How can any 21st century woman believe that only men must lead in the home and church and that a woman’s role is to submit to male leadership? How can a woman attend a church that refuses to ordain women as pastors/priests or as church leaders like deacons or board members? And how could any 21st century man believe that women should not be leaders in the church?
But the Catholic Church only allows male priests because, they claim, that Jesus’ disciples were all male and there were no female apostles. Of course, that means they deny that Mary Magdalene was a leader of the early church, even rivaling Peter, although that Church now recognizes her as the “Apostle to the Apostles.”
And since Southern Baptists and other conservative denominations like The Presbyterian Church of America (PCA) claim Biblical inerrancy, they contend that the New Testament affirms that men should be the leaders in the home, church, and state. Women were not created to rule; men were. According to the Bible, specifically Paul, no woman is qualified to be a pastor or a deacon or in any other leadership position over men. They quote the following verses as proof:
Therefore, they question how a woman could be a pastor if she is forbidden to teach or to have authority over men? A woman pastor would be disobeying scripture.
That type of reasoning may have been acceptable during the 1st century, but it definitely isn’t twenty centuries later.
Those who claim to believe everything in the Bible
It doesn’t matter to conservative Christian denominations, but the New Testament never mentions ministry categories like “senior pastor” or “pulpit minister,” whether male or female. So why do you have them?
Women were prominent in Jesus’ ministry. They are included among the disciples, witnessed his teaching and were present at his resurrection – the male disciples were not there. Mary Magdalene, obviously a woman, was the first to see the risen Jesus and she told the disciples the good news (John 20:17-18). In Luke 10:38-42, Mary sits listening to what Jesus said. When her sister, Martha, tried to get Jesus to help her with womanly chores, Mary was commended – “Mary has chosen the better part, which will not be taken away from her.” In John 4:7-30, after a Samaritan woman speaks with Jesus, she testifies to the people of her village: “Come and see a man who told me everything I have ever done! He cannot be the Messiah, can he?” And, according to John 4:39, “Many Samaritans from that city believed in him because of the woman’s testimony.” The first Gentile convert, according to Matthew 15:21-28, was a Canaanite woman. In Matthew 12:49-50, Jesus that “whoever does the will of my Father in heaven is my brother and sister and mother.” He treated women as equal to men. In Galatians 3:28, Paul said, “There is no longer Jew or Greek, there is no longer slave or free, there is no longer male and female; for all of you are one in Christ Jesus.” Paul, who is often thought to be anti-women, was saying that men and women are spiritually equal. Is that enough scriptural proof that women were important in Jesus’ ministry?
Protestant denominations who ordain woman and have female pastors:
Other denominations that, according to the Pew Research Center, allow women in leadership roles include American Baptist Church, Assemblies of God, The Christian Church/Disciples of Christ, and Religious Society of Friends (Quakers).
Although they are not recognized by the Catholic Church, there is a group of women that call themselves “Roman Catholic Womenpriests.” This is an international movement designed to “prepare, ordain in Apostolic Succession and support women” who are summoned by the Holy Spirit to minister as Catholic priests.
In 2014, the Rev. Dr. Amy Butler was elected to the senior pastor position for Riverside Church in New York City, the first woman to hold that position. Riverside is a non-denominational church that has been in existence since 1930.
There’s good news and bad news. The bad news is that only 11.4 of U.S. congregations allow women in ministerial roles. The good news is that the number of female clergy has risen from 16,408 in 1983 to 46,501 in 2010.
No one should be denied any role of ministry or leadership in the Church simply because of one’s gender.
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