So the
Anglicans in the UK have delayed yet again the vote on female bishops. I find
the whole thing bewildering. I have written on this before, http://drmarkk.blogspot.co.nz/2010/07/women-bishops-in-uk.html, but want to look at Philippians
around the question. I know a little about Philippians, having written a few
articles, a thesis, and now most of a commentary on the book.
The
bishop is drawn from the notion of the episkopos, in Greek, an
'overseer.' The word is found once in Acts (Acts 20:28) of the leaders of the
Ephesus church, of Jesus the supreme overseer (1 Pet 2:25), and in Paul three
times of church elders (1 Tim 3:2; Tit 1:7; Phil 1:1). It is generally believed
that the references in 1 Tim and Titus rule out women in this role, as the
overseer is to be a husband of one wife. This may be correct. However, the
Philippians' reference is intriguing and raises doubts.
Only in
this letter does Paul single out the overseers and deacons (Phil 1:1). He then
goes about writing a letter which is dominated by the unity issue. This
is seen in Phil 1:5, "the partnership of the gospel;" in his
report of his situation in Rome where preachers are divided over him (Phil
1:14-18); in his central proposition of the letter in 1:27 including
"standing firm in one Spirit", "contending as one for
the faith of the gospel;" in 2:1-4 he gets more direct, appealing for the
Philippians with a four-fold emphatic construct to have the "same love,
the same mind, to be one-souled, and one minded," they are to be humble
and elevate others, being others-centred; in 2:5-8 they are to emulate Christ
who embodies unity with God; in 2:14-15 they are to stop complaining and arguing;
the examples of Timothy and Epaphroditus point to their preparedness to partner
with Christ and Paul for the gospel (Phil 2:19-25); in 3:2, 18 they are to shun
false teachers, otherwise they are to be unified; in 3:16 he tells the
Philippians if there are points of disagreement, God will bring fresh
revelation to bring them into unity. Finally, in 4:2-3, he directly addresses
the two at the centre of the debate, two women, Euodia and Syntyche. Using
language used in 1:27; 2:2 he appeals to them to be unified in their mindset.
This all
raises the question of who these women were. For Paul to write a letter
dominated by the issues of their relationship suggests they were more than a
couple of housewives having a squabble over the carpet or scones. Rather, they
are clearly significant people, leaders of some sort with some degree of
influence that occasioned Paul's letter all the way from Rome 1400km away. Not
to mention that he is prepared to send two of his best co-workers, and come
himself to sort it out (see 1:24-26; 2:19-30). This is clearly some issue.
The two
women are described as "co-workers", which is Paul-speak for gospel
preachers (used of Timothy, Titus, Aquila and Priscilla, Philemon and others).
They worked beside him for the gospel, on previous visits. Again this says more
than scone making. We know that the church was not led by a single bishop in
those days (the word overseer is only plural in the NT). We know that women
hosted and likely led churches including Lydia who hosted the first Philippian
house-church in Acts 16:14-15, 40, and Nympha in Col 4:15. This all points to
these women being at least house church leaders, pastors, preachers, and
likely, overseers or deaconesses. A number of scholars suggest the latter. Why
not the former? After all, if the church began in the home of a woman, and the
letter singles out leaders, why not? So, were these women in fact bishops? It
is certainly a good debate either way, if not conclusive.
The debate also hinges on which verses your privilege. If you privilege "husband of one wife" over Phil 1:1 which is ambiguous, you will argue that the Philippians verse should be read through the lens of 1 Tim and Titus. On the other hand, these latter two texts may apply only to Ephesus and Crete, perhaps because of female involvement in false teaching. So one can equally privilege Phil 1:1.
All in all, I don't
get the refusal to have woman bishops. There are lots of signals in the NT, like
the one above, that women should not to be limited in ministry, even though there
are two situations where Paul acts to limit them (1 Cor 14; 1 Tim 2). Neither
of these texts, however, state that the limitation is universal for all of time. They could equally be situational. Indeed, 1 Cor 14 follows 1 Cor 11:4-5 where women are permitted to speak in church, so it would seem likely 1 Cor 14 is a situational issue.
Anyway, Paul
himself advocated flexibility on non-essentials on the basis of culture (1 Cor
9:19-22). I suspect he would say to those discussing this that in a nation
where a woman can lead the nation, why not the church? It is not as if this is
a salvation issue Christians should be so determined to split over.
Why
should a woman who is a good leader, preacher, administrator and carries a
sense of call, not be released into ministry, including that of being a Bishop?
Especially so in lands where a woman is queen, where women lead
businesses, schools, and become PM's (Thatcher). In fact, it is decidedly ironic that
the head of the church is a woman (the Queen), and yet they can't be bishops!
Not to mention that the idea of a single bishop is a post-biblical development
anyway. Come on!
