Feed on
Posts
Comments

The following is adapted from the Grace Church elders’ distinctive on “The Role of Women.”

God's High Calling for WomenAlthough women have traditionally fulfilled supportive roles in serving the church and gained their greatest joy and sense of accomplishment from being wives and mothers, the feminist movement has successfully influenced many women to abandon these divinely ordained roles.

Unfortunately, this movement has made headway even in the church, creating chaos and confusion regarding the role of women both in ministry and in the home. Only in Scripture can God’s intended design for women be found.

The Old Testament and Women

In the creation account of Genesis 1, God’s first word on the subject of men and women is that they were equally created in the image of God (v. 27). Neither received more of the image of God than the other. So the Bible begins with the equality of the sexes. As persons, as spiritual beings standing before God, men and women are absolutely equal.

In Genesis 2, there is a more detailed account of the creation of the two equal human beings that reveals differences in their God-given functions and responsibilities. God did not create the man and the woman at the same time, but rather He created Adam first and Eve later for the specific purpose of being Adam’s helper. Eve was equal to Adam, but she was given the role and duty of submitting to him. Although the word “helper” carries very positive connotations — even being used of God Himself as the helper of Israel (Deut. 33:7; Ps. 33:20) — it still describes someone in a relationship of service to another. The responsibility of wives to submit to their husbands, then, was part of the plan from creation, even before the curse. The first books of the Bible establish both the equality of men and women and also the support role of the wife (see Exod. 21:15, 17, 28–31; Num. 5:19–20, 29; 6:2; 30:1–16).

Throughout the Old Testament, women were active in the religious life of Israel, but generally they were not leaders. Women like Deborah (Judges 4) were clearly the exception and not the rule. There was no woman with an ongoing prophetic ministry. No woman was a priest. No queen ever ruled Israel. No woman wrote an Old Testament (or New Testament) book. Isaiah 3:12 indicates that God allowed women to rule as part of His judgment on the sinning nation.

Jesus and Women

In the midst of the Greek, Roman, and Jewish cultures, which viewed women almost on the level of possessions, Jesus showed love and respect for women. Though Jewish rabbis did not teach women and the Jewish Talmud said it was better to burn the Torah than to teach it to a woman, Jesus never took the position that women, by their very nature, could not understand spiritual or theological truth. He not only included them in His audiences but also used illustrations and images that would be familiar to them (Matt. 13:33; 22:1–2; 24:41; Luke 15:8–10) and specifically applied His teaching to them (Matt. 10:34ff.). To the Samaritan woman at the well (John 4), He revealed that He was the Messiah and discussed with her topics such as eternal life and the nature of true worship. He also taught Mary and, when admonished by Martha, pointed out the priority of learning spiritual truth even over “womanly” responsibilities like serving guests in one’s home (Luke 10:38).

Although men in Jesus’ day normally would not allow women to count change into their hands for fear of physical contact, Jesus touched women to heal them and allowed women to touch Him (Luke 13:10ff.; Mark 5:25ff.). Jesus even allowed a small group of women to travel with Him and His disciples (Luke 8:1–3), an unprecedented happening at that time. After His resurrection, Jesus appeared first to Mary Magdalene and sent her to announce His resurrection to the disciples (John 20:1–18), despite the fact that women were not allowed to be witnesses in Jewish courts because they were considered liars.

In Jesus’ treatment of women, He raised their station of life and He showed them compassion and respect in a way they had never known. This demonstrated their equality. At the same time, however, Jesus still did not exalt women to a place of leadership over men.

The Epistles and Women

In the Epistles, the two principles of equality and submission for women exist side by side. Galatians 3:28 points to the equality, indicating that the way of salvation is the same for both men and women and that they are members of equal standing in the body of Christ. It does not, however, eradicate all differences in responsibilities for men and women, for this passage does not cover every aspect of God’s design for male and female. In addition, there are many other passages that make distinctions between what God desires of men and what He desires of women, especially within family and within the church.

The Family

While Christian marriage is to involve mutual love and submission between two believers (Eph. 5:21), four passages in the New Testament expressly give to wives the responsibility to submit to their husbands (Eph. 5:22; Col. 3:18; Titus 2:5; 1 Pet. 3:1). This voluntary submission of one equal to another is an expression of love for God and a desire to follow His design as revealed in His Word. It is never pictured as demeaning or in any way diminishing the wife’s equality. Rather the husband is called to love his wife sacrificially as Christ loved the church (Eph. 5:25) and to serve as the leader in a relationship of two equals.

While husbands and fathers have been given the primary responsibility for the leadership of their children (Eph. 6:4; Col. 3:21; 1 Tim. 3:4–5), wives and mothers are urged to be “workers at home” (Titus 2:5), meaning managers of the household. Their home and their children are to be their priority, in contrast to the world’s emphasis today on careers and fulltime jobs for women outside the home.

The Church

From the very beginning, women fulfilled a vital role in the Christian church (Acts 1:12–14; 9:36–42; 16:13–15; 17:1–4, 10–12; 18:1–2, 18, 24–28; Rom. 16; 1 Cor. 16:19; 2 Tim. 1:5; 4:19), but not one of leadership. The apostles were all men; the chief missionary activity was done by men; the writing of the New Testament was the work of men; and leadership in the churches was entrusted to men.

