WHAT DOES THE BIBLE SAY ABOUT...
WOMEN IN MINISTRY?
By Betty Miller



Do women have a place in ministry? If so, to what extent? Is there scriptural basis
for a woman to be in any position of authority in the church? What does the Bible
really say about this issue? To understand God's intentions, we must go back to the
very beginning of creation to see His original purpose for both man and woman.

MALE AND FEMALE CREATED HE THEM

"So God created man in his own image, in the image of God created he him;
male and female created he them" (Genesis 1:27).
"Male and female created he them; and blessed them, and called their name
Adam, in the day when they were created" (Genesis 5:2).

It is interesting to note that God called both male and female, "Adam" in the day they
were created. Adam means "man." Adam and Eve were created with God-ordained
differences from each other, but together they made a full "man," or a complete
picture of God Himself. There was perfection in their union. Their differences were
not a source of discord or inequality, but a beautiful compliment to each other.
Together, God gave them the task of overseeing and ruling His creation

"And God blessed them, and God said unto them, Be fruitful, and multiply,
and replenish the earth, and subdue it: and have dominion over the fish of
the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over every living thing that moveth
upon the earth" (Genesis 1:28).

Notice that God gave the above commission to them both. There is no hint that there
was anything but equal authority between man and woman as they existed in a sinless
state. What changed things? In the next few chapters of Genesis, we find that sin
entered the heart of Adam and Eve. The result was a temporary curse placed upon
both man and woman, which would affect the whole earth.

Genesis 3:14-19: "And the LORD God said unto the serpent, Because thou
hast done this, thou art cursed above all cattle, and above every beast of the
field; upon thy belly shalt thou go, and dust shalt thou eat all the days of thy
life: And I will put enmity between thee and the woman, and between thy
seed and her seed; it shall bruise thy head, and thou shalt bruise his heel.
Unto the woman he said, I will greatly multiply thy sorrow and thy
conception; in sorrow thou shalt bring forth children; and thy desire shall be
to thy husband, and he shall rule over thee. And unto Adam he said, Because
thou hast hearkened unto the voice of thy wife, and hast eaten of the tree, of
which I commanded thee, saying, Thou shalt not eat of it: cursed is the
ground for thy sake; in sorrow shalt thou eat of it all the days of thy life;
Thorns also and thistles shall it bring forth to thee; and thou shalt eat the
herb of the field; In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread, till thou return
unto the ground; for out of it wast thou taken: for dust thou art, and unto dust
shalt thou return."

This curse has affected all aspects of creation, from the ground itself (infested with
weeds and thorns) to human relationships.
(I say temporary, because in Christ this curse is removed, as we shall see later on).
When Eve ate the forbidden fruit and enticed Adam to sin with her, one of the
consequences for women was the loss of equality with men, as men were to rule
over women, instead of men and women ruling together. She would now be "ruled
by her husband." However, when Jesus came as sinless Man and died as the
Messiah on the cross for us, all things were restored positionally. In actuality, the
restoration of man (men and women) began to take place at that very moment.
Though the complete cleansing of the curse has not yet been manifested on the earth,
the day is coming when it will be so. Or to put it another way, all those who receive
Jesus as Savior receive restoration as Sons of God, but not all of us walk in that
restoration--yet. Through Jesus, the curse upon women has been lifted. Women no
longer have to receive pain in childbirth nor are they inferior to man with him ruling
over them. Women can now be restored to their original place and plan that God
had for all His "sons." Although we do not see all things restored at this time, "legally"
in the spiritual realm, they already have been. Adam was the head of the first race of
mankind; and Jesus is the head of the last race, the adopted children of God. God
only sees two races--the Adamic race (all natural-born mankind) and His children
through Jesus (all those born of the spirit).

"For since by man came death, by man came also the resurrection of the
dead. For as in Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all be made alive" (I
Corinthians 15:21-22).

Once we are born into the kingdom of God, we become new creatures in Christ. In
the Spirit, we find there is "neither male nor female," just as there are no race
distinctions nor class separations. The Lord looks on the hearts of His new creatures
and therefore does not discriminate when He offers His love and privileges. Women
are not excluded from any of God's promises nor callings merely because of their sex.


Galatians 3:28: "There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither bond nor
free, there is neither male nor female: for ye are all one in Christ Jesus."

