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Following The Leader Where Ever She May Go

Saturday, February 4th, 2012

Previous Post – The Disciples Prayer

Last Tuesday, at the annual Desiring God pastors conference, well-known pastor & author John Piper advocated for what he calls a “masculine Christianity,” claiming that “God has given Christianity a masculine feel.”

“God revealed Himself in the Bible pervasively as king not queen; father not mother,” Piper said. “The second person of the Trinity is revealed as the eternal Son not daughter; the Father and the Son create man and woman in His image and give them the name man, the name of the male…God appoints all the priests in the Old Testament to be men; the Son of God came into the world to be a man; He chose 12 men to be His apostles; the apostles appointed that the overseers of the Church be men; and when it came to marriage they taught that the husband should be the head.”

“Now, from all of that I conclude that God has given Christianity a masculine feel,” said Piper. “And being God, a God of love, He has done that for our maximum flourishing both male and female… He does not intend for women to languish or be frustrated or in any way suffer or fall short of full and lasting joy in this masculine Christianity. From which I infer that the fullest flourishing of women and men takes place in churches and families that have this masculine feel.”

More of his comments can be found here.

Generally, my online response to such controversies are to remain silent- not because I do not believe that such dangerous theology should not be confronted, but rather because, in the age of viral-videos and social media, I resist giving more air time to what I believe is ignorant, dangerous, damaging, etc.

However, when Rachel Held Evans called upon Christian men to respond, I felt compelled to break that rule.  Rachel’s challenge was as follows:

“There’s a double-standard out there in which a woman’s critique of patriarchy tends to get discounted as nothing more than the rants of an “angry feminist,” and, truth be told, I’ve grown a bit weary of hearing that charge each time I speak out about this disturbing trend in the evangelical church.

So instead, I’d like to challenge the guys to respond.”

Rachel is a writer whose passion and poignancy continues to challenge me to grow in faith and truth.  Without a question, she is a leader in the Body of Christ who I need to follow.  Her ability bring life to God’s truth- yes, that means she teaches from Scripture- and communicate it effectively and engagingly in our current culture and context is a gift to Christian everywhere.  And so, I felt her invitation deserved a response.

Since volumes have been written about what God (and His written Word) has to say about gender, I will not attempt to explain the details of what I believe and how I arrived there.  Rather, let me sum it up by saying that I am deeply convinced that God calls both women and men into all vocations in the Church, gifting and empowering them to walk with one another in obedience to those callings.  Therefore, I believe women are called to pastor churches, to teach Christians of all ages and gender.  I have seen such women walk in that obedience and have been blessed to submit to their authority, including and especially my wife, Kim.

Further, I believe that in a marriage relationship between a man and a woman, they are to work together in mutual submission, respecting the differences in their giftings and experience- difference that are apparent in the unique individual, not based on their gender.  There have been many times in which I have rightfully submitted to the authority of my wife.  At times it was because she was clearly more knowledgeable, gifted and/or experienced in the situation at hand or because we believe that the Spirit was leading her.  In faith, we work through our differences and, when necessary, submit to the other as we see appropriate.  It is not always easy nor efficient, but it seems to me that following Christ rarely is.

As I read the story of God through Scripture and study the move of God through the rest of history, I am deeply convinced that the patriarchy that is so prevalent is a reflection of the brokenness of sin which has been and is being reversed by the redemptive work of Christ.  That reversal is the work of the Spirit, breaking into the world and making God’s impossible kingdom a reality.  This is the work of God, the work of Christ and thus, the work of His Body.

We are called to be the living alternative to the broken reality of what we see in the world around us.  Failure to do so is to walk in rebellion against the only Saviour worthy of our devotion and the only King worthy of our obedience.  There is no more or even possibility for neutrality on this issue.  As Desmond Tutu once said:

“If you are neutral in situations of injustice, you have chosen the side of the oppressor. If an elephant has its foot on the tail of a mouse and you say that you are neutral, the mouse will not appreciate your neutrality.”

Worse than silence or supposed neutrality is identify the brokenness of sin in our lives and call it sacred.  It is seems almost tantamount to apostasy to celebrate as God’s intention the devastating consequences of our sin.

While unpopular to say so, I believe that Piper (and those like him) affirm these flawed beliefs out of the best intentions.  They are seeking to be faithful to what they believe is God’s design for His people- for all people.  This truth does not excuse them of the resulting sin- and yes, I believe it must be called sin- however, it should give us pause in how we respond to such failings.

Public and prophetic rebuke is often necessary in such cases.  However, there are few who seem to be able to make such corrections with the grace necessary to still reflect the God waiting to forgive their (and our) sins (and I believe Rachel is one of those few). Instead, the primary response by Christians should be one of humility, grace and unparalleled devotion to live the better alternative, at any cost.

Every generation looks back upon the Church before us and finds their failings and blind spots obvious and hard to comprehend.  Yet, like them, we are equally blind to our own failings.  The realization that our grandchildren will shake their heads at some of our failings should nurture in us a patient grace.  While it might be gratifying to “crucify” (and I do not use that word by accident) those we rightly rebuke, most are being as faithful in their flawed beliefs as we are in our own.  Yes, we need to be strong, clear and uncompromising in our correction, but love and grace must win.

