders, such as
senior pastor, district superintendent, etc.
This is not simply an academic question. In some of our
smaller congregations, women are already serving in roles of spiritual
leadership. As the Worldwide Church of God has learned more about
spiritual gifts and lay ministries, we have also observed that gifts
in areas of spiritual service, such as worship, biblical studies,
public speaking and pastoral care, are not limited to men.
In some cases, women are currently serving on congregational
leadership teams, not because of any push for feminine representation,
but because the congregation believed, and the district superintendent
agreed, that these particular women had spiritual maturity and
belonged on the pastoral leadership team.
Before we entered this study, some
members of our doctrinal team felt that these women could be ordained
as elders; other members believed that the Scriptures forbid the
ordination of women as elders, and some were undecided. Our goal is to
understand what the Bible says to us about this subject. We are in
agreement on the introductory issues, as the article below presents
them.
We plan to publish more articles as we continue to work
through the questions in a systematic way. Our next paper will be on
the subject of ordination: just what does it mean to ordain a person
to a role in the church? Future articles will examine the major
relevant scriptures to see what they do and do not teach.
We believe it is just as important for members to see how we
reach our decision, as it is to read the final decision. It is my
prayer that we will all learn from the process, and be filled “with
the knowledge of his will through all the wisdom and understanding
that the Spirit gives, so that [we] may live a life worthy of the Lord
and please him in every way: bearing fruit in every good work, growing
in the knowledge of God” (Colossians 1:9-10).
In Jesus’ service,
Joseph Tkach
Women
in Church Leadership:
An
Introduction to the Question
The Worldwide Church of God Statement of Beliefs does not say anything
about women in church leadership. However, it does say that the Bible
is “fully authoritative for all matters of faith and practice.”
Our question, then, is what the Bible says about women’s role in the
church. Our starting point, and the final authority, is Scripture.
Our Statement of Beliefs also says that we are willing to grow in
knowledge, willing to respond to God’s guidance. We recognize that
we do not always understand Scripture perfectly. Some parts of
Scripture are difficult to understand. Others parts are easy to
understand but difficult to apply.
Scripture often calls on us to resist trends within society; at other
times it encourages us to follow cultural customs. For example,
Scripture includes the following command: “Greet one another with a
holy kiss” (Rom. 16:16; 1 Pet. 5:14). Although Christians in some
cultures have no problems with this command, people in America
generally do, and in the WCG we have long considered this command to
be based in culture and not a timeless truth. We encourage members to
implement the principle of the command, without obeying it literally,
even though Paul probably never thought the day would come when a kiss
would be offensive rather than friendly.
When Peter and Paul wrote their commands for a holy kiss, they were
influenced by their culture. When Paul told slaves to obey their
masters (Eph. 6:1), he was accommodating himself to culture. He was
not advocating slavery itself. There is no question that some of his
commands apply only to his culture. Others just as clearly are
timeless, and there are a few in the middle that are debatable.
So, the question is, how do we tell when a biblical command is based on
culture and in need of modification for the different cultures we live
in today? How do we tell when a command is timeless? When Paul writes
that he does not permit a woman to teach or have authority over men (1
Tim. 2:12), is he just expressing his own opinion (after all, he
states it as what he does, and not as a command), or should we treat
his policy as a permanent rule for the church?
How do we decide what God’s will is? It is a question not just of what
Scripture says, but what it means for us today. Should we apply it
literally? Or should we (as with Rom. 16:16) analyze what principle
lay behind Paul’s words, and follow that? Let us look at an example
of a conflict between Scripture and culture. Although this example is
not an exact prototype for the issue of women in the church, it does
help illustrate the question.
Comparison
with slavery
In 1 Tim. 6:1-2, Paul tells Christian slaves to respect their Christian
masters, and he never commands the masters to free their slaves. Is
Paul therefore supporting slavery, as many 19th-century Americans
argued? Or was he simply going along with culture, so the gospel would
not be seen as an enemy of society—“so that God’s name and our
teaching may not be slandered”?
Slavery had a few positive functions in ancient society, but Paul could
have challenged slavery itself as demeaning, as contrary to the love
that should characterize God’s people, and as a violation of the
created order. But he did not; neither did he challenge the political
system of Rome, the frequent brutality of the army, or unfair methods
by which taxes were collected.
Nevertheless, the gospel challenges culture. It challenges us to treat
poor people with respect, not to favor the rich (Jas. 2:1-7). The
gospel challenged Jews to treat Gentiles as equals; it challenged
Philemon to treat his slave Onesimus “as a dear brother” (Phm.
16). If masters treated their slaves as family members, then slavery
would soon disappear—and in this way the gospel challenged the
attitudes that allowed slavery to exist. The gospel sowed the seeds
that undermined the injustice of slavery—but the Bible does not
attack slavery directly.
Some people today say that the gospel sows the seeds that undermine
gender restrictions, too. Galatians 3:28 says, “There is neither Jew
nor Greek, slave nor free, male nor female, for you are all one in
Christ Jesus.” This verse is about equality in salvation, but does
it sow the seeds for leadership equality within the church, too? Is it
not possible for people to have equal importance within the church
without having the same roles? However, the church no longer treats
Jews and Gentiles differently; we denounce as unjust the existence
of slavery; should we also stop differentiating between men and women
when it comes to leadership in the church?
