Episode 22 of the Christ for Us Bible Study Podcast is on Women Pastors and Transgenderism. You can read below or visit Christforus.org.
Women Pastors and Transgenderism
The title of this topic might seem to be needlessly provocative, but it addresses a real theological issue in the Church. When Christ instituted the pastoral office, He instituted it as an exclusively male office. A pastor is a male job, not a female job. For a woman to usurp the office of pastor is for her to transgress a gender barrier established by Christ. The promotion of female pastors is in essence transgenderism. And when we make this connection, we see why most churches that have female pastors have also embraced homosexuality, so-called same-sex marriage, and now transgenderism.
But before we go further, let us pray:
Enlighten our minds, we beseech Thee, O God, by the Spirit which proceedeth from Thee, that, as Thy Son hath promised, we may be led into all truth; through the same Jesus Christ, Thy Son, our Lord.
Biblical Argument for Male only Pastors Start with Jesus
So, why can’t women be pastors? Simply put, the Bible forbids women to be pastors. We must start with Jesus. Jesus instituted the pastoral office. He did this when He called His disciples, gave them authority to forgive sins, and sent them out to preach the Gospel and administer the Sacraments (Luke 10:16; John 20:19-23; Matthew 28:18-20; Luke 24:44-47). Jesus sent only men to preach. All twelve of His Apostles were men (Matthew 10:1-4). Why did Jesus choose only men? Did He not have women followers? The Bible teaches that Jesus had many female followers (Matthew 27:55; Luke 8:2-3). These women loved Jesus, and Jesus loved them. Why didn’t He make Mary, Martha, Joanna, or Susanna apostles? Jesus certainly loved these women. He even honored some of them as being the first witnesses of His resurrection. But He did not send any of them to publicly preach and teach. Jesus certainly wasn’t afraid of going against the social norms of that day or upsetting the Jews, who would have been opposed to female rabbis. Jesus did not call women to be preachers, because He did not want women to be preachers.
It is important that we started with Jesus, before we got to the prohibitions by Paul, because starting with the institution helps us understand why Paul makes prohibitions. When arguing against women pastors, we often jump immediately to 1 Timothy 2:12 or 1 Corinthians 14:34-35. And many critics and proponents of women’s ordination will then attack Paul or his letters to defend women’s ordination. But it is Jesus who placed only men into the ministry. He chose the disciples. He sent out the apostles. And He did not send women to preach, even though He had many wonderful, pious women to choose from.
The Apostolic Descriptions of the Pastoral Office
Still, before we get to Paul’s explicit prohibition of women preaching and performing the pastoral office, we should look at how Scripture describes the pastoral office.
St. Paul’s Explicit Prohibition
The reason for reading these passage before going into the prohibitions given by Paul, is so that we see that Paul’s prohibitions are necessary and they are what we would expect from what we already know about the pastoral office. In fact, I would go so far as to say that if we did not have Paul’s explicit prohibition of women teaching and speaking publicly in Church in 1 Timothy 2:12 and in 1 Corinthians 14:34-35, the church would still not have women pastors and would have sound biblical reasons not to have women pastors.
The Order of Creation and the Distinction between Men and Women
The reasons Paul gives for prohibiting women from teaching and publicly speaking in church is that Adam was formed first, Eve was deceived, and that women will be saved in child-birth.
Societal Shift on the Understanding of the Distinction between Men and Women
Although a few churches adopted women’s ordination in the 19th century, it ramped up in the 20th century to the point that every mainline Protestant denomination had women’s ordination before the 21st century. Most churches reached this conclusion by either denying that Paul wrote 1 Timothy 2 and 1 Corinthians 14, or by saying that Paul did write them, but they are not inspired by the Holy Spirit. Others spoke as if God caused Paul to write these things for that time, but they do not fit in our time. And some even try to reconcile women’s ordination with the words of Paul, as if Paul was unclear in what he meant.
What is clear is that Paul, an Apostle of Jesus Christ, writing under inspiration of the Holy Spirit, forbids women from carrying out the office of pastor, namely, teaching and preaching. So, how have so many denominations embraced the ordination of women?
Feminism, which blurs the lines between men and women, brought about a cultural shift, so that women’s ordination was demanded. It didn’t matter what argument was made to get there. Feminism demanded women’s ordination, because anything a man could do, so could a woman. Anything entrusted to a man, must also be entrusted to a woman.
The Fruit of Women’s Ordination
Church bodies, which have embraced women’s ordination according to the dictates of feminist culture were also, by and large, the church bodies, which embraced same-sex “marriage,” and now transgenderism. The ELCA officially accepted homosexual clergy in 2009 and a few years ago made “history” with the first “transgender” bishop. One could simply blame the ELCA’s propensity for going with the progressive crowd. However, it is not just that. The acceptance of female pastors necessarily leads to the acceptance of homosexuality and transgenderism, because women’s ordination itself transgresses sex and gender.
