Women Preaching?
Dabney rips this position to shreds
both practically and exegetically.
"This
common movement for women's rights,' and women's preaching, must be
regarded, then, as simply infidel. It cannot be candidly upheld
without attacking the
inspiration and authority of the Scriptures."
The
Public Preaching of Women
by R.L. Dabney
In
this day innovations march with rapid strides. The fantastic suggestion
of yesterday, entertained only by a few-fanatics, and then only
mentioned by the sober to be ridiculed, is today the audacious reform,
and will be to-morrow the recognized usage. Novelties are so numerous
and so wild and rash, that in even conservative minds the sensibility of
wonder is exhausted and the instinct of righteous resistance fatigued. A
few years ago the public preaching of women was universally condemned
among all conservative denominations of Christians, and, indeed, within
their bounds, was totally unknown. Now the innovation is brought face to
face even with the Southern churches, and female preachers are knocking
at our doors. We are told that already public opinion is so truckling
before the boldness and plausibility of their claims that minister of
our own communion begin to hesitate, and men hardly know whether they
have the moral courage to adhere to the right. These remarks show that
a discussion of woman's proper place in Christian society is again
timely.
The
arguments advanced by those who profess reverence for the Bible, in
favor of this unscriptural usage, must be of course chiefly
rationalistic. They do indeed profess to appeal to the sacred history of
the prophetesses, Miriam, Deborah, Huldah, and Anna, as proving that sex
was no sufficient barrier to public work in the church. But the fatal
answer is, that these holy women were inspired. Their call was
exceptional and supernatural. There can be no fair reasoning from the
exception to the ordinary rule. Elijah, in his civic relation to the
kingdom of the ten tribes, would have been but a private citizen without
his prophetic afflatus. By virtue of this we find him exercising the
highest of the regal functions (1 Kings xviii.), administering the
capital penalty ordained by the law against seducers into idolatry, when
he sentenced the priests of Baal and ordered their execution. But it
would be a most dangerous inference to argue hence, that any other
private citizen, if moved by pious zeal, might usurp the punitive
functions of the public magistrate. It is equally bad logic to infer
that because Deborah prophesied when the supernatural impulse of the
Spirit moved her, therefore any other pious woman who feels only the
impulses of ordinary grace may usurp the function of the public
preacher?} It must be remembered, besides, that all who claim a
supernatural inspiration must stand prepared to prove it by supernatural
works. If any of our preaching women will work a genuine miracle, then,
and not until then, will she be entitled to stand on the ground of
Deborah or Anna.
A
feeble attempt is made to find an implied recognition of the right of
women to preach in 1 Cor. xi. 5 : " But every woman that prayeth or
prophesieth with her head uncovered, dishonor-eth her head: for that is
even all one as if she were shaven." They would fain find here the
implication that the woman who feels the call may prophesy in public, if
she does so with a bonnet on her head; and that the apostle provides
for admitting so much. But
when we turn to the fourteenth chapter, verses 34, 35, we find the same
apostle strictly forbidding public preaching in the churches to women,
and enjoining silence. No
honest reader of Scripture can infer that he meant by inference to allow
the very thing which, in the same epistle and in the same part of it, he
expressly prohibits. It is
a criminal violence to represent him as thus contradicting himself.
He did not mean, in chapter xi. 5, to imply that any woman might
ever preach in public, either with bonnet on or off.
The learned Dr. Gill, followed by many more recent expositors,
supposes that in this place the word "prophesy" only means
"praise," as it unquestionably does in some places (as in 1
Chron. xxv.2, the sons of Asaph and Jeduthun "prophesied with the
harp"), and as the Targums render it in many places in the Old
Testament. Thus, the
ordinance of worship which the apostle is regulating just here is not
public preaching at all, but the sacred singing of psalms.
And all that is here settled is, that Christian females, whose
privilege it is to join in this praise, must not do so with unveiled
heads, in imitation of some pagan priestesses when conducting their
unclean or lascivious worship, but must sing public praises with heads
modestly veiled.
We
have no need to resort to this explanation, reasonable though it be. The
apostle is about to prepare the -war for his categorical exclusion of
women from public discourse. He does so by alluding to the intrusion
which had probably begun, along with many other disorders in the
Corinthian churches, and by pointing to its obvious unnaturalness. Thus
he who stands up in public as the herald and representative of heaven's
King must stand with uncovered head; the honor of the Sovereign for whom
he speaks demands this. But no woman can present herself in public with
uncovered head without sinning against nature and her sex. Hence no
woman can be a public herald of Christ. Thus this passage, instead of
implying the admission, really argues the necessary exclusion of women
from the pulpit.
But
the rationalistic arguments are more numerous and are urged with more
confidence. First in natural order is the plea that some Christian women
are admitted to possess every gift claimed by males, zeal, learning,
piety, power of utterance, and it is asked why these are not
qualifications for the ministry in the case of the woman as well as of
the man. It is urged that there is a mischievous, and even a cruel
impolicy, in depriving the church of the accessions and souls of the
good which these gifts and graces might procure when exercised in the
pulpit. Again, some profess that they have felt the spiritual and conscientious
impulse to proclaim the gospel which crowns God's call to the ministry.
