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Scot McKnight's avatar

Each of these is on-point and pastorally important. Thank you for each one. The tone is helpful. I have also added (in conversations) to your list "Don't expect that your church is going to become egalitarian." It might, but the chances are not good. If changing the church is the goal, think of changing churches. There is something new about complementarianism that deserves pushback, and complementarianism as a theological shaping has an impact that can be pervasive; in the hands of some it can be authoritarian and diminishing of women. In the USA comp is at times symbolic of one's stance in the broader culture war. A kind of "here I stand (because I have the authority to make the stand)."

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Elizabeth Klein's avatar

This is excellent, and also reinforces why I could never be a member of a complementarian church. That became clear to me when I was considering becoming a member of a PCA church, and witnessed an ordination for my first time. This was in Feb 2018, during the early months of the #ChurchToo movement. Only men laying hands on a man. It struck me, somehow for the first time, that comps do not truly believe that the Holy Spirit works fully through women, that men are not to be held accountable to women or by women in any way--and I was essentially being taught this liturgically, DURING WORSHIP. Ever since then, my conscience forbids me from giving money towards a church or org that propagates teachings that are not only harmful towards women, but are, in my view, anti-Gospel. Jesus didn't just die so that we can believe in Him and wind up in heaven, but to make us into a brand new creation. The consequences of sin after the Fall (Genesis 3:16) should never be our template for the Christian community (marriage & the church). Jesus died for this!!

All Baskin-Robbins flavors of complementarianism boil down to this: restrict women in some way, and you're in the club.

Yes, we egalitarians ought to be charitable to other Christians who disagree with you (and all of God's image bearers).

But no. Not my club. Not my Jesus. Not my Gospel.

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