GOD'S MASCULINE AND FEMININE TRAITS

As we stated above, the command to have dominion over and subdue the earth was
given to both Adam and Eve. They were both to rule and reign over the Lord's
creation. The very act of subduing something requires authority, aggressiveness and
leadership, as well as humility, tenderness, patience, and the ability to respect the
intrinsic value of what we are ruling. Most of all, it requires love. Within God's own
nature we find these same qualities. Both men and women are to become like Him as
we are conformed to His image. Since this is true, there are times that under the
unction of the Holy Spirit a woman should assert herself boldly. (This assertion,
however, should not necessarily be toward others, but rather toward the enemy,
Satan!) For men and women to become overcomers they must have this boldness
and authority over the devil. God still desires that His people rule and reign with Him.
His intention is to qualify us for that position, whether we be male or female.
"And hath made us kings and priests unto God and his Father; to him be
glory and dominion for ever and ever. Amen" (Revelation 1:6).

Even though "kings" is a masculine term, this is the ultimate destination He desires for
all of His people. The Lord often uses both male and female terms to refer to both
sexes. Women are to live in the "hidden man of the heart" (1 Peter 3:4). Both men
and women in the church are referred to as "the bride of Christ." God has both a
masculine and feminine nature. The mother heart of Jesus was evident as he prayed
over Jerusalem.

"O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, thou that killest the prophets, and stonest them
which are sent unto thee, how often would I have gathered thy children
together, even as a hen gathereth her chickens under her wings, and ye
would not!" (Matthew 23:37).

Submission is considered to be a feminine trait. However, Jesus submitted to the
cross under the direction of the Father. If we walk in the Spirit, we too will possess
both the masculine aggressiveness and feminine submissiveness of God. Both
submissiveness and aggressiveness are God-given strengths. Yet, both can be
perverted, so that we become submissive and aggressive in the wrong ways, with the
wrong attitudes. Because these qualities are so misused and misunderstood by the
world, they have become distasteful and despised. If aggression is frowned upon,
submission is viewed in an even more negative light in western culture. We equate
submission with weakness and lack of spirit. Nothing could be further from the truth.
There was never a human being more submitted to God than Jesus Christ-- yet
never was there one as completely resistant to the system of the world! It took
extraordinary submissiveness and aggression for Jesus to overcome the world. For
the Christian, whether we are male or female, He is our model. We are to possess
His qualities and use them according to the needs around us.

WOMEN AS MINISTERS

How does all of this lead up to women ministers? Perhaps you are thinking that
although we have laid a biblical foundation for "neither male nor female" in Christ,
certain verses in the New Testament still seem to ban women from ministry positions
in the church. Let's examine these verses for the true interpretation.

"Let your women keep silence in the churches: for it is not permitted unto
them to speak; but they are commanded to be under obedience, as also saith
the law" (1 Corinthians 14:34).
"Let the woman learn in silence with all subjection. But I suffer not a woman
to teach, nor to usurp authority over the man, but to be in silence" (1
Timothy 2:11-12).

In these verses, Paul cannot be addressing women who were in the ministry, but
rather those in the congregation who were out of order. How do we know this? We
have many such proofs, many from Paul himself. Here is a partial list of women who
were all in influential positions of leadership in the early church. Pheobe (
Romans
16:1-2
): This woman was a deaconess of the church in Cenchrea, who was beloved
of Paul and many other Christians for the help she gave to them. She filled an
important position of leadership. It would be a difficult stretch of the imagination to
say that this woman fulfilled her duties without ever speaking in the church! Priscilla
(
Acts 18:26): Priscilla and her husband Aquila are often mentioned with great
respect by Paul. Together they were pastors of a church in Ephesus, and were
responsible for teaching the full gospel to Apollos. We are informed that they both
taught Apollos, and pastored the church together. In fact, Priscilla is sometimes listed
ahead of Aquila when their names come up. This has led some to speculate that of
the two, she was the primary teacher and her husband oversaw the ministry. At any
rate, we see here a woman in a very prominent position of teaching and pastoring.
(Other references to Priscilla and Aquila are
Acts 18:2, 18; Romans 16:3, and I
Corinthians 16:19).
Euodia and Syntyche (Philippians 4:2-3): Here we see reference to two women
who were "true yokefellow" and who labored with Paul in the advancement of the
gospel. Junia (
Romans 16:7): In this verse we see Paul sending greetings to
Andronicus and Junia, his "fellow-prisoners" who are of note among the apostles.
Junia is a woman's name. In some modern translations, an "s" has been added
(Junias) because the translators were so sure a woman could not be an apostle, that
they assumed a copyist has accidentally dropped the "s." However the proper male
ending would have been "ius," not "ias." No church commentator earlier than the
Middle Ages questioned that Junia was both a woman and an apostle.
Though there were other women throughout the Bible in positions of leadership, such
as prophetesses, evangelists, judges, leaders, etc., the above references should be
enough to establish that women were indeed a vital and normal part of church
leadership. Paul expected women to speak in the church, or else why would he have
given the following directive? It would have been useless to give directions for
women who were speaking in the church, if they were never allowed to do so.