They "must obey God rather than men," and they warn us against
opposing their impulse, lest haply we be "found even to fight
against God." They argue that the apostle himself has told us, in
the new creation of grace " there is neither Greek nor Jew,
circumcision nor uncircumcision, barbarian, Scythian, bond nor
free." In Christ " there is neither Jew nor Greek, there is
neither bond nor free, there is neither male nor female " (Col.
iii.11; Gal. iii.28). But if the spiritual kingdom thus levels all
social and temporal distinctions, its official rights should equally be
distributed in disregard of them all. And last, it is claimed that God
has decided the question by setting the seal of his favor on the
preaching of some blessed women, such as the " Friend," Miss
Sarah Smiley. If the results of her ministry are not gracious, then all
the fruits of the gospel may as reasonably be discredited. And they ask
triumphantly,
Would
God employ and honor an agency which he himself makes unlawful?
We reply, Yes. This confident argument is founded on a very transparent
mistake. God does not
indeed honor, but he does employ, agents whom he disapproves.
Surely God does not approve a man who "preaches Christ
for envy and strife" (Phil. i.15), yet the apostle rejoices
in it, and "knows that it shall result in salvation through his
prayers and the supply of the Spirit of Jesus Christ."
Two very simple truths, which no believer disputes, explode the
whole force of this appeal to results.
One is that a truly good person may go wrong in one particular,
and our heavenly Father, who is exceedingly forbearing, may withhold
his displeasure from the misguided efforts of his child, through
Christ's intercession, because, though misguided, he is his child.
The other is, that it is one of God's clearest and most blessed
prerogatives to bring good out of evil. Thus who can doubt but it is
wrong for a man dead in sins to intrude into the sacred ministry ?
Yet God has often employed such sinners to convert souls; not
sanctioning their profane intrusion, but glorifying his own grace by
overruling it. This experimental
plea may be also refuted by another answer.
If the rightfulness of actions is to be determined by their
results, then it ought evidently to be by their whole results.
But who is competent to say whether the whole results of one of
these pious disorders will be beneficial or mischievous?
A zealous female converts or confirms several souls by her
preaching. Grant it. But may she not, by this example, in the future
introduce an amount of confusion, intrusion, strife, error and scandal
which will greatly overweigh the first partial good?
This question cannot be answered until time is ended, and it will
require an omniscient mind to judge it.
Thus it becomes perfectly clear that present seeming, good
results cannot ever be a sufficient justification of conduct, which
violates the rule of the word. This is our only sure guide.
Bad results, following a course of action not commanded in the
word, may present a sufficient, even an imperative, reason for stopping,
and good results following such action may suggest some probability in
its favor. This is
all a finite mind is authorized to argue in these matters of God's
service, and when the course of action transgresses the commandment
such probability becomes worthless.
Pursuing
the arguments of the opposite party in the reverse order, we remark
next, that when the apostle teaches the equality of all in the
privilege of redemption, it is obvious he is speaking in general,
not of official positions in the visible church, but of access to
Christ and
participation in his blessings. The expository ground of this
construction is, that thus alone can we save him from
self-contradiction. For his
exclusion of women from the pulpit is as clear and emphatic as his
assertion of the universal equality in Christ.
Surely he does not mean to contradict himself.
Our construction is established
also by other instances of a similar kind.
The apostle expressly excludes "neophytes" from
office. Yet no one dreams
that ho would have made the recency of their engrafting a ground of
discrimination against their equal privileges in Christ.
Doubtless the apostle would have been as ready to assert that
in Christ there is neither young nor old, as that in him there is
neither male nor female. So
every sane man would exclude children from office ill the church, yet no
one would disparage their equal interest in Christ. So the apostle inhibited Christians who were implicated in
polygamy from office, however sincere their repentance.
So the canons of the early church forbade slaves to so ordained
until they had legally procured emancipation; and doubtless they were
right in this rule. But in
Christ there is "neither bond nor free."
If, then, the equality of these classes in Christ did not imply
their fitness for public office in the church, neither does the equality
of females with males in Christ imply it.
Last, the scope of the apostle in these places proves that he
meant no more, for his object in referring to this blessed Christian
equality is there seen to be to infer that all classes have a right to
church membership, if believers, and that Christian love and communion
ought to embrace all.
When
the claim is made that the church must concede the ministerial function
to the Christian woman who sincerely supposes she feels the call to
it, we have a perilous perversion of the true doctrine of vocation.
True, this vocation is spiritual, but it is also scriptural. The same
Spirit who' really calls the true minister also dictated the Holy
Scriptures. When even a good man says that he thinks the Spirit calls
him to preach, there may be room for doubt; but there can be no doubt
whatever that the Spirit calls no person to do what the word dictated
by him, forbids. The Spirit cannot contradict himself. No human being is
entitled to advance a specific call of the Spirit for him individually
to do or teach something contrary to or beside the Scriptures previously
given to the church, unless he can sustain his claim by miracle. Again,
the true doctrine of vocation is that the man whom God has designed and
qualified to preach learns his call through the word. The word is the
instrument by which the Spirit teaches him, with prayer, that he is to
preach. Hence, when a person professes to have felt this call whom the
word distinctly precludes from the work, as the neophyte, the child, the
penitent polygamist, the female, although we may ascribe her mistake to
an amiable zeal, yet we absolutely know she is mistaken; she has
confounded a human impulse with the Spirit's vocation. Last, the
scriptural vocation comes not only through the heart of the candidate,
but of the brotherhood, and the call is never complete until the
believing choice of the brethren has confirmed it. But by what shall
they be guided? By the " say so " of any one who assumes to be
sincere? Nay, verily. The brethren are expressly commanded "not
to believe every spirit, but to try the spirits whether they are of
God." They have no other rule than Scripture. Who can believe
that God's Spirit is the agent of such anarchy as this, where the
brotherhood hold in their hands the word, teaching them that God does
not call any woman, and yet a woman insists against them that God calls
her? He " is not the author of confusion, but of peace, as in all
the churches of the saints." It is on this very subject of vocation
to public teaching that the apostle makes this declaration.
