Today’s post is from my friend Crystal Renaud. She is a strong woman in ministry (which you’ll be able to tell from this post!) and it has been really cool to see her grow and mature since the first time I met her (as a wee-barely-out-of-high-school-student). This is her second time guest blogging here. (Read her first guest post here).
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Crystal writes:
My post today reflects my personal opinion and in no way reflects my employer or any particular church or denomination.
Without further ado, here it be.
The Good Ole Boys Club
Confession: I am a bit of a feminist.
Don’t get me wrong, I am not an extremist or going to lead a new suffragette movement, but I definitely have opinions when it comes to the power of women and dare I say it, their power in The Church.
I have coined the phrase, ?Good Ole Boys Club? to refer to male leadership in The Church. As a woman, you can imagine this is a very difficult club to join. There?s a certain lacking anatomy that is against us. And because of this, being a woman in ministry is a lonely existence. These women are often unfairly silenced, their pay is considerably lower than their male counterparts and their hiring in these positions comes few and far between.
How do I know this? Because I am one of them.
Without a doubt, there are women all over this very blogsphere called to lead, and who are strong and equipped to do so. But in this male-dominated field, they are simply not accepted. You know who you are.
Now, I am not a believer in women as senior pastors – however women do have a ton more to offer The Church and even to the men they are following than given the opportunity to prove.
All over the Bible, there were women like Deborah (Judges), Esther, Martha and Phoebe (Romans) who were all leaders in their own right (and even so over men). Not to mention the various other seemingly nameless deaconesses and prophetesses, oh and Christ Himself appearing to women first to spread the news that He had Risen. Somehow these men were not afraid of women having a say and a platform to lead from.
I am not going to claim myself a theologian; you can throw at me all your Timothy & Titus descriptions of an elder all day long, but that still doesn?t explain the inequality among men & women in ministry today.
So tell me, in a country where women have overcome great oppression, have reached the top in business, juggle full-time jobs and/or full-time homes, why is ministry leadership still a clubhouse with a wooden sign saying ?No Girls Allowed??