1 Corinthians 11:5, "But every woman that prayeth or prophesieth with her
head uncovered dishonoureth her head: for that is even all one as if she were
shaven."

Furthermore, if Paul believed that all women should never teach or speak in church,
why does he commend many women who did just that?
With all this in mind, what then do we make of the troubling verses that command
women to be silent in the churches? First of all, we must interpret those verses in light
of what we have just established--that there were women in leadership positions of
the church. Obviously, Paul is not writing to them. He is must be addressing another
issue entirely--the women who were loud and unruly during the service, causing
disorder and confusion..
When he wrote the Corinthians, he was dealing with a church that was very
disorderly in their services. Much of the letter was spent correcting excesses and
abuses. Some of these pertained to women in particular and some were to the entire
church. Paul is not being prejudiced against women when he instructs the Corinthian
women to keep silence. In the early church the seating arrangement was quite
different from our modern day churches. Men were seated on one side of the church
while the women and children were seated on the opposite side. This is still practiced
in many cultures today. The women of Christ's day were generally uneducated and
usually only the men were privileged with an education. Due to this situation, when
the church met the women were tempted to shout across the room and ask their
husbands the meaning of whatever was being taught. This disturbed the service. Paul
was simply saying during the service, "Women, keep your children quiet and you be
quiet, and if you have anything to ask your husbands, wait until you get home."
Because of the new equality that Christianity brought to women, it could be that
some of them were taking their freedom too far, to the point of being obnoxious.
When Paul wrote to Timothy, he gave him a similar directive. Again, it is important to
understand the context in which the letter was written. In I Timothy, a careful reader
becomes aware that many severe heresies and false teachings that were being dealt
with. We can draw a conclusion here that many of the proponents and victims of the
false teachings were women. Timothy pastored in Ephesus, and it has been
suggested that goddess worship might have played a large part in Paul dealing so
severely with the women. Ephesus was a primary center of the worship of Diana or
Artemis. The heresies being taught might have suggested that women were
authoritative over men and had higher access to spiritual knowledge than men did.
Regardless of the particulars, in both cases we can see that Paul is dealing with
specific incidents in specific churches for very particular reasons. We must
understand that many of Paul's epistles dealt with local problems and his
commandments are not meant to be taken as "commandments" across the board for
all situations. Rather, we are to seek the Lord for the basic principal that needs to be
incorporated in our churches. Because of Old Testament precedents that had
already been set, apparently it never occurred to Paul to re-establish the case for
women in ministry. Why would he need to? The early church took it as a matter of
course that Jesus would call and ordain anyone He chose--and that settled it! As a
matter of fact, the Bible mentions a prophetess who was in the Temple when Jesus
was brought there as a baby. Her name was Anna (
Luke 2:25-35), and she was
one of two people who recognized Jesus as the Messiah because of her sensitivity to
the Holy Spirit. Paul's writings are sometimes misunderstood today because we do
not know all the details that led him to write as he did. We must rely on the Holy
Spirit, and the rest of the testimony of Scripture to interpret how we are to apply
these things to our everyday lives. Scripture should always be compared with other
Scripture and the context taken into consideration. Even in Paul's day, there were
those who tried to twist the meaning his words. "...His (Paul's) letters contain some
things that are hard to understand, which ignorant and unstable people distort, as
they do other Scriptures, to their own destruction" (
2 Peter 3:16). It is a fair
conclusion that the testimony of the bulk of Scripture, church history and God's
anointing upon them, all speak plainly for women being able to fulfill all positions of
the five-fold offices of apostle, prophet, pastor, evangelist and teacher.

