If we took the word “submit” out and substituted the word “trust,” that would be faulty exegesis, but it might shine a light on the central problem: you can’t submit to someone you don’t trust. Most black church women I know tend to be brassy and pushy, clearly wearing the pants in the family. These women, who tend to embarrass and upstage their men, usually leading their men around by the nose and treating them like children, are completely out of order with the bible, with this scripture. It’s easy to beat up women with these scriptures, but the fact is, for things to work, both parties must embrace their roles in the matter.
In I Corinthians 7, he admonishes men to remain single. Then, in
his letter to Timothy, he is harshly critical of women. In his
letter to the Ephesians, he is condescending to women, referring
to them in much the same way I might refer to a favorite cat or
cocker spaniel. Now, if I were a woman, and realized all the
avenues to ministry that would close should I choose to marry,
why would I ever do that? Why would I sign up for the bondage
Paul advocates throughout his writings? Paul paints a bleak
picture of marriage as something of a nuisance [I Cor 7], and
seems relentlessly oppressive of women. However, unmarried women
and widows he seems to all but ignore, which suggests the
oppression of women begins at the marriage altar. In our black
church tradition, our public position seems to be that all
women—married or not—must submit to all men. That men,
regardless of their qualities as a person or qualifications to
lead, are simply superior to women and must lead. This is a
pathetically ignorant distortion of scripture, but it is the
most commonly accepted biblical Old Wives Tale: men are
everything, women are nothing. In practice, though, the women of
the church do, literally, everything. And, while the men strut
around like peacocks mangling scripture and putting women in
their place, it is an open secret that most of these men are
henpecked husbands owned by their brassy, loud, pushy wives who
are the true shot-callers both at home and at the church. The
continuing oppression of women in the black church is,
therefore, almost completely symbolic; Sunday morning bluster
which evaporates against the accepted norm of women running
everything and calling all the shots. Which makes liars of us
all.
The fact is, I know of almost no one who does this. I know a lot
of Christian women who give lip service to the idea of
submitting to their husbands, but the evidence and testimony of
their lives is, more often than not, a loud, aggressive,
emotional, pushy, easily offended and quickly angered person
whose choices are driven mostly by how she feels about
something. The bigger problem is uninformed, uneducated or lazy
pastors who misinterpret scripture. Paul’s admonition, “…I do
not allow a woman to teach or exercise authority over a man…”
from I Timothy is usually taken out of context. Paul’s use of
the pronoun “I” suggests a personal choice moreso than a
commandment. But, even if it were a commandment, the context of
Paul’s first letter to Timothy suggests a specific set of
circumstances Paul was addressing, rather than a universal
mandate. Paul himself cautions against teaching his personal
preferences as God’s law, “But I speak this by permission, and
not of commandment. 7 For I would that all men were even as I
myself. But every man hath his proper gift of God, one after
this manner, and another after that.” [I Corinthians 7]
Paul’s writings are critical to forming sound doctrine, but his
letters are not an unambiguous or universal narrative the way,
say, the Ten Commandments are. Yet the church routinely
implements Paul as though Paul were Moses and as if Paul
intended for his writings to be canonized as scripture. Paul was
writing to specific people at specific times in specific places
and about specific things. And, while there is certainly a
universal application for Paul’s commentary and pastoral advice,
it is critical for the seeker to understand the man himself and
the age and circumstances in which these letters were written.
What we do instead is flip through Paul’s letters like they’re
the Yellow Pages or something, using what we want (women be
silent), discarding what we choose to ignore (slaves obey your
masters).
As a result, the words of Paul are almost routinely misapplied,
and are almost universally used to oppress women and deny them
their very humanity, which I hardly believe is the point of
scripture. Scripture should free us, not enslave us. Should
enlighten us, not leave us ignorant and in bondage.
As I wrote in an earlier essay:
It is important the seeker understand Paul
almost never spoke universally: he was usually speaking to
somebody about something. His teaching is God-inspired,
God-breathed and useful for God's church, but we simply must
take the time to understand who Paul was talking to and what was
going on in that place at that time so we can put an end to our
tradition of misusing the Pauline epistles by insisting on a Ten
Commandments-style universality those letters never intended to
have. By trying to make Paul's letters be more than what they
were, we actually diminish what they are. As Bishop Shelby Spong
said, “To treat the words of Paul as if they were the inerrant
Word of God... presents us with far more problems than it
solves. Such a claim suggests that to be a Christian requires
the abdication of the mind to cultural patterns long since
abandoned.” He continues: “Because I believe those words to be
in touch with something eternal, transcendent, and holy, I want
to rescue them from the hands of those who by claiming too much
will finally accomplish too little. If the words of Paul cannot
be broken loose from the cultural accretions and presuppositions
of a first-century mindset, they will never speak to this
generation.” This Paul-as-God business is the bedrock of some of
the church's more oppressive dogma, including the continuing
oppression of women and the black church's romance with the year
1965. Elevating the words of Paul to the Word of God is
incredibly bad doctrine.