The
argument from the seeming fitness of some women, by their gifts and
graces, to edify the churches by preaching, is then merely utilitarian
and unbelieving. When God endows a woman as he did Mrs. Elizabeth Fry,
it may be safely assumed that he has some wise end in view; he has some
sphere in earth or heaven in which her gifts will come into proper play.
But surely it is far from reverent for the creature to decide, against
God's word, that this sphere is the pulpit. His wisdom is better than
man's. The sin involves the presumption of Uzzah. He was right in
thinking that it would be a bad thing to have the sacred ark tumbled
into the dust, and in thinking that he had as much physical power to
steady it and as much accidental proximity as any Levite of them all;
but he was wrong in presuming to serve God in a way he had said he did
not choose to be served. So when men lament the "unemployed
spiritual power," which they suppose exists in many gifted females,
as a dead loss to the church, they are reasoning with Uzzah; they are
presumptuously setting the human wisdom above God's wisdom.
The
argument, then, whether any woman may be a public preacher of the word
should be prevalently one of Scripture. Does the Bible really prohibit
it ? "We assert that it does. And first, the Old Testament, which
contained, in germ, all the principles of the New, allowed no regular
church office to any woman. "When a few of that sex were employed
as mouth-pieces of God, it was in an office purely extraordinary, and in
which they could adduce a supernatural attestation of their commission.
No woman ever ministered at the altar, as either priest or Levite. No
female elder was ever seen in a Hebrew congregation. No woman ever sat
on the throne of the theocracy, except the pagan usurper and murderess,
Athaliah. Now, Presbyterians at least believe that the church order of
the Old Testament church was imported into the N«w, with leas
modification than any other part of the old religion. The ritual of
types was greatly modified; new sacramental symbols replaced the old;
the temple of sacrifice was superseded, leaving no sanctuary beneath the
heavenly one, save the synagogue, the house of prayer. But the primeval
presbyterial order continued unchanged. The Christianized synagogue
became the Christian congregation, with its eldership, teachers, and
deacons, and its women invariably keeping silence in the assembly. The
probability thus raised is strong.
Secondly,
if human language can make anything plain, it is that the New Testament
institutions do not suffer the woman to rule or "to usurp authority
over the man." (See 1 Tim. ii.12; 1 Cor. xi.3, 7-10; Eph. v.22, 23;
1 Peter iii.1, 5, 6.) In ecclesiastical affairs, at least, the woman's
position in the church is subordinate to the man's. But, according to
New Testament precedent and doctrine, the call to public teaching and
ruling in the church must go together. Every elder is not a public
teacher, but every regular public teacher must be a ruling elder. It is
clearly implied in 1 Tim. v. 17 that there were ruling elders who were
not preachers, but never was the regular preacher heard of who was not
ex officio a ruling elder. The scriptural qualifications for public
teaching, the knowledge, piety, experience, authority, dignity,
purity, moral weight, were a fortiori qualifications for ruling.
"The greater includes the less." Hence it is simply
inconceivable that the qualified person could experience a true call to
public teaching and not also be called to spiritual rule. Hence, if it
is right for the woman to preach, she must also be a ruling elder. But
God has expressly prohibited the latter, and assigned to woman a
domestic and social place, in which her ecclesiastical rule would be
anarchy.
This
argument may be put in a most practical and ad hominem, (or ad
feminam) shape. Let it be granted, for argument's sake, that here is
a woman whose gifts and graces, spiritual wisdom and experience, are so
superior her friends feel with her that it is a blamable loss of power
in the church to confine her to silence in the public assembly. She
accordingly exercises her public gift rightfully and successfully. She
becomes the spiritual parent of new-born souls. Is it not right that
her spiritual progeny should look up to her for guidance? How can she,
from her position, justify herself in refusing this second service? She
felt herself properly impelled, by the deficiency in the quantity or
quality of the male preaching at this place, to break over the
restraints of sex and contribute her superior gifts to the winning of
souls. Now, if it appears that a similar deficiency of male supervision,
either in quantity or quality, exists at the same place, the same
impulse must, by the stronger reason, prompt her to assume the less
public and obtrusive work of supervision. There is no sense in her
straining out the gnat after she has swallowed the camel; she ought to
act the ruling elder, and thus conserve the fruits she has planted. She
ought to admonish, command, censure, and excommunicate her male
converts, including, possibly, the husband she is to obey at home, if
the real welfare of the souls she has won requires.
The
attempt may be made to escape this crushing demonstration by saying
that these women consider themselves as preaching, not as presbyters,
but as lay persons, that theirs is but a specimen of legitimate lay
preaching. The answers are, that stated, public lay preaching is not
legitimate, either for women or men, who remain without ordination (as
was proved in this and
that the terms of the inspired prohibition against the public
preaching of -women are such as to exclude this plea.
Let
us now look at these laws themselves; we shall find them peculiarly,
even surprisingly, explicit.
First, we have 1 Cor. xi.3-16, where the apostle discusses the
relation and deportment of the sexes in the public Christian
assemblages; and he assures the Corinthians, verses 2 and 16, that the
rules he here announces were universally accepted by all the churches.
The reader will not be wearied by details of exposition; a
careful reading of the passage will give to him the best evidence for
our interpretation, in its complete coherence and consistency.