MINISTERING TODAY

It has always been a strange doctrine that will allow women to go to foreign mission
fields and teach heathen men, but will not allow the "heathen" men at home to be
taught by the same women! It makes absolutely no sense to think that a female who
is learned in the Scriptures cannot teach a male who is unlearned. Additionally, it is
acceptable for many women to teach Sunday School to children, and for mothers to
teach their sons. Where do we draw the line and say to the women that can no
longer teach a male once they reach a certain age? This may seem like a ridiculous
scenario, yet there are those in the church who teach along these lines. Those that
are dogmatic in excluding women from the ministries of God usually are not walking
in the Spirit, as they see women after the flesh (viewing her sex), not after the Spirit
(seeing her heart and calling). The Lord admonishes us in His Word that we are not
to look at one another with regard to our sex, race, class or culture, but rather we
are to see one another through spiritual eyes. "Wherefore henceforth know we no
man after the flesh: yea, though we have known Christ after the flesh, yet now
henceforth know we him no more. Therefore if any man be in Christ, he is a new
creature: old things are passed away; behold, all things are become new. And all
things are of God, who hath reconciled us to himself by Jesus Christ, and hath given
to us the ministry of reconciliation: To wit, that God was in Christ, reconciling the
world unto himself, not imputing their trespasses unto them; and hath committed unto
us the word of reconciliation. Now then we are ambassadors for Christ, as though
God did beseech you by us: we pray you in Christ's stead, be ye reconciled to God"
(
2 Corinthians 5:16-20). God wants to use any person who will yield to His Spirit,
regardless of that person's sex or capabilities. Those who are a new creature in
Christ have His capabilities. Our problem is that we must see there are rules for the
fleshly, or earthly man, and there are rules for the spiritual man. Then, we must
discern when to apply the appropriate Scripture. We are admonished in                    
                                                                               
2 Timothy 2:15 to "Study to
show thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be
ashamed, rightly dividing the word of truth."

THE FIVE-FOLD MINISTRY

The Lord gave the church gifts of His choosing in the form of men and women who
would lead the church into perfection (
Ephesians 4:8-12).
It is the Lord who calls men and women to His ministry. He does not call special
people, but the call goes out to "whosoever will." First, we are called to salvation;
then as we walk in obedience to Him, He calls for us to be baptized in His Holy
Spirit. As we continue to obey and follow Him, He then may choose us to serve Him
in a full-time ministry. He chooses people for the ministry out of those who have
walked in obedience to His other calls. He desires that all follow, but can only
choose those who are obedient. These men and women who have answered the call
are set in the ministry by Jesus Himself. Man's ordination does not qualify them, but
the ordination of God does. Men will recognize those who are truly called by Him.
They will even recognize women who are called of God as God empowers them
with His anointing and power which cannot be denied.
God has used many modern day women in His service as well as women spoken of
in the Bible. Madame Guyon, Catherine Booth, Jessie Penn-Lewis, Aimee Semple
McPherson, Corrie Ten Boom and Kathryn Kuhlman are only a few of the women
on the list of great five-fold ministry gifts to the church. What are those gifts and that
ministry? "And His gifts were (varied; He Himself appointed and gave men to us,)
some to be apostles (special messengers), some prophets (inspired preachers and
expounders), some evangelists (preachers of the Gospel, traveling missionaries),
some pastors (shepherds of His flock) and teachers'' (
Ephesians 4:11, Amplified
Bible.). When this Scripture says, "appointed and gave men to us," it does not mean
just the male sex. The same man whom God created in the beginning which included
male and female is the one referred to here. These "men" are both male and female
and they have a responsibility to bring others into the maturity that they possess.
Ephesians 4 continues, "His intention was the perfecting and the full equipping of the
saints (His consecrated people), [that they should do] the work of ministering toward
building up Christ's body (the church), [That it might develop] until we all attain
oneness in the faith and in the comprehension of the full and accurate knowledge of
the Son of God; that [we might arrive] at really mature manhood....the completeness
of personality which is nothing less than the standard height of Christ's own
perfection -- the measure of the stature of the fullness of the Christ, and the
completeness found in Him'' (
Ephesians 4:12-13, Amplified Bible.). The Lord has
lofty intentions for His men and women and desires that they come into perfection
and maturity even as Christ walked in that perfection. The Lord sends those whom
He chooses to bring about this maturing and perfecting. If we have been raised in a
traditional church, the idea of coming into perfection may sound impossible--even
heretical! However, it is clearly a Biblical precedent and until we understand it we
will not be able to understand God's full intention for His body. The separation of
laity and clergy is not God's plan for His people. All that are called to salvation are
called to a full-time ministry in the Lord. This does not mean that all should leave
their secular occupations, but all should devote their lives to the Lord and be as
committed and active in witnessing, learning and growing in God as the leadership.
The leadership that God raises up is those men and women whom He trains for His
work in the kingdom. Women have been limited in traditional churches to certain
positions that men would give them, but the Lord is restoring His full five-fold
ministry in these last days to prepare the body of Christ for His return.

