Sixty-one
percent of the delegates at the Southern Baptist Convention in Indianapolis
voted for a Constitutional ban on all churches that have a woman on staff with
the title of pastor. The vote, however, fell short of the required two-thirds majority
necessary for a constitutional amendment.
The amendment
would not have changed the SBC’s position on women pastors but would have added
teeth for enforcing their position. Their position is still that put forth last
year by the executive staff, which quoted Paul’s words in I Timothy 2:12, that, I do not permit a
woman to teach or to have authority over a man.
Based on a superficial reading of this passage, the executive
staff then declared that Paul, “Concludes women cannot have a pastoral
position, or perform the pastoral function, for that puts them in authority
over men in the life of the church.”
The
“Authority Myth”
Based on this “authority myth,” this year’s convention
expelled the First Baptist Church of Alexandria, VA from their fellowship because
of their embrace of women pastors. They also voted not to accept the requests
for reinstatement from Saddleback Church in southern California and Fern Creek
Baptist Church in Louisville, both of which were excommunicated for having
women pastors.
For the SBC, and
all churches that ban women from leadership roles, “authority” is the central
issue. The titles may change, but authority is still the issue. For example, one
mega church allows women to be pastors but does not allow them to be on their
board of elders because the elders govern their church and “women cannot function
in governing authority.”
This
authority myth is, however, dispelled when we take a closer look at Paul’s
words in I Timothy 2:12 and when we look at what Jesus said about authority in
the Church.
The Greek Word for “Authority”
The
Greek word for "authority" in the New Testament is exousia,
and it is found 102 times in the Greek New Testament, and numerous other times
in its verb and other cognate forms. For example, Mark 7:29 says that the
people were astonished at the teaching of Jesus, For He taught them as one
having authority (exousia) and not as the scribes. Not once in the entire
New Testament is a woman told she cannot exercise exousia.
Those who would
ban women from the pastorate immediately point to I Timothy 2:12, which says, I
do not permit a woman to teach or to have authority over a man. However,
the word translated “authority” in this verse is not exousia. It is the
word authentein and is found only here in the entire New Testament.
The fact that it is used only here should cause us to pause and question why that would be the case. Why would Paul use this strange Greek word that neither he nor any New Testament writer ever uses? It certainly indicates that Paul is not addressing the normal exercise of authority in the church. Paul is obviously using this strange word to address the unique situation Timothy is confronting in Ephesus (Hyatt, Who Says Women Can’t Pastor, 16-31)
Jesus
and Authority
Jesus made it
clear that leadership in His kingdom is not about authority. He made this clear
when James and John asked for the two most prominent seats in His kingdom—one
on His right hand and the other on His left.
When the ten heard
about it they were angry, for they wanted those positions of authority. As
strife erupted among them over the issue of “authority,” Jesus rebuked them and
told them they were thinking like the heathen. He said,
You
know that the rulers of the Gentiles lord it over them and those who are great
exercise authority (exousia) over them and their great ones lord it over them.
Yet it shall not be so among you; but whoever desires to become great among
you, let him be your servant (diakonos).
The word that
Jesus said must characterize leaders in His movement is the Greek noun diakonos. In first century Israel, a diakonos was a household servant who did
the bidding of his/her master. Thayer’s
Greek-English Lexicon defines a diakonos
as “those who advance other’s interests even at the sacrifice of their own.”
In other words, diakonos designates one who is a servant
and is the very antithesis of “office,” “authority,” and “power.” Jesus thus
steers the Twelve away from thinking of their ministry in terms of hierarchy
and authority to thinking of it in terms of humble service. The late Catholic
reformer, Dr. Hans Kung, wrote,
In
the New Testament, not only is the word ‘hierarchy’ consistently and
deliberately avoided, but so too are all secular words for ‘office’ in
connection with church functions, as they express a relationship of power.
Instead of this, an all-encompassing term, diakonia, service (really
‘serving at table’), is used, which can nowhere evoke associations with any
authority, control or position of dignity and power (Hyatt, Who Says WomenCan’t Pastor, 41).
The
Conclusion of the Matter
Modern churches,
such as the SBC, who make authority the central issue, are at odds with both
Jesus and Paul. Neither made “authority” the central issue for functioning in church
leadership, including pastoral ministry.
The idea that
women cannot function in authoritative roles is doctrinally unsound and harmful
to the mission of the Church. While much of the Church languishes in defeat, spiritual
gifts are being quenched and voices are being muzzled. This is tragic! The
world will never see a fully functioning body of Christ until she embraces the gifts
and callings in all her members, including the women.
For
a thorough discussion of the controversial issue of women pastors, see Dr.
Eddie Hyatt’s book, Who Says Women Can’t PastorWho Says Women Can’t Pastor, available from Amazon
and his website at http://eddiehyatt.com.
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