The most common thinking among black male clergy and laymen is
that women should submit. Submit to whom? Everybody. Anybody
with a penis. She should not lead any ministry that has men in
it. She surely must not pastor. This is sublimely ignorant
mangling of scripture, and it has absolutely no basis in the
ministry of Jesus Christ Himself. There’s absolutely no reason I
can imagine that an unmarried woman should have to submit
herself to every man she passes at a bus stop. Paul's admonition
to wives to be subject to their husbands is part of his larger
command for us to be subject one to another [Eph 5:21]—which
suggests we be responsible to each other, regardless of gender.
By presenting Paul-as-Moses (presenting Paul's teaching out of
context and in sweeping absolutes), we make Paul seem
anti-marriage. The message Paul seems to be sending is, "Girls,
stay home with your parents." We all submit to our parents.
Independent women were all but unheard of in Paul's day, which
is a historical consequence we rarely factor into his teaching.
Thus, Paul did not address the single, independent, professional
woman. Such a concept would likely be alien to him. But, by
applying his teaching, out of context, in this modern age, what
Paul seems to be suggesting is (1) marriage is an awful state to
be in, and, (2) the minute a woman marries she gives up all
rights to her own identity. Her judgment is of no value, and she
should just burn her master's degree and sit in the corner
saying, "Yassuh" to her bone-head spouse as he heads out to the
nudie bar. With Paul-as-Moses, the bible becomes a bleak and
oppressive document for women, who find only bondage and
repression under Paul's dogmatic teaching. Under Mosaic Law, she
is lumped into the middle of the tenth commandment, after your
neighbor's house and before his male or female slave, or ox, or
donkey.
Subsequently, most Christian women I’ve known have quietly
rejected Paul’s teaching, adding his dictates regarding women to
our cafeteria menu of Pauline doctrine we do not embrace. Most
women I've known have not appreciated the word "obey" in their
marriage vows ("be subject to", applied to both parties, seems,
to me, more doctrinally accurate). Paul’s writings are tinged
with misogyny and Paul himself comes across as deeply conflicted
when it comes to women, He seems, at best, asexual, which has
led many biblical scholars to suspect Paul’s admitted “thorn in
the flesh” might, in fact, be homosexuality—Paul as an either
repressed or celibate homosexual. Paul usually refers to women
as objects, as children, often like pets—cats and dogs to be
cared for and loved in a condescending fashion.
Hypocritically, most black Christian husbands I know allow their
wives to treat them like children, the wives ostensibly calling
the shots in the family. I know of no black Christian husbands
who don’t check with their wives before deciding whether or not
to hang out. And this is not a check-in out of courtesy or even
concern for her welfare—it’s fear, for he knows there’ll be hell
to pay if he doesn’t. She’s his mommy. He’s allowed her to
become his mommy. He doesn’t know where anything is. He doesn’t
know how to make a peanut butter sandwich. Mommy, can I have a
peanut butter sandwich? He’s helpless. His socks wouldn’t match
if she didn’t dress him. For many of these men, their wives are
far more than their help-meet, they are their literal masters.
Many of these men feel oppressed and in bondage and suffer
quietly because they’re too humiliated to reach out for help.
These men are in abusive relationships run by these pushy,
aggressive, nasty mommy-types. It is usually a situation borne
out of the man's own cowardice and laziness, but the fact is
many if not most married couples, yes, even the pastor and the
deacons and the blusterous shot-callers at your church, are
living a lie. They come down to church and thump on the pulpit
and holler and strut, but these men are owned by slave masters.
They have dumped all responsibility and all labor, all sacrifice
and all duty involved in their family life onto their wives, a
crushing weight she suffers under. Her waning sexual
attraction—a blow to her self-esteem—is only compounded by his
diminishing interest in her. She hardens into a drill sergeant,
a taskmaster. Stressed, worn out, and, ultimately, lonely. She
gets his attention any way she can, which usually means negative
stimuli as he fails to respond to her passion and her needs
increasingly go unaddressed. She treats him like a child. He
treats her like mommy. These husbands and wives are living lives
completely out of dimension with God’s plan.