FURTHER QUESTIONS

If Jesus wanted women to minister, how come all His disciples were men? This
question is actually raised from a misunderstanding of the word "disciple." Jesus had
many women disciples. These include, Mary and Martha (
John 11:1-4, and many
other references as well. Mary and Martha, along with their brother Lazarus were
among Jesus' closest friends). In addition, Jesus had many other women followers as
well.
Luke 8:1-3, "And it came to pass afterward, that he went throughout every
city and village, preaching and showing the glad tidings of the kingdom of
God: and the twelve were with him And certain women, which had been
healed of evil spirits and infirmities, Mary called Magdalene, out of whom
went seven devils, And Joanna the wife of Chuza Herod's steward, and
Susanna, and many others, which ministered unto him of their substance."
For the sake of brevity, I will not include other lists of names of women who
followed Him. However the Scripture makes it clear there were many of them. In
another incident, Jesus motions to the crowds that followed him and said,
"Behold
my mother and my brethren! For whosoever shall do the will of my Father
which is in heaven, the same is my brother, and sister, and mother"
(Matthew 12:49-50).
In John 1:1-42, we see that it is a Samaritan woman who
leads a large population of her community to Jesus.
Why didn't Jesus choose any women to be among His twelve original apostles?
Jesus could not choose women to be among the twelve because it would not be
wisdom for men and women to be travelling about together when many of them were
single. Also, the twelve apostles fulfilled the "type and shadow" of the twelve
patriarchs, so they had to be equal to men
(Revelation 21:12, 14). However, this
doesn't mean that he does not anoint women to fill an apostolic role today, as we
already established in the case of Junia. Jesus showed a great deal of respect for
women--and children as well. In the culture of Jesus' day, these were often deemed
"lower class" so to speak, and not worth paying serious attention to. However, Jesus
repeatedly broke this unspoken rule. Because His actions were so unusual, those
closest to Him were often surprised and annoyed.
WOMAN, THOU ART LOOSED!
We pray that this teaching will encourage many women, who might otherwise
relegate themselves to the "back burner" to instead step forward into the full calling
of God upon their lives. Likewise, we pray that men who have been taught against
letting women minister will see the truth of the fullness of God's plan. No matter who
we are in the Lord, we will be held responsible for how we treated others and how
we either hindered or helped the cause of Christ on Earth. Those in leadership
especially need to heed this warning with reverent fear. Just because we have
believed something our whole life, or because our denomination or culture teaches us
so, doesn't mean it is correct. If you have a problem with seeing women in the pulpit,
or in any position of leadership, we pray that you will prayerfully seek the Lord with
an open heart on this issue.
In conclusion, let us read the following promise from the prophet Joel. This prophesy
was initially fulfilled at Pentecost, and as we draw closer to the End, we can expect
to see it fulfilled in even greater measures.

Acts 2:17-21, "And it shall come to pass in the last days, saith God, I will
pour out of my Spirit upon all flesh: and your sons and your daughters shall
prophesy, and your young men shall see visions, and your old men shall
dream dreams: And on my servants and on my handmaidens I will pour out
in those days of my Spirit; and they shall prophesy: And I will show wonders
in heaven above, and signs in the earth beneath; blood, and fire, and vapour
of smoke: The sun shall be turned into darkness, and the moon into blood,
before that great and notable day of the Lord come: And it shall come to
pass, that whosoever shall call on the name of the Lord shall be saved."
______________________
Personal Note from Betty:

My own personal call to the ministry came as a surprise to me. I was not expecting
the Lord to use me because I did not realize God used women in the ministry. At the
time of my call I was in the medical profession. I had been filled with the Holy Spirit
and because of the tremendous transformation in my own life, I was eager to share
with others this beautiful blessing. I had known the Lord since the age of twelve.
However, I had not known Him in the power of the Holy Spirit. After my baptism in
the Holy Spirit, I found I had a new holy boldness that I had not had before. I found
myself witnessing and sharing with all who would listen. I wanted them to know of
my new joy, love, peace and faith. I did not intend to pursue the path of becoming a
female preacher. (I really did not know such existed). I just found myself sharing and
preaching. Actually all of us who know Christ should be "preachers." Preaching is
simply sharing the good news of Jesus Christ. The clergy should not be the ones who
do all the preaching! This is the responsibility of every member of the body of Christ.
When the Lord spoke to me about His plan for my life, I immediately thought of
many objections. My first was that I was a woman, so how could He use me? I told
Him I didn't have the kind of tremendous testimony that would cause people to listen
to me. He said, "Betty, it is not your testimony that will cause people to listen, but it
will be My Spirit and My anointing." He then ministered to me in a beautiful way to
show me in His Word that it was Scriptural for women to minister. Most of these
truths are in this teaching. Our confusion over women ministering comes by
misunderstanding the full counsel of God's Word. The verse with which this chapter
begins is one of the first He revealed to me, "...there is neither male nor female..." in
the Spirit. In heaven there will be no sex; so if we are walking in the Spirit now, we
will not be conscious of sex, but only of the Spirit of God. "For in the resurrection
they neither marry, nor are given in marriage, but are as the angels of God in heaven"
(Matthew 22:30). My husband and I have been privileged to serve the Lord together
as evangelists, pastors, teachers and now pioneering this new work on the Internet.
It's rewarding to allow the Holy Spirit to minister through us as He sees fit. We only
want to be those vessels who stand ready for the Master's use. The Lord uses Bud
to relate to many that I could not reach, and He uses me to minister to others that he
could not reach. Together we are able to accomplish much more for the Lord than
we would if we were ministering by ourselves. We are grateful that the Lord called
us into His service together.
God bless you! Betty