Although the Apostle Paul respected women and worked side by side with them for the furtherance of the gospel (Rom. 16; Phil. 4:3), he appointed no female elders or pastors. In his letters, he urged that men were to be the leaders in the church and that women were not to teach or exercise authority over men (1 Tim. 2:12). Therefore, although women are spiritual equals with men and the ministry of women is essential to the body of Christ, women are excluded from leadership over men in the church.

Men and women stand as equals before God, both bearing the image of God Himself. However, without making one inferior to the other, God calls upon both men and women to fulfill the roles and responsibilities specifically designed for them, a pattern that can be seen even in the Godhead (1 Cor. 11:3). In fulfilling the divinely given roles taught in the New Testament, women are able to realize their full potential because they are following the plan of their own Creator and Designer. Only in obedience to Him and His design will women truly be able, in the fullest sense, to give glory to God.

11 Responses to “God’s High Calling for Women”

  1. on 06 Aug 2007 at 7:06 am Victoria Lynch

    Thank you so much for this article! Please give us more! As one who fits into the model of a Titus 2 older woman called to train and teach the younger women– I again thank you! This message needs to sound forth from pulpits across America. I truly believe that many of the spiritual problems in this country stem from the fact that women are out of the home and NOT raising godly children. There are an army of us out here who want to see the home be what God intended it to be for His glory. We pray that our male leaders will teach this to the young men in our congregations. MEN–what a blessed life you will have if you strive to keep your wife home tending what God has entrusted to her,Loving her husband, loving her children and being a chaste keeper at home!

  2. on 06 Aug 2007 at 7:24 am kristine

    Well written; clear, concise, comprehensive and above all…biblical!! Thanks for posting on this topic. It was a great encouragement to me!

    For God’s Glory,
    Kristine

  3. on 06 Aug 2007 at 11:38 am John Kuvakas

    Great content and brevity. I am really struck but the observation that the Bible shows no woman in charge of any prophetic ministry. I am also blessed by the sensitivity to our need to work as co-laborers in the gospel under the structure and guideline found in the Scripture.

    Can you comment on what this means in the area of Sunday School teachers for adults, youth and children? What about worhsip leaders?

  4. on 06 Aug 2007 at 12:32 pm Mike

    I would think a biblical understanding of complementarity would yield no female Sunday school teachers when men are in the group. I think they can lead and teach women and children (the question for children is up till how old). I think Grace Church considers 13 to be the age where boys are no longer taught by women (correct me if I’m wrong, Nate), and there seems to be wisdom in that.

    I would also think the same thing would be true about worship leaders.

    I have a question for you (Nate and others), though. In the church I attend we have a “worship team” that is elevated in the front of the congregation, in which there is a leader (always a man) who picks the songs, introduces them with Scriptures he selects, and leads the congregation in an opening prayer. However, on that team there are women who sing and play instruments. Do you think there are any complementarity issues there?

  5. on 07 Aug 2007 at 7:21 am Carla Rolfe

    This was indeed a blessing to read today. Thank you for posting this.

  6. on 08 Aug 2007 at 11:44 am Kim

    I agree and like the others have said…this was very well written. I’m so glad God’s Word teaches on this…God was so very kind to show us that this way is best and it honors Him when we obey.

  7. on 10 Aug 2007 at 3:04 pm Elle S

    How wonderfully written! Yesterday was “Women’s Day” in South Africa, and everything about it was just Me, Myself and I. This was so refreshing to read, I’m recommending reading it to all I know.

  8. on 16 Aug 2007 at 7:51 pm Mark La Roi

    I know this is really late but I wonder if you’d express your opinion of the ministry of Kay Arthur in general. I have learned much from it but many see it as her holding a teaching authority over men.

    I understand and accept the different roles of men and women, it’s clear that the man has the responsibility of pastor, but what about the woman teaching accurately in broadcast?

    Does the fact that it is a radio/tv ministry have any bearing on this?

    Thanks much,

    Mark

  9. on 23 Aug 2007 at 3:14 pm Rai

    Good article, thank you! It brought to light a valid fact that has always been with us, but rarely has been properly acknowledged. In comment to the other replies that have been left here, there is nothing unscriptural about having a female teacher, worship leader, prophetess, or speaker. Many “guidelines” found in the Bible are only culturally influenced patriarchal customs of the time, and this includes stereotypical gender roles of women in the church and the ministry. Women are indeed called of God that they may contribute their God given gifts in these areas, which are both just as necessary and influential.

  10. on 31 Aug 2007 at 12:32 am tia

    I’ve read Pastor J. MacArthur’s sermon series transcript on God’s high calling for women. I’ve been passing it around.

    By the way, is Patricia MacArthur (& the other ladies) considering putting a blog or a website together? :]

  11. on 21 Aug 2008 at 6:39 pm Tonia Nichols

    It is really refreshing to hear that maybe, just maybe it is God’s calling for women to stay at home. I do not have children, but I am married and I do feel that sense of fulfillment whenever I am on vacation and actually have time to think about housework and taking care of my husband like I am suppose to. Please pray for me that I may have that opportunity someday.

Trackback URI | Comments RSS

Leave a Reply