There are churches all over the country led by women. I hardly
suppose gender alone should dictate who leads a church—God,
ultimately, should make that choice, and many of these female
pastors are, indeed, both anointed and quite capable. My problem
with women preachers is not that they are women but that too
many of them, to my acquaintance, are leading by their emotions
rather than by the Holy Spirit. They are mommies, and we are all
treated like children. They are histrionic and, many of them,
overly masculine, feeling, perhaps, they have to show muscle and
teeth in order to be taken seriously. But a woman behaving like
a man runs contrary to God’s intent. A woman pastor should
ideally be, first and foremost, a woman. Which isn’t to say she
should be soft and a pushover, but in her manner, in her
comport, she should not strive to emulate masculine behavior for
the sake of appearances. The most successful women pastors I’ve
known have all been obviously and unapologetically feminine.
They don’t emulate the behavior of male ministers because
they’re not so wounded that they feel a need to.
Women ministers who behave like men send the signal that they
are not ready. That they are wounded and broken and are,
perhaps, immersing themselves in ministry as a balm for that
wound. Rather than dealing with their insecurities, they create
this veneer of strength by emulating masculine behavior. By
being pushy and aggressive—usually borrowing the worst traits of
black pastors, as Jesus never asked us to be pushy or
aggressive. One female pastor here decorated her sanctuary in
mauve and pink and delightful hues of blue. For her anniversary,
the congregation dedicated the morning service to her, singing
songs about her to her and wheeling in a multi-tiered wedding
cake, decorated in pink, which they set in the place of the
communion table.
That, beloved, is witchcraft. And I don’t care if it’s a woman
or a man: when you place yourself at the center of worship—where
only God belongs—you are embracing that which is antichrist. A
Matriarchal system is antichrist. It is against nature and
against God’s plan. Which is not to say God did not call
women—He obviously did. And God uses women, yes as pastors, for
His divine purpose. But when you see any pastor, male or female,
going so obviously off the rails and say nothing about it, when
the very church is so feminine it feels hostile to men, when the
woman preacher’s message is always and relentlessly, unbearably,
about how men done her wrong and whining on and on about how
tough it is to be a woman pastor—this is somebody working
through deep-seated insecurities and problems and calling that “pastoring.”
Pastoring is a denial of self. Pastoring is pouring yourself
into the lives of your flock. Giving yourself over to the work
of the ministry. It’s not about you. It’s *never* about you.
A lot of my pastor friends preach a conditional acceptance of
women preachers in the sense that it’s all right with them so
long as God has not raised up a man willing to lead. In other
words, that view is that women pastors are called when no men
are available. Which makes God either stupid or desperate, when
He is neither. God could make pastors out of banana peels and
shoeboxes—don’t kid yourself. God has placed specific people at
specific places at specific times and in specific situations for
specific purposes. The real diviner between a woman who is
called to lead and one who is not is the fruit she bears. If
she’s the hardass tyrant, all bluster and full of threat, that’s
not God. And that applies to men even more so. If her church
environment is secretive and hostile toward men, that’s not God.
If all she does is whine about How She Been Done wrong, that’s
not God.
I am not Anti-Woman Preacher but I am leery of women preachers.
I am watchful of women preachers. Female ministers have a unique
calling. The problem is, too many of our pastors groom women
ministers along with the men, as if their ministerial bench was
one-size-fits-all. Women ministers need to prove their work in
different ways: to prove theirs is an act of submission and not
rebellion.
Of the dozen or so women ministers I’ve met here in Ourtown,
there has been one—exactly one—whom I trusted was genuinely
submitted to God. Who’s not necessarily out to prove anything,
but is simply submitting to God’s will. The rest may indeed be
called by God, but listening to their sermons, there’s always
this inherent layer of bitterness, the preacher venting about
their trouble finding acceptance.
Sisters: if you feel a call on your life, by all means explore
that call. But demand of your pastor, your mentor, a deeper
sensitivity to the call of women pastors. Don’t let him bring
you along in a generic manner, along with the boys. You’re not a
boy. And you must learn, first and foremost, if you are whole
enough, complete enough, healed enough, to contribute to the
ministry. Or, if you’re just using the ministry to vent your
frustration and work out your emotional stuff.
In the best example of female ministry we find Mary Magdalene, a
woman of debatable repute, anointing the feet of Jesus with her
hair [John 12]. Mary used her dowry—a year’s worth of wages—to
purchase the expensive perfume. Judas Iscariot, as a typical
church deacon, scoffed at her and complained about what a waste
of money the gesture was. But this was something only a woman
would be uniquely qualified for. Had a man attempted that, he’d
likely have been dragged out and beaten. As is, the men missed
the point of her sacrifice and, being men, tried to win favor
with Jesus by complaining about her and trying to stop her.
