In this excerpt from a longer talk, theologian N.T. Wright discusses Paul’s perspective on women in ministry.
In this excerpt from a longer talk, theologian N.T. Wright discusses Paul’s perspective on women in ministry.
Posted in Ruth's Posts, Video
Tagged 1 Corinthians 11, Galations 3:28, headship, Paul on women, Women in Ministry
I’m going to lift a post I wrote for my personal blog, a place where I keep a family journal for relatives and friends to peek in on. This is old, written in July of 2011. Ages ago! 🙂
How I Changed My Mind About Women in Leadership
I ordered the book and read it within days of receiving it (a remarkable feat for a mother of three little ones!). In this book, “Well-known Evangelical leaders—individuals and couples, males and females from a broad range of denominational affiliation and ethnic diversity—share their surprising journeys from a more or less restrictive view to an open inclusive view that recognizes a full shared partnership of leadership in the home and in the church based on gifts not gender.” I was familiar with many of the 27 authors, so it was wonderful to read their personal testimonies on this topic.
I highly recommend this book. It got me thinking about how my chapter would read, which is a good exercise for anyone–to examine how you have reached your conclusion on this topic. My abbreviated chapter would go like this: I have loved the Lord and the Church for as long as I can remember. A hierarchical view of authority in the Church had always made sense to me. I believed that Paul’s teaching very clearly gives men “headship” in the church and home. I never questioned that or had any doubts about that being God’s orderly design. My dad was a pastor and I always deeply admired his ministry in the Conservative Baptist denomination. I am very grateful that my father gave me self-confidence, first by giving me a strong name: Ruth Elizabeth (two women who inspired me as a child), and then by believing in me.
As a young woman in college, I had very little idea about what to do with myself when I grew up. I majored in Music because I have musical abilities and I knew I could use music in church ministry. The most exciting classes for me, however, were my Bible and Missions classes and my Music in Worship class. I felt I had found my calling with my Worship class, and I decided to go to seminary after college. I very clearly saw myself as investing in my future volunteer work, not as preparing for a “career” in ministry.
The question of women in leadership was a hot topic among fellow seminarians, and it had become a question in my mind, but not a burning one. By this time, I had been mentored by two female seminary students, had sat under the teaching of numerous female scholars, had experienced years of leadership in student ministries in college, had taught the college Sunday School class at church, and had been the adult mentor/leader of a Christian ministry on a secular campus. This ministry in particular was very exciting and fulfilling to me. I was beginning to take note of strong women in the Bible and question the conservative position on women in ministry, but it was not a crucial issue in my life.
Just as suddenly as seminary was done, I was a new mother and had an overwhelming existence as a housewife always working part-time jobs on the side and busy volunteering my “extra” time to our local church’s music and children’s programs. While I see being a wife and mother as a sacred calling that gives me much joy and fulfillment, there has still been that nagging question in the back of my mind all along, “What am I going to do with myself when I grow up?” As I get older, I am learning more about my particular spiritual giftings and calling. I do not feel that being a mother is the end-all of my calling, just as being a husband and father is not the end-all of Logan’s calling. The harvest is great, but the workers are few. God has work for all of us to do!
There have been a few specific times since seminary that the question of women in leadership has come up for me, but I wont share the details here. At one point, I wrote to my college mentors and was sent this excellent article called “Correcting Caricatures,” written by the president of Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary when Logan and I were there, and who is a respected authority on the Old Testament. A must read!
So that brings us up to this past winter. After I read, “How I Changed My Mind,” I borrowed this book from my Aunt Linda:

On Monday, I posted How Culture Shapes Our Perspective. Tonight, I thought I’d briefly share how my own life has been impacted by the culture of my community.
I grew up in a traditional, conservative Baptist home with loving parents and three awesome brothers. My dad was a pastor and my mom homeschooled us and volunteered countless hours in service to the church. If you count my childhood, I was a complimentarian for nearly thirty years. By that, I mean that I believed that it was God’s design for men to be the heads of their households and for wives to submit to their husbands’ leadership. For many complimentarians, there is a distinction between women preaching and teaching (OK) and women in leadership (NOT OK), but for most, women should not teach men, as this would be a position of authority.
I was a naturally easy-going and compliant child and young adult, and was a classic people pleaser. This particular quality made me admirable in my Christian community. But I was also a natural leader among my peers in the church, and at Gordon College, I held many leadership positions in student ministries. Looking back at my college days, I am grateful for three women, two were seminary students and one was a professor, who took my under their wings and discipled me. While I was in seminary, I led a Christian fellowship on a non-Christian campus. I felt like I had fallen into my calling, as I mentored young leaders and taught Bible lessons and grew the ministry. That’s when my complimentarian views first conflicted with my personal life. What if this ministry was a church? Would I be restricted from leadership because of my gender? I still wasn’t brazen enough to make such a bold shift in perspective, although this was the first time I asked the question.
After seminary and a few years of married life and lay-ministry in a Baptist church, there was a period of conflict that tore the church apart. My family was caught in the cross-fire, and I again wondered about women in leadership when I thought about some of the mature believers in the church who had no voice or influence in resolving the conflict, simply because they were women.
About three years ago, I was watching Beth Moore’s Bible study, The Inheritance, when I had a lighting-bolt sensation that God was telling me I was called to co-pastor with my husband. We had been talking about Logan planting a church, and I was excited to partner with him, but not really sure how I would be involved. Deep down, I wanted to be alongside him in ministry, not looking on from courtside. When I felt called to pastoral ministry, I was one part convinced that I had heard from God, and one part confused and embarrassed. When men feel called to ministry, it is cause for great celebration, but for me, it was cause for shame and doubt. I began studying the topic of women in ministry and very soon was convinced that not only are women free to participate in leadership, but also that it was never God’s design for women to be in submission to men’s leadership. The message of the Bible is that hierarchy is not God’s design but came into being after the fall, and that participating in God’s kingdom on earth means women are a part of the royal priesthood, today. God created both man and woman in His image and gave them the order to have dominion, together. There will certainly not be a hierarchy of believers in heaven, and God’s kingdom is already available to us today. I felt confident that God had prepared good works for me to do, and to accept the charge, I would have to challenge my complimentarian roots.
One of the ways God has bolstered my confidence in my calling is by bringing Logan and me into community with other egalitarians (those who believe in equal power in the church for men and women) and several couples that co-pastor together. Community is a powerful influence. The greatest support has come from my husband, who looks forward to co-pastoring with me. To change perspective on women in ministry is to rock the boat, if you come from a complimentarian community like myself. But for me, it has brought freedom to follow the fullness of my giftings and calling.
Let me leave you with a link to an excellent blog post that describes the difference between being a Good Christian Woman and an Ex Good Christian Woman. She draws some great comparisons that I deeply identified with! Ex Good Christian Women by Kathy Escobar.
Until next time,
Peace and Blessings – Ruth
Image credit – pictures snapped by Ruth, coming home from church on Sunday.
Posted in Ruth's Posts
Tagged Calling, complementarian, Egalitarian, Women in Ministry