Two principles, then, are laid down: first, verse 4, that the man
should preach (or pray) in public with head uncovered, because he then
stands forth as God's herald and representative; and to assume at that
time the emblem of subordination, a covered head, is a dishonor to the
office and the God it represents; secondly, verses 5, 13, that, on the
contrary, for a woman to appear or to perform any public religious
function in the Christian assembly, unveiled, is a glaring impropriety,
because it is contrary to the subordination of the position assigned her
by her Maker, and to the modesty and reserve suitable to her sex; and
even nature settles the point by giving her her long hair as her natural
veil. Even as good taste and a natural sense of propriety would protest
against a woman's going in public shorn of that beautiful badge and
adornment of her sex, like a rough soldier or a laborer, even so clearly
does nature herself sustain God's law in requiring the woman to appear
always modestly covered in the sanctuary. The holy angels who are
present as invisible spectators, hovering over the Christian
assemblies, would be shocked by seeing women professing godliness
publicly throw off this appropriate badge of their position (verse 10).
The woman, then, has a right to the privileges of public worship
and the sacraments; she may join audibly in the praises and prayers of
the public assembly, where the usages of the body encourage responsive
prayer;. but she must always do this veiled or covered.
The apostle does not in this chapter pause to draw the deduction,
that if every public herald of God must be unveiled, and the woman must
never be unveiled in public, then she can never be a public herald.
But let us wait. He
has not done with these questions of order in public worship; he
steadily continues the discussion of them through the fourteenth
chapter, and he there at length reaches the conclusion he had been
preparing, and in verses 34, 35, expressly prohibits women to preach
publicly. " Let your women keep silence in the churches, for it is
not permitted to them to speak" (in that public place), "but
to be in subordination, as also the law saith. And if they wish to learn
something "—about some doctrine which they there hear discussed
but do not comprehend—"let them ask their own husbands at home,
for it is disgraceful for women to speak in church." And in verse
37 he shuts up the whole discussion by declaring that if anybody
pretends to have the Spirit, or the inspiration of prophecy, so as to
be entitled to contest Paul's rules, the rules are the commandments of
the Lord (Christ), not Paul's mere personal conclusions, so that to
contest them on such pretensions of spiritual impulse is inevitably
wrong and presumptuous. For the immutable Lord does not legislate in
contradictory ways.
The
next passage is 1 Tim. ii. 11-15. In the eighth verse the apostle,
having taught what should be the tenor of the public prayers and why,
says: " I ordain therefore that the males pray in every place
" (in which the two sexes prayed publicly together). He then,
according to the tenor of the passage in 1 Cor. xi., commands
Christian women to frequent the Christian assemblies in raiment at once
removed from untidiness and luxury, and so fashioned as to express the
retiring modesty of their sex. He then adds : " Let the woman learn
in quiet in all subordination. But I do not permit woman to teach "
(in public) " nor to play the ruler over man, but to be in
quietude. For Adam was first fashioned; then Ere. Again, Adam was not
deceived" (by Satan), " but the woman, having been deceived,
came to be in transgression" (first). "However, she shall be
saved by the child-bearing, if they abide, with modest discretion, in
faith and love and sanctity." In 1 Tim. v. 9-15, a sphere of church
labor is evidently defined for aged single women, and for them only, who
are widows or celibates without near kindred. So specific is the apostle
that he categorically fixes the limit below which the church may not go
in accepting even such laborers at sixty years. "What was this
sphere of labor? It was evidently some form of diaconal work, and not
preaching, because the age, qualifications and connections all point
to these private charitable tasks, and the uninspired history confirms
it. To all younger women the apostle then assigns their express sphere
in these words (verse 14), " I ordain accordingly that the younger
women many, bear children, guide the house, give no start to the
adversary to revile" (Christians and Christianity). Here is at
least strong negative evidence that Paul assigned no public preaching
function to women. In Titus ii.4, 5, women who have not reached old age
are to be " affectionate to their husbands, fond of their
children, prudent, pure, keepers at home, benevolent, obedient to their
own husbands, that the word of God may not be reviled." And the
only teaching function hinted even for the aged women is, verse 4, that
they should teach these private domestic virtues to their younger
sisters. Does not the apostle here assign the home as the proper sphere
of the Christian woman? That is her kingdom, and neither the secular nor
the ecclesiastical commonwealth. Her duties in her home are to detain
her away from the public functions. She is not to be a ruler of men, but
a loving subject to her husband.
The
grounds on which the apostle rests the divine legislation against the
preaching of women make it clear that we have construed it aright.
Collating 1 Cor. xi with 1 Tim. ii, we find them to be the following:
The male was the first creation of God, the female a subsequent one.
Then, the female was made from the substance of the male, being taken
from his side. The end of the woman's creation and existence is to be a
helpmeet for man, in a sense in which the man was not originally
designed as a helpmeet for the woman. Hence God, from the beginning of
man's existence as a sinner, put the wife under the kindly authority of
the husband, making him the head and her the subordinate in domestic
society. The Lord said (Gen. iii. 16), " Thy desire shall be unto
thy husband, and he shall rule over thee." Then last, the agency of
the woman in yielding first to Satanic temptation and aiding to seduce
her husband into £in was punished by this subjection, and the sentence
on the first woman has been extended, by imputation, to all her
daughters. These are the grounds on which the apostle says the Lord enacted
that in the church assemblies the woman shall be pupil, and not public
teacher, ruled, and not ruler. The reasons bear upon all women, of all
ages and civilizations alike. Hence the honest expositor must conclude
that the enactments are of universal force.
