Can a woman preach? Obviously she can for
there are many now who do. To preach means to proclaim, to herald a
message. Can a woman do that? Yes she can. Really what concerns us at
the present hour is may a woman preach? That gets to the heart of the
issue of divine authority. Is such activity on her part approved by God
in his word? To that question, we answer emphatically, no.
While other writers will deal with 1
Timothy 2:11-15, I must press it into service here for it settles
the question for all who respect the word of God. "And I do not permit a
woman to teach or to have authority over a man, but to be in silence."
Paul gave two reasons for that: (1) Adam was first formed, and (2) the
woman was deceived in the transgression (vv. 13-14). In the wake
of the transgression, God said to Eve: "Your desire shall be for your
husband, and he shall rule over you" (Gen. 3:16). In the light of
these simple statements, how say some that it is permissible for a woman
to preach? Paul said, "I do not permit" it.
I have been asked to address some of the
arguments made in defense of women preaching.
"Men and Women Have
Equal Ability to Preach"
Some women are more expressive than some
men. That cannot be denied. But the issue is not equal ability. It
involves the roles which God assigned to men and women in the church.
Can you name one woman in the church in the New Testament who preached?
This boils down to an argument about the use made of talent. I have
heard the same argument used to justify instrumental music in worship.
"God gave me this talent and I ought to use it to glorify him." But
people are capable of doing many things which God did not authorize in
his word.
"Paul Was Prejudiced
Against Women"
This argument has been made not only to
escape the force of what Paul wrote in 1 Timothy 2:11-15 but also
to nullify what he taught in Ephesians 5:22-25 about the husband
being the head of the wife and what he wrote in Titus 2:4-5 about
women being "obedient" to their husbands. It is held that Paul was an
old bachelor, obviously biased against women and that what he wrote was
motivated by the chauvinism of the times in which he lived. Such an
argument strikes at the heart of the doctrine of verbal inspiration. The
Holy Spirit was to guide the apostles "into all truth" (Jn. 16:13-14).
By revelation, Paul received from God the knowledge of the mystery of
divine truth which he then wrote in words "whereby when you read you
may understand my knowledge in the mystery of Christ" (Eph. 3:1-4).
"But God revealed them unto us by his Spirit" (1 Cor. 2:10). The
message was given in words "which the Holy Spirit teacheth" (v. 13),
so that Paul and the other apostles had "the mind of Christ" (v. 16).
Then to clinch it, Paul wrote, "If anyone thinks himself to be a prophet
or spiritual, let him acknowledge that the things I write to you are the
commandments of the Lord" (1 Cor. 14:37). Paul was either
inspired by the Holy Spirit and taught the commandments of the Lord, or
else he lied about it. If the latter, then there is no reason to discuss
the New Testament further. Yet those who seek to justify women preaching
would have us to believe the practice is taught in the New Testament. It
cannot be both ways.
"We Must Make Our
Practice Relevant to the Times"
Ah, now we are getting to it. This strikes
at the all-sufficiency of the word of God to meet every need in the
church for as long as the world stands. This all springs from the notion
that the word of God is out of date and out of touch with the demands of
modem life. What an insult to God! The faith was "once for all delivered
to the saints" (Jude 3). Perverting it is wrong (Gal. 1:8-9).
"Going onward" is wrong (2 In. 9-11). Adding to it or subtracting
from it is wrong (Rev. 22:18-19). It furnishes us to every good
work (2 Tim. 3:16-17). We are equipped with "all things that
pertain unto life and godliness" (2 Pet. 1:3). The New Testament
is all-sufficient to guide the church and in that delivered faith the
Holy Spirit guided Paul to write, "I permit not a woman to teach or to
have authority over a man, but to be silence."
"There Were Women Who
Could Prophesy"
Joel had written "your sons and your
daughters shall prophesy" and Peter quoted that on Pentecost in Acts
2:17. Early in the New Testament we are introduced to Anna, a
prophetess. Phillip the evangelist had four virgin daughters "which did
prophesy" (Acts 21:8-9). From 1 Corinthians 11:5 we learn
of women who "prayed and prophesied." Men were to do this with their
heads uncovered and women who exercised such gifts were to cover their
heads when they did so as a sign of subjection. But I know from 1
Corinthians 14:34-35 and from 1 Timothy 2:11-12 that they
could not do this in a situation where they exercised authority over
men. That means then that they must do such things as they instructed
other women and in a context removed from a mixed public assembly. Paul
took great care to protect the chain of authority which he detailed in
1 Corinthians 11:3. Headship was not to be despised. Also, it
needs to be remembered that prophesying was not simply teaching. It was
inspired teaching. We have none, men or women, who can prophesy today
for these gifts have ceased and the argument for women preachers based
on this collapses.
"What If the Men
Authorize Women to Preach?"
This contends that if men give their
permission, then it would be all right. I doubt that argument will
please those who are tainted with feminism. They would see that as too
demeaning, to think that men had to grant it. But be that as it may, God
does not give man the right, ever, to permit what the Holy Spirit said
he did not permit. That is equal to saying 1 Timothy 2:12 forbids
it but I do permit it. What group of elders, deacons, preachers or other
men have grown so large that they can say they permit the very thing the
Holy Spirit guided an apostle to write and say he did not permit?
Pentecostal churches have had women
preachers a long time. This has gradually spread to the mainline
denominations and now it is not uncommon to find women filling pulpits
while others are studying in seminaries preparing for this work. The
Catholic Church is faced with a possible rebellion from American
Catholics over women in the priesthood. Not to be outdone, some in the
more liberal Churches of Christ have begun to beat the drums for a
changing role for women in the church. One preacher spoke on the Texas
college lectureship and reported hearing a sister address a mixed crowd
of about 1,000 and said, "she was dynamite." Evidently, he approved.
Such magazines as Image and Wineskins have called for a reassessment of
this matter while other journals have opposed any trend in that
direction. Who could deny that the increasing clamor for leadership
roles from women in the church parallels the agenda of the Feminist
Movement?
The God-ordained roles of both men and women
in the church, the home and society are in the best interest of all
concerned. The upsetting of those roles has led to disaster in the home,
in society and bids to do the same in the church. The whole matter must
be settled by a "thus saith the Lord." And what he said through Paul is
"I do not permit" it. We can quibble about it from here on out. We can
rationalize it, minimize it, philosophize about it, ridicule it, or
attempt to simply ignore it. When we get through with all of that, the
New Testament will still say the same thing about it. It is that by
which we shall all be judged in the last day.
May a woman preach? No, she may not and
still please God.
Guardian of Truth - February 2, 1995