Tuesday, March 24, 2009

It is not good for man to be alone...

Since I had the time and focus to blog last, I preached a three sermon series on men and women in the public worship assembly. I tried to show from the text that the core teaching was that from the beginning the image of God was projected best into the world when men and women together were fulfilling the responsibility to fill and manage the earth. In the same way, the image of God is presented well as men and women do the work of the Kingdom of God in the world together. 

The overture of the ministry of the church plays at Pentecost and the lyric is from Joel. The word of the Lord comes heralding the day when the sons and daughters of God will prophesy as the Holy Spirit rains down. That day has come in Acts 2. How the church that began under such words would become one in which the women would be excluded from having a voice in the family meetings around the family table is mystifying. The Corinthians were told that the men and the women could pray and prophesy as long as the men looked like men and the women looked like women. To be sure the disruptive wives were to be silent and ask their poor husbands at home. And it is not without cause that Paul tells Timothy to urge a quieter and more serene demeanor from the overbearing women teaching in Ephesus. 

Still I hear with louder, clearer tones the words of Paul to the Galatians, who are plummeting back into legalism, that now because of Christ the Jew-Gentile distinction is done; the slave-free distinction is done; the male-female distinction is done. I am thankful that God has worked to restore the wonder of his image in the life of the church as men and women work together without power and authority other than the power of love and the authority of the giftedness distributed by the Holy Spirit. This is not a matter of caving in to the demands of contemporary culture; it is the matter of restoring an ancient, honorable culture of man and woman together before the fall in the fellowship of the Father in the quiet of a garden.

4 comments:

Becky said...

I used to be a member at UA for many years; I read you blog, and was touched by your thoughts and desire to seek truth, not just proof text.
We miss out on so much richness of our faith by doing this....limiting the power of our God and living in fear when we struggle with questions of practice and faith.We like what we are comfortable with, alas, our God doesn't see it that way. Thanks for stepping out of the boat.....becky

Carisse said...

No more let sins and sorrows grow,
Nor thorns infest the ground.
He comes to make
His blessings known
Far as the curse is found.

Thanks and blessings.

Jared Cramer said...

nicely (and powerfully) summarized. thanks eddie.

Unknown said...

Well...as always, you have words for ears that are anxious to hear and to pass on to the heart...you are missed...