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Women in the Church: A Biblical Survey aby F. F. Bruce
WOMEN IN THE CHURCH: A
BIBLICAL SURVEY
By F. F. Bruce
Prolegomena
The phenomenon of cultural relativity with the
adaptations it imposes, is repeatedly illustrated within the
Bible
itself. We see the Israelite nomads moving from the wilderness into the
settled agricultural life of Canaan; we see a peasant economy giving
place under the monarchy to an urbanised mercantile economy, with the
attendant abuses against which the great prophets of Israel inveighed;
we see the post-exilic adjustment to life in a unit of a great,
well-organized empire-first Persian, then Hellenistic, then Roman. Even
within the limited confines of the New Testament
we see the gospel transplanted from its Jewish and Palestinian matrix
into the Gentile environment of the Mediterranean world. In this last
respect we could pay special attention to the way in which John, while
preserving the authentic gospel of Christ, brings out its abiding and
universal validity in a new idiom for an audience very different from
that to which it was first proclaimed.
One major concern of the scribes and Pharisees of our
Lord's day was to apply their contemporaries a code of laws originally
given in quite another way of life. The sabbath law, for example, was
formulated in relation to a simple pastoral or agrarian economy, in
which 'work' was a clearly understood term. But what kinds of activity
came within the prohibition of 'work' in the more complex situation at
the dawn of the Christian era? The scribes saw that detailed definition
was necessary if people were to have clear guidance in this matter: in
one their schools thirty-nine categories of 'work' were specified, all
of which were banned on the sabbath.
That was one way to tackle the problem of cultural
relativity; the way of Jesus was different. He preferred to go back to
first principles: any kind of action which promoted the original purpose
of the commandment fulfilled it; any kind of action which hindered that
original purpose violated it. But it was for people to decide for
themselves which actions promoted the original purpose and which actions
hindered it he would not lay down precise regulations.
The gospels exhibit the contrast between the scribal way
and the way of Jesus in the handling of the Old
Testament. Subsequent church history, down to
our own generation, exhibits the same contrast in the handling of the New
Testament and the varying attempts to apply
its principles to changing situations. Canon law, whether it is
explicitly so called or not, exemplifies the scribal way-the tradition
of the elders.
Cultural relativity is certainly to be reckoned with
when the permanent message of the New Testament
receives our practical attention today. The local and temporary
situation in which that message was first delivered must be appreciated
if we are to discern what its permanent essence really is and learn to
re-apply it in the local and temporary circumstances of our own culture.
We take this for granted in the case of missionaries
taking the gospel to lands of different traditions from their own. Even
with our instant and our worldwide intercommunication, culture shock
remains a reality-a two-way reality. Let us similarly take it for
granted that a sympathetic awareness of the cultures in which the
gospels and epistles first appeared will help us to understand those
documents in their own setting and also to profit by them in our own
setting.
I. In creation
The basic teaching of the creation narratives is that
when God created mankind (Adam) in his own image, he created them male
and female (Gen. 1:27).
In the narrative of Gen. 1 no question of priority, let
alone of superiority, arises. In the narrative of Gen. 2 the female is
formed after the male, to be "a help answering to him
"not, as
a later interpreter put it, "he for God only, she for God in
him." The priority of the male in this creation narrative does not
bespeak his superiority; any suggestion to this effect might be answered
by the counter-argument that the last-made crowns the work-but either
argument is beside the point.
II. In the fall
It is in the fall narrative, not in the creation
narrative, that superiority of the one sex over the other is first
mentioned. And here it is not an inherent superiority, but one that is
exercised by force. The Creator's words to Eve, "your desire shall
be for your husband, and he shall rule over you" (Gen.3:16), mean
that, in our sinful human condition, the man exploits the woman's
natural proclivity towards him to dominate and subjugate her.
Subjugation of woman, in fact, is a symptom of man's fallen nature.
If the work of Christ involves the breaking of the
entail of the fall, the implication of his work for the liberation of
women is plain.
