We’re going to focus on Egalitarianism in today’s Fuerst Best of the Week.
In this piece, Suzanne McCarthy writes an email to Christians for Biblical Manhood and Womanhood expressing the need to engage and make accessible the best information available regarding gender inclusive language in the NIV2011, even though the information doesn’t jibe with CBMW’s larger theological position.
JR Daniel Kirk looks at Complementarian interpretations of the Genesis creation narratives. I’d be interested in some of your thoughts on his argument. It certainly engages the ambiguity of the Bible in regards to gender roles and hierarchy.
The Gospel…finally will not allow hierarchy to stand. Who we are “in the Lord” transforms our understanding of mutual interrelations, so that it no longer makes sense to say, “Here is man, who simply rules over his wife and family.” Now mutual interdependence and dependence come to the fore, such that both depend upon the other–a kind of relationship in which there can not, for long, be any sense of one ruling the other.
At CBE International (Christians for Biblical Equality International) Michael Bird reflects on teaching his students about Phoebe, the deaconess in Romans 16, in ‘Fretting Over Phoebe.” (You’ll have to scroll down a bit to get to it.)
“Could it be that the first person to publicly read and teach about or from Romans was a woman? If so, what does that tell you about women and teaching roles in the early church?”
Kyle, over at the Triniatrian Soapbox reflects on God and Gender/Sex. Kyle’s a brilliant writer from the few months I’ve been following him, so stay focused. It’s worth it. His main point is that though masculine pronouns are used for God (Father, for example), that God is not inherently a male.
The Southern Baptist Convention once again rejects the newest NIV because of it’s apparent Egalitarian bent. To me, it seems from all the evidence I’ve read, the new NIV is sound and is a good middle ground. But like many things in the SBC, if it’s not ‘our way’ then it’s the highway.
Criticism over the update has been high ever since its inception, with opponents like the Council on Biblical Manhood and Womanhood – which support a complementarian view of manhood and womanhood – finding over 3,600 gender-related problems in the new version.
Let’s just say that I’m probably going to get an NIV2011, if they’re still available when I need a new Bible. But until then, I think I’m just going to boycott Lifeway.