A woman pastor is a transvestite. She is dressing up as the opposite sex. It is like a man wearing a dress. Our culture has so bought into feminism, that it does not recognize the bending of gender until it goes to extremes. Today we see men dressing as little girls and going into women’s restrooms and locker rooms. Even secularists are saying, “enough!” There is even a new term called TERF. It stands for Trans-excluding Radical Feminist. It is supposed to be a pejorative against feminists, who oppose trans rights. However, feminism built the groundwork for transgenderism. It fought to tear down the cultural norms which distinguished man and woman. Same-sex “marriage” is absurd. But most people today do not recognize the absurdity, because they do not recognize men and women as not only different, but complementary. A head needs a body. You can’t have two heads without a body. That isn’t a person. You can’t have two bodies without a head. That isn’t a person either. So, you cannot have a marriage with two men or two women. This doesn’t even get to the fact that two men or two women cannot have children!
The arguments for women’s ordination are the same arguments for same-sex “marriage” and transgenderism. A person’s sex does not determine the limits of what that person can or should do. Everything depends on how a person feels. So, if a woman feels that she is called to be a pastor, no one has the right to tell her that she cannot. Her biological sex cannot bar her. Likewise, if a man is in love with a man and wants to do unspeakable things with another man, they should be able to call their union a marriage. It doesn’t matter that fifty percent of what is essential for a marriage, a woman, is not there. It doesn’t matter that a same-sex union is by nature childless; children are no longer an essential purpose of marriage. And since the marriage bed is already defiled, the purchasing of biological material or children is justified for the sake of equal rights.
Transgenderism denies God’s clear word, “In the beginning, God made them male and female.” (Mark 10:6) Transgenderism denies nature and biology, insisting that there is no real difference between the sexes. Transgenderism insists that a person determines his own identity and that others must accept that identity, even if it causes harm to others. The same is true about women pastors. The practice of women pastors denies God’s clear Word, “I do not permit a woman to teach or exercise authority over a man…” (1 Timothy 2:12) Women pastors deny nature and biology, insisting that God did not make men with certain strengths over women and give men and women different roles in marriage, church, and society. Women pastors insists that a person determines her own identity and that others must accept that identity, even if it causes harm to others. The church did not need women pastors. The church needed mothers to cares for their children at home, as St. Paul instructs older women to teach younger women in Titus 2, “Older women likewise are to be reverent in behavior, not slanderers or slaves to much wine. They are to teach what is good, 4 and so train the young women to love their husbands and children, 5 to be self-controlled, pure, working at home, kind, and submissive to their own husbands, that the word of God may not be reviled.” The church needed wives to help their husbands and encourage them to lead, as Sarah did for Abraham. The church needed husbands and fathers to not only preach and teach as pastors, but to set an example of how to be a good husband and father to the men in the church, as St. Paul instructs Timothy in 1 Timothy 4, “Let no one despise you for your youth, but set the believers an example in speech, in conduct, in love, in faith, in purity. 13 Until I come, devote yourself to the public reading of Scripture, to exhortation, to teaching. 14 Do not neglect the gift you have, which was given you by prophecy when the council of elders laid their hands on you. 15 Practice these things, immerse yourself in them, so that all may see your progress. 16 Keep a close watch on yourself and on the teaching. Persist in this, for by so doing you will save both yourself and your hearers.”
Transgenderism is an attack on the order of creation. It isn’t about a man who feels feminine being comfortable in his body or a woman, who feels masculine feeling comfortable in her body. It is about discarding any structure of sex in any part of life. This is why many of them identify as they/them or even some made up pronoun, calling themselves gender-nonbinary. They hate that God created us from the beginning as male and female.
Yes, St. Paul says in Galatians 3, that there is neither Jew nor Greek, slave nor free, male and female, for you are all one in Christ.” But this speaks of our freedom in the Gospel to be heirs of Christ. Paul is not calling for the destruction of God’s creation. He is not even calling for the abolition of slave and master or employee and employer. Rather, he continues to teach that slaves should obey their master, children their parents, and wives should submit to their husbands (Ephesians 5-6).
Transgenderism will destroy itself, whether or not it destroys our civilization first. It is cultural suicide. Yet, we in the Church must recognize that women’s ordination is part of the transgender movement. They are both part of a movement to deny the reality of God’s creation and the clear words of God. But when we accept God’s order of creation, not only do we conform to biblical practices like only male pastors, but the household is put in order, the church supports the godly structure of the home, and men in society step up to their godly roles as protectors and providers, and women and children are protected. And then we see better the image of Christ and His Church, when we see pastors caring for their parishes as a husband and father, and fathers caring for their wives and children as Christ cares for the Church.