Jesus on
no occasion limits people like this; if anything he went the other way allowing people freedom to serve (e.g.
Luke 9:49-50). It is not as if Christian ministry is defined primarily by authority, it is defined by servanthood.
Neither is this issue on the same scale as the gay issue, which
seems to be assumed in the debate by many. The whole Biblical Narrative gives
no sense that the Law, Prophets, Christ, Paul or any other writer was open to
the possibility of gay leaders. So, it is a different discussion.
On the other
hand, slavery, gender and race issues we see contrary and subversive notes through Scripture. On
slavery the seeds are sown in Philemon and Eph 6:9 which to me anticipate the
end of slavery. On gender, in texts like Deborah, Philippians, people like Mary at
Jesus' feet, Mary Magdalene, the Samaritan woman of John 4, Nympha, Priscilla,
Junia and the women of Rom 16. On race, we see proselytes leading from Acts 6; Luke
was likely a gentile, as were many of the leaders of the churches (e.g.
Philemon, Clement etc).
I am all for the authority of
Scripture, for an evangelicalism based on Scripture, but we have to do it well.
I find the whole thing perplexing. There is a time biblical conservatism
becomes deeply troubling.
Comments
Sorry, just stirring.
It strikes me that the three Abrahamic religions have actually lost touch with their origins or the origin of their rituals, most of which have a common theme. The rituals now mostly have a meaningful symbolic or spiritual role that is disconnected with their beginnings.
From what I can see the trick is to understand the temple of olden days and its function or more specifically one of its functions and nomadic culture in arid conditions.
There is good reason to believe that women could not perform this function - nor could practising gay men when engaged in temple duties. The issue of circumcision ties into this - the German courts raised the profile of this debate recently. I am working on a theory and have some way to go. For now it points to the ban on women bishops having derived from temple function that is now redundant. Significantly it points to their being no reason why women cannot perform pastoral and spiritual roles in the church on equal terms with men - nor gay men for that matter.
I am not an Anglican and have begun to call myself both a lapsed Christian and a lapsed atheist. I am coming to a view that Anglicanism has a problem. Unlike the non-conformist and free churches it retains a hierarchical super-structure but unlike the Church of Rome is democratic. It is a broad church that tries to encompass a range or ranges of views that are poles apart. I believe that unless its scholarly leaders reconnect with Christianity's roots it will not resolve the current debate. There isn't any room for a fudge.
Bruce
It seems to me that Christian leadership has two equal and opposite dangers--excessive individualism (which episcopalian and extreme Pentecostal groups tend toward), and excessive democracy whereby leadership is cramped (congregational, presbyterian can be like this). I think the Pressies are closest to what I sense in the NT in that we have corporate leadership at every level. It breaks down at Presbytery and Assembly because the leadership groups are too big and clumsy. There is no perfect system.
I mentioned "one specific function" of a temple. You mentioned "sacrifice". That's my direction of travel. What do we mean by sacrifice? What was its significance in OT times and before?
My feeling is that if we can crack that we get close to solving the meaning of the three Abrahamic religions. The Higgs boson springs to mind. It could be the keystone that, according to Masonic tradition, was thrown out with rubble and without which the whole edifice was unsound.
Bruce
I think what has been omitted is that St. Paul who was personally supervised by the Lord Jesus from the day of his conversion, insists that the instruction for women to remain silent in the mixed congregations was if fact a "Commandment of the Lord"
Indeed, he is so concerned about it being understood as such, that he put's a persons spiritual integrity on the line.
"As in all the churches of God's holy people, 34 the women must keep silent. They don't have the right to speak......It's shameful for a woman to speak in church. 36 Did God's word originate with you? Are you the only ones it has reached?
37 Whoever thinks that he speaks for God or that he is spiritually gifted must acknowledge that what I write to you is what the Lord commands."
1 Cor 14:33-37 (GW)
As it is the "Commandment of the Lord" it must remain firm and irrevocable as it has done for nigh on 2,000 years of Apostolic tradition.
"As in ALL the churches of God" including "Whomsoever calls on the name of the Lord"
therefore includes all churches for all centuries while ever the Lord remains away.
"2 To the church of God in Corinth, to those sanctified in Christ Jesus and
called to be holy, *together with all those everywhere* who call on the name
of our Lord Jesus Christ*--their Lord and ours" 1 Cor 1:2 (NIV)
It's plain and simple enough then as it has been since the Apostles first taught God's Truth.
That summary of the transition from the OT to the NT is succinct and shows how spiritual Christianity is.
The question I am investigating is what was the purpose of sacrifice in pre-Biblical days. We think of the wanton slaughter of animals just to please our god (or gods). I am beginning to think that we've got wrong.
Right now I am looking at a jigsaw puzzle that doesn't have a starting picture and very probably has many, many pieces missing. It will be a challenge.
For now many thanks for your kind words.
Bruce
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