Such reasons are, indeed, in strong opposition to the radical
theories of individual human rights and equality now ill vogue with
many. Instead of allowing to all human beings a specific equality and an
absolute natural independence, these Scripture doctrines assume that
there are orders of human beings naturally unequal in their inherited
rights, as in their bodily and mental qualities; that God has not
ordained any human being to this proud independence, but placed all in
subordination under authority, the child under its mother, the mother
under her husband, the husband under the ecclesiastical and civil
magistrates, and these under the law, whose guardian and avenger is God
himself. And so far from flouting the doctrine of imputation as an
antiquated barbarism, these Scriptures represent it as a living and
just ruling principle, this very day determining, by the guilt of a
woman who sinned six thousand years ago, when combining with the natural
qualities of sex propagated in her race, a subordinate social state
and a rigid disqualification for certain actions, for half the human
race. Between the popular theories of individual human right and this
sort of political philosophy there is indeed an irreconcilable opposition.
But this is inspired. The only solution is that the other, despite all
its confidence and arrogance, is false and hollow. " He that
replieth against God, let him answer it."
The
inspired legislation is explicit to every candid reader as human
language can well make it. Yet modern ingenuity has essayed to explain
it away. One is not surprised to find these expositions, even when
advanced by those who profess to accept the Scriptures, tinctured with
no small savor of infidelity. For a true and honest reverence for the
inspiration of Scripture would scarcely try so hopeless a task as the
sophisticating of so plain a law. Thus, sometimes we hear these remarks
uttered almost as a sneer, " Oh, this is the opinion of Paul, a
crusty old bachelor, an oriental, with his head stuffed with those ideas
of woman which were current when society made her an ignoramus, a
plaything, and a slave." Or, we are referred to the fable of the
paintings of the man dominating the lion, in which the man was always
the painter, and it is said, " Paul was a man; he is jealous for
the usurped dominion of his sex. The law would be different if it were
uttered through woman." "What is all this except open unbelief
and resistance, when the apostle says expressly that this legislation
was the enactment of that Christ who condescended to be born of woman ?
Again,
one would have us read the prohibition of 1 Cor. xiv. 34, " it is
not permitted to females to babble." Some pretended usage is cited
to show that the verb is here used in a bad sense only, and that the
prohibition to a woman to talk nonsense in public address does not
exclude, but rather implies, her right to preach, provided she preaches
well and solidly. No
expositor will need a reply to criticism so wretchedly absurd as this.
But it may not be amiss to point out in refutation that the opposite of
this in Paul's own mind and statement is " to be silent." The
implied distinction, then, is not here between solid speech and
babbling, but between speaking publicly at all and keeping silence.
Again, in the parallel declaration (1 Tim. ii. 12), the apostle says, And
I do not permit a woman to teach or to have authority over a man, but to
be in silence, where he
uses the word dedaskin; concerning whose regular meaning no such
cavil can be invented. And the apostle's whole logic in the contexts is
directed, not against silly teachings by women, but against women's
teaching in public at all.
Another
evasion is to say that the low is indeed explicit, but it was temporary.
"When woman was what paganism and the oriental harem had made her,
she was indeed unfit for ruling and public teaching; she was but a
grown-up child, ignorant, capricious and rash, like other children; and
while she remained so the apostle's exclusion was wise and just. But
the law was not meant to apply to the modern Christian woman, lifted by
better institutions into an intellectual, moral and literary equality
with the man. Doubtless were the apostle here, lie would himself avow
it.
This
is at least more decent. But as an exegesis it is as unfair and
untenable as the other. For, first, it is false that the conception of
female character christianized, which was before the apostle's mind when
enacting this exclusion from the pulpit, was the conception of an
ignorant grown-up child from the harem. The harem was not a legitimate
Hebrew institution. Polygamy was not the rule, but the exception, in
reputable Hebrew families; nor were devout Jews, such as Paul had
been, ignorant of the unlawfulness of such domestic abuses. Jewish
manners and laws were not oriental, but a glorious exception to
orientalism, in the place they assigned woman; and God's word of the Old
Testament had doubtless done among the Jews the same ennobling work for
woman which we now claim Christianity does. To the competent
archeologist it is known that it has ever been the trait of Judaism to
assign an honorable place to woman; and the Jewish race has ever been as
rare an exception as Tacitus says the German race was to the pagan depression
of the sex common in ancient days. Accordingly, we never find the
apostle drawing a depreciated picture of woman; every allusion of his to
the believing woman is full of reverent respect and honor. Among the
Christian women who come into Paul's history there is not one who is
portrayed after this imagined pattern of childish ignorance and
weakness. The Lydia, the Lois, the Eunice, the Phoebe, the Priscilla,
the Damaris, the Mary, the Junia, the Tryphena, the Tryphosa, the "
beloved Persis" of the Pauline history, and the " elect
lady" who was honored with the friendship of the aged John, all
appear in the narrative as bright examples of Christian intelligence,
activity, dignity, and nobleness. It was not left for the pretentious
Christianity of the nineteenth century to begin the emancipation of
woman. As soon as the primitive doctrine conquered a household, it did
its blessed work in lifting up the feebler and oppressed sex; and it
is evident that Paul's habitual conception of female Christian character
in the churches in which he ministered was at least as favorable as
his estimate of the male members. Thus the state of facts on which this
gloss rests had no existence for Paul's mind; he did not consider
himself as legislating temporarily in view of the inferiority of the
female Christian character of his day, for he did not think it inferior.
When this invasion is inspected it unmasks itself simply into an
instance of quiet egotism. Says the Christian " woman of the
period" virtually, "I am so elevated and enlightened that I am
above the law, which was well enough for those old fogies, Priscilla,
Persis, Eunice/ and the elect lady." Indeed! This is modesty with a
vengeance! " Alas Paul only legislating temporarily when he
termed modesty one of the brightest jewels in the Christian woman's
crown?