As a Christian man, I am committed to submitting to Christ by submitting to the women He has called, gifted and commanded to lead His Church.  While I am grateful and humbled to do so, it should not be credited to me as meritorious in any way.  While such a commitment might be exceptional with respect to past and current realities, our measure is Christ and His kingdom.  To do any less is unacceptable.

Tags: church, gender, Leadership, women
Posted in Bible, Justice, Leadership, Missional, Pastors, church | 19 Comments »

What Is The Church? Discernment & Discipline

Friday, December 9th, 2011

Previous Post – What Is The Church? Exploring Body Politics

The terms “discernment” and “discipline” can seem daunting- especially the latter of the two.  However, I believe that these challenges are not largely due to the nature of these practices themselves, but due to the way they are used within Christian contexts that utilize systems of coercion and authoritarianism typical of Christendom expressions.  Therefore, if we can try to somewhat extricate ourselves from those dynamics, what would these dynamic disciplines look like?

Yoder brings these two together through use of Matthew 18:15-20, which reads:

“If your brother or sister sins, go and point out their fault, just between the two of you. If they listen to you, you have won them over. But if they will not listen, take one or two others along, so that ‘every matter may be established by the testimony of two or three witnesses.’ If they still refuse to listen, tell it to the church; and if they refuse to listen even to the church, treat them as you would a pagan or a tax collector.

“Truly I tell you, whatever you bind on earth will be bound in heaven, and whatever you loose on earth will be loosed in heaven.

“Again, truly I tell you that if two of you on earth agree about anything they ask for, it will be done for them by my Father in heaven. For where two or three gather in my name, there am I with them.”

In this text we see the connection between correction within the Body of Christ and practice of community discernment, namely that the community is called to discern together the will and way of following Christ, even (and perhaps especially) with respect to sin in the community.

First, we must recognize that the primary posture of correction in this text is one of resolution, restoration and reconciliation.  While this might seem an obvious emphasis, in practice the church all too commonly allows punitive values to become primary in the purpose and process of discipline.  While punishment is valid and often necessary, even it should be practiced with the design and intent to bring restoration to both the wrong-doer, the recipients of their wrong and the community as a whole.

The mutuality of the process means that, unlike the systems of justice we see in the world, we do not isolate the wrong doer from either the process of correction or as a means of punishment (except as last resort). While we rightly seek to protect the victims, the pattern of reconciliation manifested in Christ’s death and resurrection calls for the radical participation of everyone in the healing process.  This must be done with great care, compassion and wisdom.  This is a guiding understanding, not a rule.  There are certainly exceptions to how it is exercised.  However, when it possible, the humility and grace displayed in the context of community stands as a powerful beckon of hope to a watching world.  This is, in part, what makes Alcoholics Anonymous so widely respected.

However, even more fundamental in this text is the presupposed politic of the people of God.  When the intervention of others was necessary in the process of restorative correction, Jesus taught to widen the circle to include others in the community, then further to include the whole community.  While we will get into the pragmatics of how this works, we must not miss the implications: no hierarchy or formal leadership was pursued in this process of discipline.  Or rather, the authority that it was brought to was the authority Christ intended, the discerning community.

At Little Flowers Community, we seek to make decision together as a community.  For us, this often means resisting two impulses.  On the one side, we resist the urge to expediate these processes through either retreating into democracy, instead working through the difficult process of consensus through discernment.  On the other, we resist the urge to relegate our responsibility by leaving it in the hands of a hierarchical authority structure.  This does not mean that there are not leaders.  We often often submit (through discernment) to the authority of those whose gifting best equips them to help us navigate a given situation.  Their authority is never absolute and it is not positional.  Therefore, my role as pastor in the community gives me more authority only insofar as my gifting is being expressed within the context of the larger community of differently gifted, yet equal leaders.

Further, the level of trust and commitment in our church means that many of us also submit to the wisdom of the discerning community even when making important personal decisions.  We recognize that the mutuality discussed above extends to the whole of our lives.  This flies in the face of the individualism and “rights” mentalities of our culture (which we wrestle with as much as anyone else), but has also produced a way of sharing life together- in essence, living Christ together in the fullness of who we are.

How is church discipline handled in your church community?  Is it primarily punitive or restorative?

How does your community make decisions

UPDATE: Here are a couple of quotes by Yoder that I think flesh this out a bit more:

“There is no distinction between major offenses and minor ones: Any offense is forgivable, but none is trivial”

While this might sound obvious, the fact is that we often screen out issues of reconciliation through a grid in which we dismiss smaller issues as unimportant.  However, in the guise of being quietly forgiving, we are simply avoiding the discomfort of participating in the mundane work of redemption.

“The intention is not to protect the church’s reputation or to teach onlookers the seriousness of sin, but only to serve the offender’s own well-being by restoring her or him to the community.”

These are all too often the primary motivations for church discipline.  The inverse of the above quote is that, towards the end of the offenders restoration, the community must be willing to sully it’s perceived reputation and to suffer the misunderstanding and indignation of the “older brother” Christians within the community.

Tags: Community, discernment, discipline
Posted in Community, Leadership, church | 2 Comments »

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  • @MonetteChilson Thanks so much! Let me know if you do. I'd love to hear how it goes. Peace! # 2 hours ago
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