III. In the new creation
(a) The attitude and teaching of Jesus
Jesus was born into a male-dominated culture. Some of
its basic presuppositions he quietly and indirectly undermined. His
treatment of the divorce questions, for example, not only illustrates
his constant appeal to first principles; its chief practical effect was
the redressing of a balance which was heavily weighted against women.
His male disciples immediately realised this, as is shown by their
response. 'If a man cannot divorce his wife under any circumstances,'
they meant, 'it is better not to marry' (Matt. 19:10).
Unwarranted inferences have sometimes been drawn from
the fact that all twelve of the original apostles were men. But in fact
our Lord's male disciples cut a sorry figure alongside his female
disciples, especially in his last hours; and it was two women that he
first entrusted the privilege of carrying the news of his resurrection.
He treated women in a completely natural and
unselfconscious way as real persons. He imparted his teaching to the
eager ears and heart of Mary of Bethany, while to the Samaritan woman
(of all people) he revealed the nature of true worship. His disciples
who found him thus engaged at the well were surprised to find him
talking to a woman: for a religious teacher to do this was at best a
waste of time and at worst a spiritual danger.
(b) The attitude and teaching of Paul
No distinction in service or status is implied in Paul's
many references to his fellow-workers, whether male or female. Among the
latter we recall Phoebe, deacon (not deaconess!) of the church at
Cenchreae (Rom. 16:1f.), who by her safe delivery of the Epistle to the
Romans performed an inestimable service to the church universal, and
Euodia and Syntyche of Philippi, who received Paul's commendation as
women who 'laboured side by side' with him in the gospel together with
Clement and others (Phil. 4:3). Paul uses the designation 'apostles'
more comprehensively than Luke does, and he may even include at least
one women among them, if the companion of Andronicus in Rom. 16:7 is
Junia, a woman (as Chrysostom understood), and not Junias, a man.
From the standpoint of Paul's upbringing he voices a
revolutionary sentiment when he declares that in Christ Jesus...there is
neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither slave or free, there is neither
male nor female' (Gal. 3:28). Already in his time the Jewish morning
prayer probably included the passage where the pious man thanks God that
he was made a Jew not a Gentile, a free man not a slave, a man and not a
woman. All three of these privileges are hereby wiped out:
real how they were in the Judaism of Paul's day, they are abolished in
Christ, in Judaism it was the males only who received in their bodies
the viable seal of the covenant with Abraham; it is a corollary of
Paul's circumcision-free gospel that any such religious privilege
enjoyed by males over females is abolished. To the present day among
orthodox Jews the quorum for a synagogue congregation is ten free men;
unless ten such males are present the service cannot begin. (We may,
incidentally, be happy that for Christian meetings we have the less
stringent quorum of 'two or three', with nothing said as to whether they
are men or women.) Paul, on the other hand, expects Christian women to
play a responsible part in church meetings, and if, out of concern for
public order, he asks them to veil their heads when they pray or
prophesy, the veil is the sign of their authority to exercise their
Christian liberty in this way, not the sign of someone else's authority
over them.
Nothing that Paul says elsewhere on women's contribution
to church services can be understood in a sense which conflicts with
these statements of principle. This applies to the limitations
apparently placed on their public liberty in 1 Cor. 14:34 ('the women
should keep silence in the churches') and 1 Tim. 2:11 ('let a woman
learn in silence with all submissiveness'). Critical questions have
indeed been raised about the text of 1 Cor. 14:34f.(which the 'western'
recension places after verse 40) or the direct authorship of the
pastoral epistles. The evidence is not sufficient to extrude 1 Cor.