A
second answer is seen to this plea in the nature of the apostle's
grounds for the law. Not one of them is personal, local, or temporary.
Nor does he say that woman must not preach in public because he regards
her as less pious, less zealous, less eloquent, less learned, less
brave, or less intellectual, than man. In the advocates of woman's right
to this function there is a continual tendency to a confusion of
thought, as though the apostle, when he says that woman must not do what
man does, meant to disparage her sex. This is a sheer mistake. His
reasoning will be searched in vain for any disparagement of the
qualities and virtues of that sex; and we may at this place properly
disclaim all such intention also. Woman is excluded from this masculine
task of public preaching by Paul, not because she is inferior to man,
but simply because her Maker has ordained for her another work which is
incompatible with this. So he might have pronounced, as nature does,
that she shall not sing bass, not because he thought the bass chords the
more beautiful—perhaps he thought the pure alto of the feminine throat
far the sweeter—but because her ver}* constitution fits her for the
latter part in the concert of human existence, mid therefore unfits her
for the other, the coarser and less melodious part.
But
that the scriptural law was not meant to be temporary, and had no
exclusive reference to the ignorant and childish woman of the Eastern
harem, is plain from this, that every ground assigned for the exclusion
is of universal and perpetual application. They apply to the modern,
educated woman exactly as they applied to Phoebe, Priscilla, Damaris
and Eunice. They lose not a grain of force by any change of social
usages or feminine culture, being found in the facts of woman's origin
and nature and the designed end of her existence. Thus this second
evasion is totally closed. And the argument finds its final completion
in such passages as 2 Tim. ii. 9 and v. 14. A few aged women of peculiar
circumstances are admitted as assistants in the diaconal labors. The
rest of the body of Christian women the apostle then assigns to the
domestic sphere, intimating clearly that their attempts to go beyond it
would minister to adversaries a pretext to revile. Here, then, we have
the clearest proof, in a negative form, that he did not design women in
future to break over; for it is for woman as elevated and enlightened by
the gospel he preached that he laid down the limit.
Every
true believer should regard the scriptural argument as first, as
sufficient, and as conclusive by itself. But as the apostle said in one
place, that his task was " to commend himself to every man's
conscience in God's sight," so it is proper to gather the teachings
of sound human prudence and experience which support God's wise law. The
justification is not found in any disparagement of woman as man's
natural inferior, but in the primeval fact: " Male and female made
he them." In order to ground human society God saw it necessary to
fashion for man's mate, not his exact image, but his counterpart.
Identity would have utterly marred their companionship, and would have
been an equal curse to both. But out of this unlikeness in resemblance
it must obviously follow that each is fitted for works and duties
unsuitable for the other. And it is no more a degradation to the woman
that the man can best do some things which she cannot do so well, than
to the man that woman has her natural superiority in other things. But
it will be cried: " Your Bible doctrine makes man the ruler, woman
the ruled." True. It was absolutely necessary, especially after sin
had entered the race, that a foundation for social order should be laid
in a family government. This government could not be made consistent,
peaceful or orderly by being made double-headed, for human finitude, and
especially sin, would ensure collision, at least at some times, between
any two human wills. It was essential to the welfare of both husband and
wife and of the offspring that there must be an ultimate human head
somewhere. Now let reason decide, was it meet that the man be head over
the woman, or the woman over the man ? Was it right that he for whom woman
was created should be subjected to her who was created for him; that he
who was stronger physically should be subjected to the weaker; that the
natural protector should be the senant of the protégée; that the
divinely ordained bread-winner should be controlled by the
bread-dispenser? Every candid woman admits that this would have been
unnatural and unjust. Hence God, acting, so to speak, under an
unavoidable moral necessity, assigned to the male the domestic
government, regulated and tempered, indeed, by the strict laws of God,
by self-interest and by the tenderest affection; and to the female the
obedience of love. On this order all other social order depends. It was
not the design of Christianity to subvert it, but only to perfect and
refine it. Doubtless that spirit of willfulness, which is a feature of
our native carnality in both man and woman, tempts us to feel that any
subordination is a hardship, so that it is felt while God has been a
Father to the man, he has been but a stepfather to the woman. Self-will
resents this natural subordination as a natural injustice. But self-will
forgets that " order is heaven's first law;" that
subordination is the inexorable condition of peace and happiness, and
this as much in heaven as on earth ; that this subjection was not
imposed on woman only as a penalty, but as for her and her offspring's
good ; and that to be governed under the wise conditions of nature is
often a more privileged state than to govern. God has conformed his
works of creation and providence to these principles. In creating man he
has endued him with the natural attributes which qualify him to labor
abroad, to subdue dangers, to protect, to govern. He has given these
qualities in less degree to woman, and in their place has adorned her
with the less hardy, but equally admirable, attributes of body, mind
and heart which qualify her to yield, to be protected, and to
"guide the home." This order is founded, then, in the
unchangeable laws of nature. Hence all attempts to reverse it must fail,
and must result only in confusion.
Now,
a wise God designs no clashing between his domestic and political and
his ecclesiastical arrangements. Ho has ordained that the man shall be
head in the family and the commonwealth ; it would be a confusion full
of mischief to make the woman head in the ecclesiastical sphere. But we
have seen that the right of public teaching must involve the right of
spiritual rule. The woman who has a right to preach, if there be any
such, ought also claim to be a ruling elder. How would it work to have
husband and wife, ruler and subject, change places as often as they
passed from the dwelling or the court-room and senate chamber to the
church ? "When we remember how universally the religious
principles, which it is the prerogative of the presbyter to enforce,
interpenetrate and regulate man's secular duties, we see that this
amount of overturning would result in little short of absolute anarchy.
