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Women
in the PULPIT!
by Julia
Duin
They're bold and they love Jesus, but they aren't promoting
worldly feminist ideas. A growing number of charismatic women have
assumed leadership in the church. Today's pastors, evangelists and
church leaders come in a variety of packages. They can be black or
white, Asian or Hispanic. They can be rich or poor, self-taught or
seminary-educated.
And they can be male or...female.
Historically, the church has struggled with the questions surrounding
the proper biblical role of women in church leadership. Many of today's
female ministers, however, have resolved that conflict, at least in
their own hearts--and sometimes in their own churches.
Delrio Berry, 48, pastor of Lombard Central Presbyterian Church in
Philadelphia, says she felt "the call" to preach for years.
But her Pentecostal denomination, the Memphis-based Church of God in
Christ, forbade ordination of women.
"As a child, I remember asking why there were no women in the
pulpit," she says. After she became a Pentecostal in her 20s, she
signed up for every ministry opportunity available. In 1985 she was told
she might be ordained as a university chaplain in the bishop's study.
"The precedent was that a woman would be quietly ordained in the
background," she explains. "I felt that would be a dishonor to
God and to my own person, so I let them know up front that I wouldn't do
that."
Thus Berry, who has three master's degrees and one doctorate, was
ordained in the sanctuary of Philadelphia's Holy Temple Church of God in
Christ along with 15 men. She eventually left her denomination to be
named pastor of Lombard Central in 1991. She is the only black female,
senior Presbyterian minister in the region.
"We're regressing," states Berry when asked about the status
of ordained women. "The women are coming forward, but they're not
being sent or called to churches, even among Presbyterians.
"They don't get the key roles where they're able to call the
shots," she says. "The women don't always get the best pick of
the churches unless you've got a female bishop or a male bishop who's an
advocate for women."
Frustration over this "glass ceiling" was a recurring theme
sounded recently. Last summer marked the 20th anniversary celebration in
Philadelphia of the ordination of the first 11 women to the Episcopal
priesthood. That ordination was illegal until two years later when
Episcopalians voted to approve it.
The concern? Women ministers in the 1990s, most often, are relegated to
assistant pastorates, chaplaincies, seminary professorships, prison
ministries or other positions that men do not want. They get handed a
double whammy if they are single--without a husband for "spiritual
covering."
"You do get handed something a man doesn't want," admits
independent charismatic evangelist Iverna Tompkins. "And then you
make it what you want it to be."
THE
SWINGING PENDULUM
Despite the fact that the International Foursquare Church was founded in
1923 by a woman, Aimee Semple McPherson, opportunities for women in the
denomination "regressed for a long time," says Nevada
Foursquare pastor Marjorie Kitchell. "There was a time when even
missionary women weren't allowed on the platform, and women weren't
allowed on committees."
But the pendulum has since begun swinging back toward the center, she
says.
Kitchell, 62, entered the ministry after her husband left her 27 years
ago for a church secretary. She now pastors the 300-member Boulder City
Christian Center. And although the local ministerial association first
balked when she began to attend its meetings, she was eventually elected
its president.
"I had thought it was good enough to be the pastor's wife,"
she says, "but deep down, I knew the Lord had something more for
me."
After years of working behind the scenes in the church, Nancy Milsk was
thrust into international revival leadership. Her opportunity followed a
trip to China in 1988 with evangelist Nora Lam.
"Avenues are opening up for women if they obey God, go forward and
don't get hung up on criticism or doors that are closed," says
Milsk. "People wouldn't let me minister but I ministered anyway: at
kitchen tables, at someone's home, wherever.
"Even though denominations closed the doors," she says,
"I never let that bother me." Milsk currently bases her
international preaching ministry in Southfield, Michigan.
One outspoken advocate of women's ministry is Daisy Washburn Osborn, 70,
wife of evangelist T.L. Osborn. She has written six books encouraging
women to overcome what she calls "female dominance phobia" in
churches.
"Is God in a woman to be subordinated to God in a man?" she
wrote in her 1990 book Woman Without Limits. "Jesus Christ expected
women who received Him as Lord to obey Him. But did He plan later for
them to acquiesce in favor of Paul's alleged position for women to be
silent?"
Osborn says that Paul's statements--"I do not permit a woman to
teach or to have authority over a man; she must be silent" (1 Tim.
