Baptist News Global
Sections
  • News
  • Analysis
  • Opinion
  • Curated
  • Podcasts
    • Stuck in the Middle With You ↗
    • Madang with Grace Ji-Sun Kim ↗
    • Highest Power: Church + State ↗
    • Non-Disclosure: The Silenced Stories of Kanakuk Kamps Survivors ↗
    • Change-making Conversations ↗
  • Storytelling
    • Faith & Justice >
      • Charleston: Metanoia with Bill Stanfield
      • Charlotte: QC Family Tree with Greg and Helms Jarrell
      • Little Rock: Judge Wendell Griffen
      • North Carolina: Conetoe
    • Welcoming the Stranger >
      • Lost Boys of Sudan: St. John’s Baptist Charlotte
      • Awakening to Immigrant Justice: Myers Park Baptist Church
      • Hospitality on the corner: Gaston Christian Center
    • Signature Ministries >
      • Jake Hall: Gospel Gothic, Music and Radio
    • Singing Our Faith >
      • Hymns for a Lifetime: Ken Wilson and Knollwood Baptist Church
      • Norfolk Street Choir
    • Resilient Rural America >
      • Alabama: Perry County
      • Texas: Hidalgo County
      • Arkansas Delta
      • Southeast Kentucky
  • More
    • Contact
    • About
    • Donate
    • Associated Baptist Press Foundation
    • Planned Giving
    • Advertising
    • Ministry Jobs
    • Subscribe
    • Submissions and Permissions
Donate Subscribe
Search Search this site

Freeman: For women, proper question not ‘ordination,’ but ‘calling’

NewsABPnews  |  March 12, 2009

MOUNT OLIVE, N.C. (ABP) — Asking whether women should be ordained to the ministry is the wrong question, according to Baptist professor Curtis Freeman.


“The question is, ‘Who is being gifted in the church?’” said Freeman, research professor of theology and director of the Baptist House of Studies at Duke Divinity School. “Where are those gifts being displayed?”


Freeman was guest lecturer for the Vivian B. Harrison Memorial Lecture at Mount Olive College in Mount Olive, N.C., March 10. His lecture focused on women’s voices in the church. He also preached during the Free Will Baptist school’s chapel service that day.


Freeman said ordination doesn’t give one the gift of preaching. Ordination is instead the church recognizing that gift, he said.


“The point is, the church doesn’t really call people into ministry,” he said. Instead, “We help people discern God’s call on their life.”





Curtis Freeman converses following his lecture on women in ministry March 10 at Mount Olive College in North Carolina. (PHOTO/Steve DeVane)


The lectures included an overview of four 17th-century Baptist women who wrote about their experiences. They were among nine Baptists and about 300 total prophetesses in England between 1640 and 1660, Freeman said.


The four Baptist women wrote at least 748 pages of material — much of it in pamphlets, which were cheaply reproduced and available to a wide audience.


“The pamphlet was like the 17th-century Internet,” Freeman said.


Historical records indicate that the women influenced early English General and Particular Baptists, according to Freeman.


“Through their writings they surely attained an even wider audience,” he said. “Yet there was also a tension between the prophetic voices of these women, the gathered churches and the wider society that eventually refused to swallow their prophetic pill.”


Freeman said that revolutionary forces in England at the time had destabilized governmental power and other forces that “long had kept women in their place.”


“The social spaces that opened up enabled women not just to think freely but to speak their minds freely,” he said. “Yet, as the Baptist movement became organized and institutionalized, many of the more egalitarian expressions of the early days dissipated.”


These and other women who spoke out were on the fringes of the early Baptist churches, Freeman said.


“Maybe these women standing on the edge see something those of us at the center of the church can’t see,” he said.


Freeman said women have found a space to share their voices during other periods of social upheaval, such as the American Revolution, the settling of the Western frontier and the social upheaval of the 1960s and ’70s. He asked if churches could find a way to create such a space without waiting for the wider culture to create it.


Freeman used the story of the first woman ordained by a Southern Baptist church to suggest three essential elements of discernment used by the church. Addie Davis was ordained by Watts Street Baptist Church in Durham, N.C. on Aug. 9, 1964.


The church was “committed to the practice of calling out the called,” Freeman said. Such a call includes both inward discernment and outward confirmation, he said.


“It’s not about women in ministry,” he said. “It’s first about this principle of calling.”


The second conviction of the Watts Street church was what Freeman called “openness to more light from the word.” For many the issue of women in ministry is settled, one way or the other. But others remain searching and open.


“It’s a sense that our understanding is growing,” he said.


Freeman said Watts Street was also committed to stand together with others under the rule of Christ. An ordination council from the local association examined Davis.


“Because a local congregation stands under the immediate rule of Christ, it has the power to call its own ministers, celebrate the sacraments of baptism and the Lord’s Supper, and administer the keys of church discipline,” he said. “Yet no congregation is independent. It is interdependent with those who ‘walk by the same rule.’”


Freeman said this is a “hard word,” since all Baptists don’t agree.


“Sometimes I’d like it to be me and Jesus, but in the end I don’t think that’s the way it is,” he said.


The challenge of standing together will take patience and humility, Freeman said.


“It is the vector of the Baptist vision that suggests that we find our way together,” he said. “Ultimately, it is not a matter of gender or ordination, but of spiritual discernment.”


-30-


Steve DeVane is managing editor of the North Carolina Baptist Biblical Recorder.

Share this:

  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on Threads (Opens in new window) Threads
  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Print (Opens in new window) Print
  • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Share on Bluesky (Opens in new window) Bluesky
  • More
  • Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
  • Share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr
  • Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
  • Share on Telegram (Opens in new window) Telegram
  • Share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp
Tags:Archives
More by
ABPnews
  • Get BNG headlines in your inbox

  • Check out our podcasts

     

     

    Stuck in the Middle
    With You

     

    Madang
    With Grace Ji-Sun Kim

     

     

    Highest Power
    Church+State

     

     

    Non-Disclosure:
    The Silenced Stories
    of Kanakuk Kamps Survivors

     

    Change-making
    Conversations

     

     

  • Politics • Faith • Resistance: by Greg Garrett

    BNG interview series on the state of faith, politics and resistance in our nation.

    See also Greg’s series on Politics, Faith and Mission

     

  • Featured

    • What you’re not seeing: Tens of thousands of children separated from parents

      News

    • The way we were

      Opinion

    • Talarico’s pastor pushes back on Daily Wire’s claims

      News

    • Spiritual formation is how churches learn whom to hear

      Opinion


    Curated

    • Pro-Palestinian, pro-Israel symbols to be banned after British government backs NHS antisemitism reforms

      Pro-Palestinian, pro-Israel symbols to be banned after British government backs NHS antisemitism reforms

    • Catholic Archdiocese Fires Prominent Exorcist After Unexpected Claim About Demons

      Catholic Archdiocese Fires Prominent Exorcist After Unexpected Claim About Demons

    • Draft of King’s ‘Letter from Birmingham Jail’ found at Virginia seminary archives

      Draft of King’s ‘Letter from Birmingham Jail’ found at Virginia seminary archives

    • Some Republican governors are rebranding June with conservative alternatives to Pride

      Some Republican governors are rebranding June with conservative alternatives to Pride

    Conversations that Matter.

    © 2026 Baptist News Global. All rights reserved.

    Want to share a story? We hope you will! Read our republishing, terms of use and privacy policies here.

    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    • LinkedIn
    • RSS
    • 129