Again,
the duties which natural affection, natural constitution, and imperious
considerations of convenience distribute between the man and the woman
make it practicable for him and impracticable for her to pursue, without
their neglect, the additional tasks of the public preacher and
evangelist. Let an instance be taken from the nurture of children. The
bishop must be " husband of one wife." Both the parents owe
duties to their children; but the appropriate duties of the mother,
especially towards little children, are such that she could not leave
them as the pastor must for his public tasks without criminal neglect
and their probable ruin. It may be said that this argument has no
application to unmarried women. The answers are, that God contemplates
marriage as the proper condition of woman, while he does not make
celibacy a crime, and that the sphere he assigns to the unmarried
woman is also private and domestic.
Some
minds doubtless imagine a degree of force in this statement, that God
has bestowed on some women gifts and graces eminently qualifying them
to edify his churches, and as he commits no waste he thereby shows that
he designs such women at least to preach. Enough has been already said
to show how utterly unsafe such pretended reasonings are. " God
giveth no account of his matters to any man." Does lie not often
give most splendid endowments for usefulness to young men whom he then
removes by what we call a premature death from the threshold of the
pastoral career? Yet " God commits no waste." It is not for us
to surmise how he will utilize those seemingly abortive endowments. He
knows how and where to do it. We must bow to his dispensation, whether
explicable or not. The case is the same in this respect with his
ordinance restraining the most gifted woman from publicity. But there is
a more obvious answer. God has assigned to her a private sphere
sufficiently important and honorable to justify the whole expenditure of
angelic endowments—the formation of the character of children. This is
the noblest and most momentous work done on earth. Add to it the efforts
of friendship, the duties of the daughter, sister, wife and charitable
almoner, and the labors of authorship suitable for woman, and we see a
field wide enough for the highest talents and the most sanctified
ambition. Does self-will feel that somehow the sphere of the pulpit
orator is more splendid still? "Wherein? Only in that it has
features which gratify carnal ambition and the lust for carnal applause
of men. But let it be noted that Christians are forbidden to have these
desires! Let, then, the Christian comply with God's law requiring him to
crucify ambition, and the only features which made any difference
between the private and the public spheres of soul-culture are gone.
The Christian who, in the performance of the public work of rearing
souls for heaven, fosters the ambitious motive, has deformed his
worthiness in the task with a defilement which sinks it far below that
of the humblest peasant mother who is training her child for God. Does
the objector return to the charge with the cavil that, while the
faithful mother rears six, or possibly twice six, children for God,
the gifted evangelist may convert thousands? But that man would not have
been the gifted evangelist had he not enjoyed the blessing of the modest
Christian mother's training. Had he been reared in the disorderly home
of the clerical Mrs. Jellyby, instead of being the spiritual father of
thousands, he would have been an ignorant rowdy or a disgusting
Pharisee. So that the worthiness of his public success belongs fully as
much to the modest mother as to himself. Again, the instrumentality of
the mother's training in the salvation of her children is mighty and
decisive; the influence of the minister over his hundreds is slight and
non-essential. If he contributes a few grains, in numerous cases, to
turn the scales for heaven, the mother contributes tons to the right
scales in her few cases. The one works more widely on the surface, the
other more deeply; so that the real amount of soil moved by tho two
workmen is not usually in favor of the preacher. The woman of sanctified
ambition has nothing to regret as to the dignity of her sphere. She
does the noblest work that is done on earth. Its public recognition is
usually more through the children and beneficiaries she ennobles than
through her own person. True ; and that is precisely the feature of her
work which makes it most Christ-like. It is precisely the feature at
which a sinful and selfish ambition takes offence.
The
movement towards the preaching of women does not necessarily spring
from a secular "woman's rights" movement. The preaching of
women marked the early "Wesleyan movement to some extent, and the
Quaker assemblies. But neither of these had political aspirations for
their women. At the present time, however, the preaching of women and
the demand of all masculine political rights are so synchronous, and
are so often seen in the same persons, that their affinity cannot be
disguised. They are two parts of one common impulse. If we understand
the claim of rights made by these agitators, it includes in substance
two things: that the legislation at least of society shall disregard all
distinctions of sex and award all the same specific rights and
franchises to women and men in every respect; and that women, while in
the married state, shall be released from every form of conjugal
subordination and retain independent control of their property.
These pretensions are indeed the proper logical consequences of
that radical theory of human right which is now dominant in the country.
According to that doctrine, every human being is naturally
independent, owes no duties to civil or ecclesiastical society save
those freely conceded in the "social contract"; is the natural
equal of every other human except as he or she has forfeited liberty by
crime. Legislation and taxation
are unjust unless based on representation, which means the privilege of
each man under government to vote for his governors.
If these propositions were true, then, indeed, their application
to women would be indisputable. And
it would be hard for the radical politician to explain why it was right
to apply them in favor of ignorant Negroes and deny their application
to intelligent ladies. "We
here see the great danger attending the present misguided woman's
movement. Neither the
politicians nor the American masses cherish the purpose of being
logically consistent; and both are in the well-known habit of
proclaiming doctrines for which they care nothing, and which they do not
mean to hold honestly, as " stalking horses" for a temporary
end. But their demagogism
has given a currency and hold to these political heresies whose extent
and tenacity make them perilous. God
has made man a logical animal; the laws of his reason compel him to
think connectedly to some degree.