14:34f. from the authentic text; the prohibition expressed in these
verses refers to the asking of questions which imply a judgment on
prophetic utterances (so, at least, their context suggests). As for the
pastoral epistles, we have received them as canonical scripture, and
that goes for 1 Tim. 2:9-15. I am disposed to agree with Chrysostom, who
read the Greek New Testament
in his native language, that in 1 Tim.2:9f. we have a direction
(developing the teaching of 1 Cor.11:2-16) that woman's dress and
demeanour should be seemly when they engage in public prayer. In verses
11 and 12 of this chapter, however, women are quite explicitly not given
permission to teach or rule. The relevance of the two arguments-(a) that
Adam was formed before Eve and (b) that Eve was genuinely deceived
whereas Adam knew what he was doing when he broke the divine
commandment-is not immediately obvious; I am not too happy with the
suggestions that the former is an early instance of the principle of
primogeniture, in which the special rights of the firstborn are
recognised.
Exegesis seeks to determine the meaning of the text in
its primary setting. But when exegesis has done its work, our
application of the text should avoid treating the New
Testament as a book of rules. In applying the New
Testament text to our situation, we need not
treat it as the scribes of our Lord's day treated the Old
Testament. We should not turn what were meant
as guiding lines for worshippers in one situation into laws binding for
all time. (It is commonly recognised that the regulations regarding
widows, later in 1 Tim., need not be carried out literally today,
although their essential principles should continue to be observed.) It
is an ironical paradox when Paul, who was so concerned to free his
converts from bondage of law, is treated as a law-giver for later
generations. The freedom of the Spirit, which can be safeguarded by one
set of guiding lines in a particular situation, may call for a different
procedure in a new situation.
It is very naturally asked what criteria can be safely
used to distinguish between those elements in the apostolic letters
which are of local and temporary application and those which are of
universal and permanent validity. The question is too big for a detailed
discussion here. Where the writings of Paul are concerned, however, a
reliable rule of thumb is suggested by his passionate emphasis on
freedom-true freedom by contrast with spiritual bondage on the one hand
and moral licence on the other. Here it is: whatever in Paul's teaching
promotes true freedom is of universal and permanent validity; whatever
seems to impose restrictions on true freedom has regard to local and
temporary conditions. (For example, to go to another area, restrictions
on Christian's freedom in the matter of food are conditioned by the
company in which he or she is at the time; and even those restrictions
are manifestations of the overriding principle of always considering the
well-being of others.)
An appeal to first principles in our application of the New
Testament might demand the recognition that
when the Spirit, in his sovereign good pleasure, bestows varying gifts
on individual believers, these gifts are intended to be exercised for
the well-being of the whole church. If he manifestly withheld the gifts
of teaching or leadership from Christian
women, then we should accept that as evidence of his will (1 Cor.
12:11). But experience shows that he bestows these and other gifts, with
'understanding regard', on men and women alike-not on all women, of
course, nor yet on all men. That being so, it is unsatisfactory to rest
with a halfway house in this issue of women's ministry, where they are
allowed to pray and prophesy, but not to teach or lead.
Let me add that an appeal to first principles in our
application of the New Testament
demands nothing should be done to endanger the unity of a local church.
Let those who understand the scriptures along the lines indicated in
this paper have liberty to expound them thus, but let them not force the
pace or try to impose their understanding of the scriptures until that
understanding finds general acceptance with the church-and when it does,
there will be no need to impose it.
IV. The priesthood of women
The recent debates about the admission of women to the
priesthood in the Church of England and similar communities arise
largely from a conception of Christian
priesthood which we do not share. In these debates it has been freely
conceded by many that women may perform in church practically all the
ministries preformed by a nonconformist pastor. The one thing she may
not do is to celebrate the eucharist.
The concept of priesthood implied in such a position is
of a restricted order to which certain selected men are solemnly
ordained. The exclusion of women from this order is defended by a
variety of arguments, some of which are more unconvincing than others.
Without the presence and action of such an ordained priest, it is held,
a communion service is irregular, if not invalid.
