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Women find a friend in the Apostle Paul, Truett professor says

NewsKen Camp  |  May 1, 2012

By Ken Camp

Contrary to popular opinion, women not only have a friend in Jesus, but also in the Apostle Paul, seminary professor Todd Still told a recent conference sponsored by Christians for Biblical Equality.

The William H. Hinson Professor of Christian Scriptures at Baylor University’s Truett Theological Seminary said Christians too often pit Jesus against Paul, and some even adopt the view of Irish playwright George Bernard Shaw, who labeled Paul as “the eternal enemy of woman.”

Still said women played a pivotal role both in Jesus’ ministry and in Paul’s mission. While many Christians readily accept the idea that Jesus defied conventional first-century views about women by valuing them, they see Paul as an oppressor of women, Still observed. He pointed particularly to passages in 1 Timothy and 1 Corinthians, where women—or wives—were commanded to submit to men and keep silent.

Still said those specific instructions must be viewed in light of Paul’s affirmation of women who occupied leadership roles in churches—notably Euodia and Syntyche in Philippi, Phoebe in Cenchreae, Priscilla and Chloe in Corinth and Ephesus, and Junia, Julia, Mary and others in Rome.

“It likely comes as little to no surprise that Jesus affirmed the dignity of women, treating them as those created in the divine image, and that women played a pivotal role both in Jesus’ earthly and post-resurrection ministry,” he said. “It may, however, come as a surprise to some that Paul’s calling of women/wives to silence and submission is tempered—if not trumped—by his affirmation of mutuality, yea equality, of women and wives in marriage and ministry.”

Still said both Jesus and Paul affirmed women in principle and in practice.

“Pauline prohibitions and restrictions, I would contend, are occasional exceptions to this general rule,” he said. “As such, they are contextual, not continual; time-bound troubleshooting, not timeless delimiting; a chapter in a book, but not the whole enchilada. More often than not, there is inclusion and embrace, and it is this trajectory that we trace.”

Still said the examples of both Jesus and Paul should guide modern Christians’ attitudes  toward women.

“If it was the practice of Jesus and Paul to join hands with women in mission and ministry, should this be our contemporary practice as well?” he asked. “Yes, yes and a thousand times yes, we will answer.”

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