Hence false principles once firmly fixed are very apt to bring
after them their appropriate corollaries in the course of time, however
distasteful to the promulgators of the parent errors.
To the radical mind, possessed with these false politics, the
perpetual demand of these obvious corollaries by pertinacious women
must apply a stress which is like the " continual dropping that
weareth away a stone." They
can quote the Declaration of Independence in the sense these radicals
hold it: " The hold these truths to be self-evident; that all men
are by nature equal and inalienably entitled to life, liberty, and the
pursuit of happiness." "
All just government is founded in the consent of the governed,"
etc., etc. It is true that
this document, rationally interpreted, teaches something wholly
different from the absurd equality of the radical, which demands for
every member of society all the specific franchises which any member
has. The wise men of 1776 knew that men are not naturally equal, in
strength, talent, virtue, or ability; and that different orders of human
beings naturally inherit very different sets of rights and franchises,
according as they are qualified to enjoy and employ them for their own
good and the good of the whole. But they meant to teach that in one very
important respect all are naturally equal. This is the equality which
Job recognized (ch. xxxi.15) as existing between him and his slave; the
equality of a common origin, a common humanity and immortality. It is
the equality of the golden rule. By his right, that human being whom the
laws endow with the smallest franchises in society has the same kind of
moral right to have that small franchise respected by his fellows, as
the man who justly possesses the largest franchise. It is the equality
.embodied in the great .maxim of the British Constitution, "that
before the law all are equal." This is true, although Britain is an
aristocratic monarchy, and rights are distributed to the different
orders very differently. Earl Derby has sundry franchises which the
British peasant can no more possess than he can grasp the moon. Yet in
the constitutional sense, the peasant and the earl are " equal
before the law." If indicted for crime, each has the inalienable
right to be tried by his peers. The same law which shields the earl's entailed
estates, equally protects the peasant's cottage. As the men of 1776 were
struggling to retain for America the rights of British freemen, which
the king was unconstitutionally invading, their declaration must be
construed as teaching this equality of the free British Constitution. So
when they said that " taxation without representation" was
intrinsically unjust, they never dreamed of teaching this maxim as to
individual tax-payers. The free British Constitution, for which they
were contending, had never done so. They asserted the maxim of the commonwealth.
Some representation of the commonwealth taxed, through such order of the
citizens as properly constitute the representative populous, is
necessary to prevent taxation from becoming unjust.
But
this, the true, historical and rational meaning of these maxims, is now
unpopular with radicalism; it cannot away with the true doctrine. And
for this reason it has no sufficient answer for the plea of
"women's rights." The true answer is found in the correct
statement of human right we have given. The woman is not designed by
God, nor entitled to all the franchises in society to which the male
is entitled. God has disqualified her for any such exercise of them as
would benefit herself or society, by the endowments of body, mind, and
heart he has given her, and the share he has assigned her in the tasks
of social existence. And as she has no right to assume the masculine
franchises, so she will find in the attempt to do so only ruin to her
own character and to society. For instance, the very traits of emotion
and character which make woman man's cherished and invaluable "
helpmeet," the traits which she must have in order to fulfill the
purpose of her being would ensure her unfitness to meet the peculiar
temptations of publicity and power. The attempt would debauch all these
lovelier traits, while it would leave her still, as the rival of man,
" the weaker vessel." She would lose all and gain nothing.
One
consequence of this revolution would be so certain and so terrible, that
it cannot be passed over. It must result in the abolition of all
permanent marriage ties. Indeed, the bolder advocates do not scruple to
avow it. The destruction of marriage would follow by this cause, if no
other, that the unsexed politicating woman, the importunate
manikin-rival, would never inspire in men that true affection on which
marriage should be founded. The mutual attraction of the two
complementary halves would be forever gone. The abolition of marriage
would follow again by another cause. The rival interests and desires of
two equal wills are inconsistent with domestic union, government, or
peace. Shall the children of this unnatural connection be held
responsible to both of two sinful but coordinate and equally supreme
wills? Heaven pity the children. Again, who ever heard of a perpetual
co-partnership in which the parties had no power to enforce the
performance of the mutual duties nor to dissolve the tie made
intolerable by violation? It would be as iniquitous as impossible. Such
a co-partnership of equals, with coordinate wills and independent
interests, must be separable at will, as all other such
co-partnerships are.
This
common movement for " women's rights," and women's preaching,
must be regarded, then, as simply infidel it cannot be candidly upheld
without attacking the inspiration and authority of the Scriptures.
"We are convinced that there is only one safe attitude for
Christians, presbyters, and church courts to assume towards it. This is
utterly to discountenance it, as they do any other assault of infidelity
on God's truth and kingdom. The church officer who becomes an accomplice
of this intrusion certainly renders himself obnoxious to discipline,
just as he would by assisting to celebrate an idolatrous mass.
We
close with one suggestion to such women as may be inclined to this new
claim. If they read history, they find that the condition of woman in
Christendom, and especially in America, is most enviable as compared
with her state in all other ages and nations. Let them ponder candidly
how much they possess here, which their sisters have enjoyed in no other
age. What bestowed those peculiar privileges on the Christian women of
America ? The Bible. Let them beware, then, how they do anything to
undermine the reverence of mankind for the authority of the Bible. It
is undermining their own bulwark. If they understand how universally in
all but Bible lands the "weaker vessel" has been made the
slave of man's strength and selfishness, they will gladly " let
well enough alone," lest in grasping at some impossible prize
beyond, they lose the privileges they now have, and fall back to the
gulf of oppression from which these doctrines of Christ and Paul have
lifted them.
Appeared
in The Southern Presbyterian Review for October, 1879.
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