Well, we may say, this is an issue which does not affect
us: we believe in the priesthood of all believers; we do not recognise a
restricted order of priests. Would it be all right, then, at one of our
communion services for a woman to give thanks for the bread and break
it, before it is distributed to the congregation? I suspect that some of
our brethren would-reluctantly, it may be-concede anything to a woman
rather than this. (I apologise if I am doing them an injustice; that is
the impression I sometimes get.) But why? The thanksgiving and the
preliminary breaking of the bread at the table are priestly acts only in
so far as the person who performs them does so as representative of the
other communicants who are there exercising their common priesthood, not
as representative of Christ, who is really present at his table and
needs no one to represent him. Why should not a Christian woman who
shares our common priesthood perform such a representative act on behalf
of her fellow-worshippers as well as a Christian man? This is not a
rhetorical question; I should like to be given a scriptural answer.
At some of our women's conferences, I am told, while
every other part of the programme is run very competently by women, it
is thought desirable for one or two token men to be imported to conduct
the communion service. This is not the fault of the conveners; they know
very well, however, that some of their sisters would be discouraged from
attending if their spiritual directors thought that the communion
service would be conducted by women.
J. N. Darby was no feminist, but he had a strong vein of
common sense. He thought it a little out of place for a woman even to
start a hymn, 'but I do not object', he added, 'if she does it
modestly'. But when he was asked if Christian women might take the
Lord's supper together in the absence of men, he said, 'If three women
were on a desert island, I do not see why they should not break bread
together, if they did it privately.' Herein he showed his common sense.
Of course, they could scarcely do it otherwise than privately, if they
were alone on a desert island; and there are other desert islands than
those which are entirely surrounded by water.
V. Brethren traditions and practices
The mention of J. N. Darby may suggest that the Brethren
movement-unlike (say) the Society of Friends-has tended to be
male-dominated from its inception. I do not forget that elect lady,
Theodosia, Viscountess Powerscourt, but even she 'knew her place'.
Two factors have perpetuated such an attitude: one, the
continuing high-church tradition in our movement; the other, the
scribalism (not to say legalism) of our application of scripture.
There have indeed been outstanding exceptions. The
Brethren assembly on the Hohenstaufenstrasse, Berlin, was founded by
Toni von Blücher (a female descendant of Wellington's comrade-in-arms
at Waterloo) and some like-minded women. When in due course a man joined
their fellowship, he was (unlike themselves) so utterly ungifted that
his presence made no difference to their procedure. And I know of one
Brethren meeting in the north-east of Scotland-at Rhynie, Aberdeenshire-which
in the fourth quarter of the nineteenth century obstinately persisted in
allowing liberty of ministry to women as well as men. In my boyhood I
met a very old lady, Mrs. Lundin-Brown, who used to spend the summer in
our part of the world. Her Christian activity went back well before the
revival of 1859, and she enjoyed the fellowship of the Brethren despite
her assiduity in the public preaching of the gospel. By the time I knew
her she was nearing her century and could no longer continue her
preaching, but would not be restrained from taking part audibly in
prayer-meetings in the most traditionalist Brethren assemblies in the
north of Scotland. An old lady of indomitable will can get away with
anything!
Such an exercise of liberty was untypical for that age
in most denominations. But nineteenth-century attitudes tend to persist
in quarters where they are not clearly distinguished from first-century
principles.
Conclusion
What was said at the beginning of this paper about
relativity in earlier days applies to our own times also. We too are
culturally conditioned; only we do not notice it. The women's liberation
movement has conditioned not only our practices but our very vocabulary.
But, in such an important matter as we are now considering, it would be
a pity if we were influenced by contemporary world-movements in thought
and practice rather than by the guidance of the Spirit, as he speaks his
liberating word to men and women today through the ministry of our Lord
and his servant Paul. That ministry, that liberating word, is enshrined
for us in the pages of scripture: to use scripture aright is to hear
what the Spirit is saying through it to the churches of the twentieth
century as well as what he said to those of the first.
Used with permission. "Women in the Church: A
Biblical Survey" Christian Brethren Review, 33 (Dec.
1982): 7-14. |