2:12, NIV) and "women should remain silent in the churches" (1
Cor. 14:34)--have been extracted out of their cultural context. She
believes they have been distorted and then held up before women as
"arbitrary barriers."
"I would never permit a few words by Paul, spoken to women of an
archaic epoch, to limit my obedience to my Lord in my generation,"
she writes.
Other female pastors and evangelists interpret 1 Corinthians and 1
Timothy in similar ways.
"I just say to people that we need to have more information about
the text and the times," says Delrio Berry. "The same Paul who
said, 'I suffer not a woman to teach' also commended Phoebe to the
Romans."
"Scripture says that if a woman's going to learn, let her ask of a
husband at home," says Fuchsia Pickett, an evangelical Methodist
minister and conference speaker. "What about single women? They
don't have a husband.
"Besides, I'm teaching, not learning. What Paul was referring to
was a local problem. Women were hollering from the balcony and
disrupting the service."
One night, during her early 20s, Pickett says God called her by name
while she was in bed and told her to minister. Over the years that
followed, she found that many men assumed female pastors were out to
snatch authority from them.
Nothing could be further from the truth, she says. "We're
helpmeets, just like women are in the home," she says. "We're
not trying to act like men, think like men, talk like men. We're women
who respect men."
A YEAR OF CONTROVERSY
The year 1994 has been a controversial one for women in ministry. In
March, the Church of England broke with 400 years of precedent by
ordaining hundreds of Anglican women. Two months later, Pope John Paul
II issued a statement declaring that Catholic women can't be ordained.
In addition to noting Paul's controversial statements to Timothy and the
Corinthians, some opponents of women's ordination say no one has a
"right" to that office, since it is a symbol of Jesus Christ
to His followers and thereby available only to males. Proponents of
women in ministry quote passages like Galatians 3:28 to say that
maleness or femaleness makes no difference in Christianity.
"If a woman was found worthy to carry the Lord for nine months,
surely a woman is worthy to speak the Word," says Aretha Wilson,
36, an evangelist, teacher, preacher and associate minister at New
Greater Bethel Ministries in Cambria Heights in Queens, New York.
"More and more people are beginning to recognize that God has been
giving a message, too," she adds. "Most of our churches are
filled with women. It's becoming easier for women to go into ministry
and to cross over into churches run by men."
Female-filled churches are more of a factor overseas, as in the former
Soviet Union, where Karen Anthony ministers. Anthony, 42, was ordained
an Episcopal priest in 1992 but knew her ministry opportunities in the
United States were limited.
Having accompanied evangelist John Guest to the Ukraine in 1991, she
decided to begin a ministry there for women. Anthony is the only female
pastor she knows of in Kiev.
"Some Ukrainian pastors have accepted me, and others are
cautious," she says. "But none of them will join me in
ministry because I'm an educated woman with better preaching skills than
them."
Of course, not everyone is called to minister abroad. Assemblies of God
pastor Janie Wead, 48, found people from another cultural background
coming to her when she started a Hispanic congregation in Siloam
Springs, Arkansas, three years ago. The 100-member congregation recently
built a 10,000-square-foot building.
"I'm an Anglo lady trying to pastor Hispanic men, which is a
struggle," she admits. "A woman in my shoes has to lead
gently. You have to know that God has called you.
"That's the bedrock of staying with it," she adds. "You
have to put a velvet glove on a steel hand and swim up the
current."
Bishop Barbara Amos, 37, founder of the 2,000-member Faith Deliverance
Christian Center in Norfolk, Virginia, says she got around the
women-in-ministry question by joining a small denomination that allows
female leaders, Philadelphia's Mount Sinai Holy Church in America. She
says a growing number of women are inquiring about the denomination.
UNDECLARED PREJUDICE
While few denominations or Christian groups say they don't ordain women,
many more have unofficial policies that prevent women from moving into
top positions.
"Ask some of these denominations how many of their large churches
are pastored by women or how many women serve on their boards,"
says Tompkins. "That's where you find the undeclared
prejudice."
Ruth Tucker, a professor at Trinity Evangelical Divinity School in
Deerfield, Illinois, and the author of several books on women in
ministry, points out that the problem is broader than churches. At the
turn of the century, she notes, there were 40 evangelical female-led
mission agencies. By the 1920s, most had merged with denominations, and
the women lost their places.
