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August 30, 2008
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Home > 2008 > JuneChristianity Today, June, 2008  |   |  
Wounds of a Friend: Egalitarian
Egalitarians should rely more on careful exegesis and less on political ideologies.



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Counterpoint: We complementarians need to recover a fully biblical view of women — and of handling theological disagreement.

I am a proponent of women in ministry leadership. In agreement with egalitarians, I believe that God calls both men and women to serve as pastors, preachers, and leaders of the full congregation. I also believe that Christ, not the husband, should be the leader of every marriage, since Jesus Christ alone is Lord and Savior.

At the same time, I believe that many egalitarians have tended to appeal more to political liberal thought than to the Scriptures. In so doing, they've employed the language of rights in a way that is Kantian, not Christian.

In Kantian ethics, everyone is bound by a sense of duty. It's Kantian, for example, to say that it's your duty not to drink and drive. This aspect of Kantian ethics overlaps with Christian ethics.

However, Kantian ethics differs by extending the ideal of duty to mean that when you fail to perform your duty, you violate my right. Kantian logic says that because it is your duty not to drink and drive, I have the right to drive on a road without drunk drivers.

According to Jesus, a Christian ethic says, "You shall love your neighbor as yourself" (Matt. 22:38). A Christian ethic ends at the point of duty; it does not convert others' duties into personal rights. As a Christian I can say that God commands others to love me, but I cannot say that I have the right to be loved. I don't.

Egalitarians often argue that since God commands his people to submit to one another, women leaders have the right to be submitted to by men. When this doesn't happen, they feel angry. Yet a truly Christian ethic would remember that women have the duty, not the right, to lead as God calls them to lead. When God calls a woman to step forward, she is to step forward, regardless of how others respond.

The egalitarian mantra of mutual submission in marriage is also biblically untenable. While it's undeniable that Ephesians 5:21 says to "be subject to one another in the fear of Christ," it is also undeniable that Scripture nowhere tells husbands to submit to their wives.

The Bible does say, explicitly, that wives are to submit to their husbands (Eph. 5:22). It also says that the head of the wife is the husband.

Egalitarians say that head in Ephesians 5:23, "the husband is the head of the wife," means the husband is the "source" of the wife. This interpretation is understandable insofar as Genesis 2:21-22 reveals that Adam's side was the source from which God fashioned Eve.

But exchanging the word head for the word source causes problems when we look at 1 Corinthians 11:3: "Now I want you to understand that Christ is the head of every man, and man is the head of woman, and God is the head of Christ."

It simply isn't true that Christ is the "source" of every man—for the actual source of Adam was the dust (Gen. 2:7). Nor was God alone the "source" of Christ, since Christ was born of God and of woman (Gal. 4:4).

Practically speaking, exchanging the word head for source makes the headship of the husband irrelevant. Perhaps the biggest trap in an egalitarian marriage is for the husband and wife to live two parallel lives. Instead of functioning as one, they can dwell independently as two. Egalitarian marriages are especially susceptible to the perils of Western individualism.

The egalitarian movement also tends to rely overmuch on Galatians 3:28: "There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither slave nor free man, there is neither male nor female; for you are all one in Christ Jesus."





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Displaying 1 - 3 of 23 comments.See all comments
Francis H Geis   Posted: June 25, 2008 12:55 PM
Sarah Sumner is right that egalitarians should always develop their views on the basis of sound biblical exegesis and wholistic theological interpretation. And most of the best egalitarian literature I have read does just that. Now as for the charge that we base some of our views on proof-texting of verses that only deal with salvation, and that we're unduly influenced by Kantian ethics is a rather curious charge from one who says she is an egalitarian herself. Gal. 3:26-4:7 is the first of several Pauline texts (i.e., 1 Cor. 12:12-27; Rom. 4:13-14; 8:9-17; and Eph. 2:11-22) where Paul develops what I call "the doctrine of the adoption to sonship" wherein Christ, as the Seed of Abraham, transfers the privileges, duties, and responsibilites of the privileged circumcised Jewish male to all who through faith, baptism into Christ, and reception of the Holy Spirit, who come to form the new family of Abraham, the "one new humanity." Our view has nothing to do with Kant.

The G   Posted: June 25, 2008 11:28 PM
How can Sarah teach theology? The Holy Spirit says plainly through the Apostle Paul women are not to teach men because they were led astray first in Eden. Theologically speaking, leadership over and teaching of men belong to men only. It has nothing to do with culture because Eden had no culture. Men no longer want to marry the women that women's liberation has produced, Ir has created self-absorbed women which men with testicles cannot co-exist with. Hence, the high rate of divorce. When will we wake up? I am assuming the answer is: Sarah teaches women.

Paul   Posted: June 28, 2008 6:49 PM
Egalitarian marriages are susceptible to "Western individualism?" Where's her evidence for this? There, however, actually is evidence that egalitarian marriages are less likely to be associated with domestic abuse and more likely to be associated with marital satisfaction (Coontz, Stephanie 1997; Mickelson, Kristin D, 2007)

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