Excerpt from the book and workbook Neither Male Nor Female.
________________________________________
WOMEN THROUGHOUT HISTORY SERVED AS LEADERS

A BRIEF HISTORY OF SOME WOMEN IN MINISTRY
by Richard M. Riss
The involvement of women in public ministry is as old as the gospel. Historian
Richard Riss pays tribute to women whose amazing ministries have transformed lives
throughout church history.
LEADERS IN THE EARLY CHURCH
Women have always been active in public ministry. On the pages of the New
Testament we find mention of many who filled positions of leadership in the first
century church.
Acts 2:19 mentions the four virgin daughters of Philip the evangelist
as prophetesses who lived in his home at Caesarea, where Paul and his associates
visited during his third missionary journey. Priscilla, or Prisca, and her husband
Aquilla, were known as fellow-laborers in Christ with the apostle Paul. Their
expertise as teachers enabled them to explain the way of God more accurately to
Apollos of Alexandria, another important leader of the early church (
Acts
18:25-26).
Another associate of Paul's, Lydia, a seller of purple dye, opened her
home for ministry (
Acts 16:40), as did many other Christian women in the Roman
empire, including the "elect lady" to whom John addressed his second epistle. Close
examination of
2 John would suggest that she was functioning in a pastoral capacity,
as would also have been the case for Lydia (
Acts 16:40)(Acts 16:40), Nympha
(
Colossians 4:15), and Chloe (I Corinthians 1:11). Phoebe was a leader of the
Church at Cenchrea. In
Romans 16:1,2, Paul commanded the members of the
church at Rome to receive her as such, and to help her in whatever manner she
requested. Paul also mentions that Andronicus and Junia were outstanding among the
apostles (
Romans 16:7), and there is little doubt that Junia was a feminine name.
Both John Chrysostom and Jerome made reference to her as a woman apostle, and
no commentator referred to her as a man until the late thirteenth century.

MARTYRS FOR THEIR FAITH
As Christianity spread, women along with their male contemporaries, lived their faith
"even unto death," and through heroic deeds of love, helped build the foundations of
God's Kingdom in their countries. In the early fourth century, Catherine of
Alexandria defended the faith at Alexandria before philosophers and courtiers,
before she was tortured to death by Maxentius, the son of the Roman Emperor,
Maximian. At about the same time, Dorothy of Caesarea in Cappadocia was
martyred (A.D. 313). As she was being led to her execution, Theophilus, a lawyer,
taunted her, asking her for a basket of flowers and fruit. Soon afterward, a child
came to her with a basket laden with roses and apples. She sent this to Theophilus,
who as a result of this incident became a Christian and later gave his own life as a
martyr.