"There's a fear of women getting positions in organizations that
have influence in the Christian world," she says.
One charismatic mission agency, Youth With a Mission (YWAM), is slowly
rectifying the fact that more than half of its 8,000-person work force
is female, but few women lead. Out of YWAM's 500 bases worldwide, about
5 percent are led by women, says Ron Smith, co-leader of YWAM's training
center in Lakeside, Montana. Twelve women direct national YWAM
ministries in countries that include Switzerland, Jamaica, Turkey,
Mozambique and Portugal.
"Evangelical and charismatic women carry a whole lot of pain
because they have these tremendous giftings and can't use them,"
Smith says. "Others have men tell them they'll let them lead, but
when the rubber meets the road, that doesn't happen."
Vinson Synan, dean of Regent University's School of Divinity, says the
percentage of female pastors in Pentecostal denominations is actually
declining from the percentage at the turn of the century. He attributes
that to men's fears of the secular feminist movement.
Until this year, such fears barred women from joining the Charismatic
Concerns Committee, an informal but influential annual gathering of
charismatic leaders. The group has been meeting since the early 1970s.
"Several of the men involved saw the meeting as their covering,
their authority," Synan says. "If a woman came, then they
couldn't come. In order not to lose those fellows, we decided not to let
women in."
Eventually, Synan says, a majority of the men attending the meetings
felt the male-only atmosphere was too sterile, so they voted for a
change in 1993.
"At this year's gathering, one of the guys who fought hardest
against women coming said to me, 'You were right, it's helped us to have
women here,'" Synan recalls. Still, he admits, "a kind of
grassroots resistance runs deep against women in any sort of
leadership."
THE POWER OF ANOINTING
When Chicago evangelist Juanita Bynum went on a 21-day fast, she said
the Lord informed her she would minister to the masses. But when a
Chicago minister invited her to speak before 4,000 people, she told God
that all the female ministers she knew had been to Rhema or Oral Roberts
universities.
"This is the college I'm sending you through so you'll be
well-schooled in who I am," she says the Lord replied.
Now 35, Bynum heads up her own ministry and has written a book, The
Planted Seed.
"The greater the suffering, the greater the anointing," she
says. "I've paid a great price for where I am today." Things
are opening up for women like her, she adds. "Because of the
vastness of the corruption in our society, the Lord's work cannot be
finished with just the male gender."
As more women move into ministry, the questions surrounding female
spiritual leadership will continue. But for Fuchsia Pickett, the matter
comes down to one simple factor: anointing.
"Experience, age and training help," she says, "but what
got me my ministry was anointing. If a man comes to hear you, he's got
no problem if you've got an anointing. It's the anointing that breaks
the yoke."
ADDED NOTES:
There is a "NEW WOMAN" arising in the Body of Christ---she is
SOLD OUT TO JESUS CHRIST AND WILL FIGHT A BITTER FIGHT IF NECESSARY TO
GET THE "WORD" TO ALL ---YOU CAN'T KEEP HER DOWN, YOU CAN'T
KNOCK HER OUT--SHE IS "ANOINTED BY GOD " TO DO WHAT SHE IS
DOING---MAKING THE ENEMY MAD BY TAKING THE LIGHT OF JESUS CHRIST INTO
ALL THE DARKNESS THE ENEMY HAS HELD WOMEN IN FOR YEARS! A NEW AWAKENING
in the Body of Believers? YOU BET!! It's revival time for all women WHO
are calling out to be used of God and lead their sisters and brothers
into the presence of the living God! They won't quit--they won't give
up! Their course has been laid out from the WORD OF GOD in the book of
Joel--- I will pour out MY SPIRIT says the LORD----that great Spirit of
God is pouring out upon Women all over the World---
GET READY SISTERS! YOU ARE HERE FOR SUCH A TIME AS THIS! THIS IS YOUR
TIME AND YOUR CALLING --WALK IN IT WITH GREAT HUMBLENESS OF THE
CALL----YOU ARE LIVING IN A TIME THAT GOD SPOKE OF THOUSANDS OF YEARS
AGO---TODAY IF YOU HEAR HIS VOICE--ANSWER Him ---HERE I AM LORD--SEND
ME!
GOD BLESS ALL MY SISTERS AND BROTHERS IN JESUS!
"RUTH" -MGR.
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