Even when one doesn't agree with Peter Leithart he is enjoyable to read. Due to his wide-ranging interests theologically and his familiarity with the breadth of Christian traditions, he is often the one to "join up the dots" missed by others. A good example of that is this article which appeared on the FIRST THINGS blog yesterday. It deserves the widest possible readership.
First Timothy
2:12–14 is one of the texts most commonly cited in debates over women’s
ordination: “I do not allow a woman to teach or exercise authority over a man,
but to remain quiet. For it was Adam who was first created, then Eve. And not
Adam was deceived, but the woman being deceived fell into transgression.”
Some inside and
outside the Church regard this text as prime evidence that Christianity is
inherently misogynistic. Even for Christians who take the text at face value,
it seems a thin reed. What hath Adam to do with the pastoral ministry?
Paul knows what
he’s about. In Genesis 2, the human race starts out in God’s house, the
garden-sanctuary of Eden. Nearly every feature indicates that the garden is a
temple. Like other biblical sanctuaries, it’s oriented to the east. It’s a
well-watered spot, a place of life-giving food, a sacred place where Yahweh is
present to his creatures. After the fall, cherubim are stationed at the gate,
anticipating the cherubic guardians of the tabernacle and temple. Later
sanctuaries are reconstituted gardens; the garden is a proto-sanctuary.
Adam is created
first and commanded to “cultivate and keep” the garden—or, better, to “serve
and guard” it. Both terms describe priestly ministry. Priests are guardians of
holy places and household servants of the Great King of Israel, and Adam is the
first of the line.
Yahweh’s “It is
not good for the man to be alone; I will make a helper suitable for him” should
be understood in this context. What Adam needs is not a friend, but a liturgical
partner—a hearer and speaker to converse about the word of Yahweh, a singer to
harmonize his praise, a respondent to his versicles, a table companion to break
bread with him in the presence of God. Once Yahweh forms Eve, Adam is to guard
and serve her too. He speaks Yahweh’s word to her and shares fruit from the
tree of life. Paul says elsewhere that the woman is the glory of the man, and,
in guarding Eve, Adam guards a bright radiance of glory.
Satan’s
temptation is a perverse liturgy: first the serpent’s deceptive word, then
“sacramental” food that opens Eve’s eyes. Instead of guarding Eve, Adam stands
passively “with her” (Genesis 3:6), watching in fright as the serpent seizes
Adam’s liturgical role. Adam falls in that he forsakes his priesthood.
Men and women are
biologically different in ways that used to be obvious to everyone, but Genesis
isn’t about biology. Churches are confused about ordination because we are
materialists who identify the order of creation with biology, who assume that
everything but physics is cultural construction. Liturgical differences aren’t
imposed on the more basic physical differences. For Paul and Genesis,
differences between male and female are essentially symbolic, fundamentally
liturgical.
Admittedly, this
isn’t a full defense of a male-only ministry, or even a complete explanation of
1 Timothy 2. But it shows that Paul has good reason to appeal to Genesis in
support of a male pastoral ministry. And this line of argument also indicates
the wider cultural ramifications of the struggle over women’s ordination.
The claim that
homosexual desires and acts are “unnatural” is also an appeal to the order of
creation. Opponents of same-sex marriage use the same passages of Genesis that
Paul does in 1 Timothy. The Church’s historic stance on homosexuality and her
traditional position on ordination have in common the divine design of
creation.
The parallel
isn’t accidental. Though sex acts aren’t part of biblical worship, Scripture
frequently draws analogies between liturgy and sexuality. Since it was written,
the Song of Songs has been read allegorically, and rightly so. It’s full of
temple imagery: The Beloved describes herself as dark as “the curtains of
Solomon” (Song 1:5); the lovers’ room is made of cedar and cypress (Song 1:16),
temple materials; they retreat to a “garden” to enjoy their love feast (Song
5:1), and the temple was an architectural garden. This erotic symbolism carries
over into Christianity. The Church gathers in the Lord’s presence as the “Bride
of Christ” to enjoy a foretaste of the “marriage supper of the Lamb.”
Liturgical order
and sexual order stand together, and they may fall together. For now, some
churches try to split the difference: The sexes are interchangeable in the
pulpit and at the table, but radically distinct in bed. That unsteady position
will erode, and churches won’t be able to hold the line on the same-sex
marriage issue without revisiting and resolving the question of interchangeable
sexes in pastoral ministry.
For many
churches, the question will come down to this: If men and women are
interchangeable in the garden-sanctuary, why not elsewhere? If the sexes are
interchangeable at the center of life, in the liturgy, why aren’t they
interchangeable everywhere?
* * * * * * * * *
Peter Leithart is President of Theopolis
Institute and an adjunct Senior Fellow of Theology at New St. Andrews College,
Moscow, Idaho. He is an ordained minister in the Presbyterian Church in
America.He is the author of many books, most recently of Gratitude: An Intellectual History
(Baylor, 2014) and Traces of the
Trinity (Baker, forthcoming). He writes a blog at firstthings.com, where
he also writes a regular bi-weekly column. He has published articles in many
periodicals, both popular and academic. Leithart has served in two pastorates:
He was pastor of Reformed Heritage Presbyterian Church (now Trinity
Presbyterian Church), Birmingham, Alabama from 1989 to 1995, and was pastor of
Trinity Reformed Church, Moscow, Idaho, from 2003-2013. From 1998 and 2013 he
taught theology and literature fulltime at New St. Andrews College,
Moscow, Idaho. He received an A.B. in English and History
from Hillsdale College in 1981, and a Master of Arts in Religion and
a Master of Theology from Westminster Theological Seminary in Philadelphia
in 1986 and 1987. In 1998 he received his Ph.D. at the University of
Cambridge in England. An archive of his articles in FIRST THINGS can be accessed here.
1 comments:
Your understanding of the Liturgical vocation of marriage rings of Truth. If marriage, as I understand it, is a path of coming together as one, working out our salvation, then the role of "liturgical partner "is a natural one. I have just never thought of it before, but it is proper and right. Thank you.
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