In other words, when Paul said that women should be silent in the
churches, was he simply going along with his culture, just as he went
along with slavery, knowing that the gospel would eventually correct
the problem? Did he expect his comments in Gal. 3:28 to eventually
counteract his comments in 1 Tim. 2:12? Or was he so close to his
culture that he never really thought about it, just as he probably
assumed that a holy kiss would always be fitting and appropriate? Or
was Paul giving a policy that provides permanent guidance for the
church?
History
The church has not always been on the right side of cultural questions.
When it came to slavery, some Christian churches were in the forefront
of the move for emancipation. But in the 20th century, many churches
resisted the cultural move for social equality for the descendants of
those slaves. Sometimes culture is right, sometimes it is not.
Culture sometimes asks ethical questions, but for Christians, culture
cannot answer them. Rather, we look to Scripture as the foundation for
what we do. Even if some cultures in the 1930s said that we should
treat Jews as subhuman annoyances, the gospel says that Christians
should have resisted the cultural trend, even though some church
bodies went along with it. But when it comes to the authority of women
in the church, it seems that the church is responding to culture
rather than being an initiating force.
Nevertheless, we believe that the scriptural record as it pertains to
women in roles of leadership requires careful study and a detailed
response to the question of the ordination of women as elders.
Dealing
with differences
The issue does require careful study. When it comes to a holy kiss, we
can’t just say, “The Bible says it, I believe it, that settles
it.” That approach may sound humble, but it is simplistic and
arrogant, because it assumes that “I” have the only accurate
understanding of what Scripture teaches.
The truth is that we all come to Scripture with some assumptions from our
own culture. Some of us come from a culture where women are expected
to submit to men in particularly restrictive ways; others of us come
from a culture that encourages women to think for themselves and to
take leadership roles.
Some cultures today are similar to ancient culture in their attitudes
about women; others are quite different. Some people are afraid that
any change in gender roles will cause more social chaos; others feel
that changes are necessary. Each of us needs to be aware of the bias
we bring to the Bible and, through discussion with one another, see
how our particular bias might be influencing our understanding. In
that way we let the Bible speak to our biases.
Prayer is an indispensable part of the process—we want to discern
God’s will, rather than assuming that we have already got it right.
We want to understand why some sincere Christians come to different
conclusions on this issue, and then we want to decide which
explanation seems more likely to be what God intended when he inspired
the Scriptures. We want the Holy Spirit to guide us into all truth
(John 16:13)—and that means that we don’t have it all yet. No one
does.
Since no one group has a perfect understanding of all the issues, there
are some differences of opinion on biblical interpretation, even when
there is agreement on the most basic doctrines of the faith. Some
Christians think that the Bible instructs women to be completely
silent in church; others do not, even when those holding each view
have an equal belief in the authority and accuracy of the Bible.
Some Bible-believing Christians believe that women must wear a covering
on their head when in church; others do not. The question we have is
not whether to believe the Bible; it is how to understand what the
Bible is teaching. Are the biblical restrictions on women cultural,
like the holy kiss, or are they permanent, like the prohibition on
adultery?
Since conservative Christians are divided on this issue, we would be naïve
to think that we will achieve unanimous agreement. No matter what
conclusion we come to, some members will think we have not weighed the
evidence fairly. What should they do then? Is this issue important
enough to leave the church? We don’t think so (and it is possible
that not even the doctrinal team will be unanimous). Our unity depends
on Christ, not on complete agreement on every point of doctrine.
There are many doctrines that are essential to Christian faith—for
example, the church must teach that there is only one God, and that we
are saved by grace through faith in Jesus Christ. Yet there are many
other doctrines that are not essential to our faith, but are practical
guidelines or policies for our physical life, and these may differ
from culture to culture, or from one time in history to another.
We want to get them right, but we must also understand they are not
essential to what it means to be a Christian. We believe that
eldership of women is one of those doctrines. It is a policy matter,
not part of the Statement of Beliefs. People do not need to leave the
church if they think we are wrong about the millennium, nor do they
need to leave if they think we are wrong about women’s role in the
church.
No matter who our congregational elders are, they are not perfect, and we
all have to respect them anyway. We have to weigh what they say,
accept the true and overlook minor mistakes. That will be the case
whether an elder is or is not a woman. We might like to be part of a
church with all the guaranteed correct answers, but such a church does
not exist. Spiritual growth does not depend on being in a perfect
church. Rather, we must learn to do the best we can in the
circumstances we are in, trusting in Christ to cover us with his
righteousness.
Some members will be disappointed if we permit women to be elders; others
will be equally disappointed if we do not. We do not know how many
hold one opinion, or how many the other—for our task, it does not
matter. Our job is to discern what God wants us to do, and we will
therefore concentrate on prayerful study. We will be consulting with
pastors and their supervisors frequently as we share the preliminary
results of our research, and we will keep you informed in the WCG News
and on our web site.
We do ask for your prayers, and for you to study the issue along with us.
We will all learn, and as we share the strengths and weaknesses of
various arguments, we hope the great majority of us will agree on the
results.
|