FAITH CHAMPIONS
Macrina the Younger (A.D.328-380) was founder of a religious community for
women in the eastern church. With her brothers, Basil the Great and Gregory of
Nyssa, she was a pioneer in the monastic life. She healed, prophesied, and actively
spread the faith. John Chrysostom wrote of her that "she was a great organizer, and
independent thinker, and as well educated as Basil himself." After the death of her
mother, she reared and educated her younger brother Peter, who became Bishop of
Sebaste. Marcella (325-410) was an important teacher in the early church who was
highly esteemed by Jerome. She was in the front lines in interacting with heretics and
bringing them to a better understanding of Christian truth. Her palace on the Aventine
Hill became a center of Christian influence. At one point, when a dispute arose in
Rome concerning the meaning of the Scriptures, Jerome asked Marcella to settle it.
Her Church of the Household was not only a house of study and prayer, but a center
for deeds of Christian charity and sacrifice. It was here that another woman, Fabiola,
received inspiration to establish the first hospitals in Rome. Marcella later established
on the outskirts of Rome the first religious retreat for women. It was also at
Marcella's Church of the Household that Paula (347-404) and her daughter,
Eustochium, first made their decision to assist Jerome in his Latin translation of the
Bible. They went to Bethlehem in order to aid him in this work, revising and
correcting his translations and making new Latin translations from the Hebrew and
Greek texts. In turn, Jerome dedicated some of his books to them. Paula founded
three convents and a monastery in Bethlehem, where Biblical manuscripts were
copied. This became a model for what soon became the universal practice at
monasteries for many centuries. Genevieve (422-500) lived in Paris when Attila and
his Huns invaded France in 451. She assured the inhabitants of Paris that God would
protect them if they would pray. While the men prepared for battle, she persuaded
the women to pray for hours in the church. Then, after Attila destroyed Orleans, he
decided not to touch Paris. At a later time, she was said to have averted a famine in
Paris and the surrounding cities by distributing miraculous gifts of bread. Bridget, also
known as Bride (455-523), inspired the convent system that made an indelible
impact upon life in Ireland. After settling in Kildare, she built for herself and her
female friends a house for refuge and devotion. As other houses were founded
through her missionary efforts, she became known as the "mother abbess" of all of
Ireland.
Theodora I (500-548), wife of the emperor Justinian, was an important and
influential Christian. A woman of outstanding intellect and learning, she was a moral
reformer. Justinian, as Christian Emperor, was, for all practical purposes, head of the
Church of his generation, and his wife, as Empress, shared his power to select
church leaders. The inscription "Theodora Episcopa" or "Theodora, Bishop (fem.)"
in a mosaic at the Basilica of Sts. Prudentia and Praexedis in Rome, may have been
a reference to the Empress. Hilda (614-680) was appointed by Aidan as abbess of
the convent at Hartlepool in County Durham in 649. Ten years later, she founded a
double monastery for men and women at Whitby in Yorkshire, which became world
famous as a school of theology and literature. Five of her disciples became bishops
and a sixth, Caedmon, became the earliest known English poet. Hildegard of Bingen
(1098-1179) was a German abbess, and writer known throughout all of Europe.
Skilled in subjects as diverse as theology, medicine and politics, she did not hesitate
to rebuke the sins of the greatest men of her time in both Church and state. She
exerted a wide influence among many people, including the Emperor Frederick
Barbarossa and various kings, prelates, and saints. Many miracles were attributed to
her during her lifetime. Clare (1193-1253) was co-founder, with Francis of Assisi, of
the Poor Clares, a mendicant order which spread rapidly through Italy and into
France, Germany, and Spain. In 1249, when she was lame, her convent was
attacked by a group of Saracens. She told the sisters to carry her to the door of the
monastery, then addressed the Saracens and prayed aloud that God would "deliver
the defenseless children whom I have nourished with Thy love." She heard a voice
answer "I will always have them in my keeping," and turning to the sisters, she said,
"Fear not." At this moment, the Saracens scrambled down the walls of the cloister,
recoiling from her valiant words. Clare's care for the poor was a tremendous
inspiration to Elizabeth of Hungary (1207-1231), a princess who, in the last years of
her short life, led a life of rigorous self-sacrifice and service to the poor and sick.
Some other significant women of the thirteenth through fifteenth centuries included
Hechthild of Magdeburg, Gertrude the Great, Angela of Foligno, Bridget of Sweden,
Catherine of Sienna, Catherine of Sweden, Margery Kempe, Julian of Norwich,
Joan of Arc, Catherine of Genoa, Isabella of Castile, and Maragaret Beaufort.

GREAT REFORMERS
During the Reformation, a member of the Bavarian nobility, Argula von Grumback
(1492-1563), challenged the Rector and all of the faculty of the University of
Ingolstadt to a debate in which she would defend the principles of the Protestant
Reformation. She offered to base this debate upon a translation of the Bible
published prior to the outbreak of the Reformation. She was permitted to present her
position in 1523 in Nuremberg before the heads of the Empire. Martin Luther wrote
of her, "that most noble woman, Argula von Stauffer, is there making a valiant fight
with great spirit, boldness of speech and knowledge of Christ." Her extensive
education and fine critical abilities enabled her to become a force to be reckoned
with. She conducted church meetings in her home and officiated at funerals. Two
other important leaders of the Protestant Reformation were Margaret of Navarre
(1492-1549) and her daughter, Jeanne d'Albret (1528-1572), the grandmother and
mother of King Henry IV of France, who issued the Edict of Nantes, granting
religious toleration to the French Protestants for almost a century. Jeanne d'Albret
held services of the new Reformed faith in her palace apartment. A friend of John
Calvin, she also used her palace as an institute for Reformation study.