Those guys missed the point. This was an act of sacrifice. Of
submission. This was an undeniably and uniquely feminine act,
one no man could perform. And that, in essence, is what women
ministers should be about: doing the work suited uniquely for
them. Not pretending to be men or emulating men but being who
they are, embracing it, rejoicing in it. Such women become
irreplaceable in ministry. My pastoral friends’ opinions
notwithstanding, you could not just bring in a man to push Mary
Magdalene out of the way and perform her ministry. It was a work
suited uniquely for her.
And that’s the litmus test for women in ministry. That they know
what they’re doing and why they are doing it. That they are not
acting out of emotion or need or insecurity, and that they are
performing a work suited uniquely for them. In that view, such
women are indispensible. Irreplaceable. And more than welcome to
lead.
If we took the word “submit” out and substituted the word
“trust,” that would be faulty exegesis, but it might shine a
light on the central problem: You can’t submit to someone you
don’t trust. As a pastor and designer, I spend most of my day
all but begging people to trust me. Most of these folks are like
children and I remember, as a child, my mother giving me
perfectly sound advice that I routinely ignored, resulting in my
making things much harder for myself.
It’s easy to beat up women with these scriptures, but the fact
is, for things to work as smoothly as Paul advocates, both
parties must embrace their roles in the matter. It can’t be just
about her submitting. Many guys are simply idiots who make poor
choices. I wouldn’t submit to someone who was a bad leader. Who
is a 40-year old child. Many of these men are out of fellowship
with God. Their decisions are self-serving and unwise, so she
takes over. And he likes it because it gives him more time to
play WII. She’s ignoring these scriptures, he’s ignoring these
scriptures. And this is, more or less the norm.
Husbands: if you want your wives to submit to you, first
understand what submission is and why Paul advocated it. Jesus
never spoke about any of this—this is Paul creating a seemingly
oppressive environment for women. Only, is it really?
What if we substituted that word—trust? I wasn’t so interested
in gaining my wife’s submission as I was invested in winning her
trust. The fact was, she never trusted me, not from day one.
Even though I deferred to her on matters she was more
experienced with. I trusted her advice to get us through, but
she never trusted mine. Ever. Not on anything. Which is a large
part of the reason we’re divorced. All she saw was a man telling
her what to do, and she wouldn’t stand for it. Lots of times I’d
tell her, “Y’know, if one of your sisters told you this, you’d
accept it.” It wasn’t about me giving bad advice, it was about
my lack of ovaries. It was about her working through whatever
issues she had with her dad or old boyfriends or circus clowns
or what have you, and she’d drag all of that crap into a simple
“A—B” decision. Every choice became a power struggle because
she’d feel oppressed. “Please trust me,” I was begging her. But
she likely heard, “Do what I say because I’m the man.”
This is why slinging Paul’s letters around is such a dangerous
business. Paul’s letters require study and analysis, and most
churches do neither. They just read out the verses and start
oppressing people, women most especially. And that’s why I don’t
much like Paul. Not that what he wrote was necessarily “bad,”
but that we handle it badly. We take it at face value, out of
context, not understanding who he was walking to or why, and we
use it to oppress people.
Bottom line, fellas, if you want your woman to trust you, you
need to present yourself as trustworthy. Sometime she’s carrying
around emotional baggage, as my wife was. Sometimes you’re just
a child and she doesn’t respect you. A woman doesn’t respect a
man who has to ask her permission to have a sandwich. Oh, she’ll
try bullying you and will test limits, but most women are deeply
troubled by weak men. Which isn’t to say you should slap her
around and give her a hard time, but that, ideally, in any
marriage, the husband should be A MAN. Be responsible. Reliable.
Trustworthy. He should be present. She shouldn’t have to ask you
to be home at a decent hour. She shouldn’t have to try and limit
your contact with your friends or police your actions. Your
gift, to her, is yourself. Bodily. If you are not wise, pray to
God for wisdom. Be reliable. Be thoughtful. Earn her trust and
she’ll gladly trust you.
Or you can run around like an ass and demand she “submit.” She
might submit her skillet to your skull. Which, yes, is wrong,
but Paul lays out real duties and responsibilities for the MEN
as well. Marriage is a covenant between three persons: the
husband, the wife and God. You can’t hold her to Paul’s
stringent rules while you’re out all night drinking and chasing
skirts. You can’t lay off all responsibility for childrearing
and managing the house on her and then expect her to trust you.
And if she doesn’t trust you, you can hardly expect her to
submit to your authority.
Christopher J. Priest
24 May 2009
editor@praisenet.org
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