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サマリー
あらすじ・解説
In the final episode of the Men, Women & Gospel series, pastors Ashley Mathews and Isaiah DeVyldere respond to five questions submitted by listeners:
- What is the relationship between this view of women leading in the church and human sexuality?
- How were maleness and femaleness understood in Genesis? And should that inform how we understand it today?
- What are the implications of Paul's call to mutual submission for marriages today?
- Why were Paul's requirements for elders and deacons gender normative? Or were they?
- If they were women leading in the early church after Pentecost, why do we not see a continuation of women leading in the church historically?
BIBLICAL REFERENCES
- Genesis 2
- Ephesians 5:21
- 1 Timothy 2:5, 6; 3:4
OTHER WORKS REFERENCED
- Click HERE for a visual illustration of how male “headship” is taught in some Christian contexts (in contradiction to 1 Timothy 2:5, 6).
- Two Views on Women in Ministry by Linda L. Belleville, chapter 1, published by Zondervan
- The Patient Ferment of the Early Church: The Improbable Rise of Christianity in the Roman Empire by Alan Kreider
- The Rise of Christianity: How the Obscure, Marginal Jesus Movement Became the Dominant Religious Force in the Western World in a Few Centuries by Rodney Stark
- (00:00) - Tempo: 120.0
- (00:00) - Introduction
- (01:26) - Question 1: What is the relationship with the view that men and women should be leading side by side in the Church—based on gifting, not gender—and questions about human sexuality?
- (06:38) - Question 2: How are maleness and femaleness understood in Genesis, and how should that inform or not inform how we understand it today?
- (10:16) - Question 3: What are the implications of Paul's call to mutual submission in Ephesians 5 for marriages today?
- (23:10) - Question 4: Why were Paul's requirements for elders and deacons gender normative, or were they?
- (31:41) - Question 5: If there were such amazing women leading in the early Church after Pentecost and throughout the New Testament, why do we not see a continuation of women leading in the Church?
- (42:18) - Conclusion