LEADERS IN DENOMINATIONAL MOVEMENTS
During the Puritan era, Anne Hutchinson (1591-1643), became influential in Boston,
and opened her home to large classes of women. It is estimated that as many as
eighty overflowed to the doorsteps of her house, at a time when Boston had a
population of roughly 1,000 people. These meetings grew rapidly, and soon men,
also, began to attend. Among her loyal followers was Henry Vane, who served for a
short time as governor of the Massachusetts Bay Colony. Within two years of her
arrival from England, she had the strongest following of any leader in the entire
colony. Her large following, coupled with her strong exegetical and homiletical skills,
deep Christian commitment and insightful understanding of spiritual truths, may have
incurred the jealousy of several New England ministers, who became uncomfortable
enough with her successes that she was accused of heresy and banished from the
Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1638. Margaret Fell (1614-1702), the mother of
Quakerism, was an English peeress and wife of Judge Thomas Fell, member of the
Long Parliament and Vice-Chancellor of Lancaster. Her home became a place of
refuge and renewal for the persecuted Quakers for almost fifty years. She was
arrested for holding Quaker meetings in her home, Swarthmoor Hall, and imprisoned
for four years. After her release from prison, she visited Quakers in jails and traveled
on horseback with her daughters and servants to remote farms and villages as an
itinerant preacher. Many people sought wisdom and advice from her, including
Thomas Salthouse, and, of course, George Fox, who married her a number of years
after the death of her husband. Because she had his blessing in her preaching
ministry, she wrote many tracts and letters on the subject of women in ministry.
Madame Guyon (1648-1717) was French woman who was imprisoned on several
occasions for long periods of time because of her beliefs, but she was never known
to complain about this. An author of forty books, including a twenty-volume
commentary of the Bible, she had a wide following, particularly in France and
Switzerland. Among those profoundly influenced by her ministry was Archbishop
Francois Fenelon. The founder of the first Methodist congregation in America was
Barbara Heck (1734-1804).
In England, Lady Selina Hastings, Countess of Huntingdon (1707-1791), founder of
the Calvinistic Methodist denomination during the Evangelical Awakening, functioned
as a bishop by virtue of her right as a peeress to appoint Anglican clergymen as
household chaplains and assign their duties, and to purchase presentation rights to
chapels, enabling her to decide who would conduct services and preach. Among the
many chaplains whom she appointed and continued to finance for many decades was
George Whitefield. In 1779, after sixty chapels were already functioning under her
auspices, this practice was disallowed by a consistory court of London. Therefore, in
order to continue to function, she was able, under the Toleration Act, to register her
chapels as dissenting places of worship, known as "The Countess of Huntingdon's
Connexion."
Lady Selina frequently invited members of the aristocracy to her home to hear the
preaching of the Wesleys, Whitefield, Isaac Watts, Philip Doddridge, Benjamin
Ingham, John Fletcher, John Berridge, William Romaine, Henry Venn, and others.
She founded Trevecca House on property adjoining the home of Howel Harris. A
seminary for the training of ministers for all denominations, its first president was John
Fletcher. Joseph Benson eventually became headmaster on John Wesley's
recommendation. George Whitefield preached the inaugural sermon when it opened
in 1768.
NOTABLE AMERICAN PREACHERS
In America, two important preachers during the first years of the Second Awakening
(1800-1808) were Deborah Pierce of Paris, N.Y. and Martha Howell of Utica.
Phoebe Palmer (1807-1874), "The Mother of the Holiness Movement" began her
ministry in 1835 with her Tuesday Meetings for the Promotion of Holiness, which
continued for 39 years in New York City, where she lived with her husband, who
was a physician. Hundreds of Methodist preachers, including at least five bishops,
were profoundly affected by her ministry. The success of Phoebe Palmer's informal
meetings encouraged other women to conduct the same type of ministry, and dozens
of them sprang up throughout North America. These meetings brought together
Christians of many denominations under the leadership of women, particularly among
Methodists, Congregationalists, Episcopalians, Baptists, and Quakers. In 1858,
Walter Palmer, Phoebe's husband, purchased the periodical GUIDE TO
HOLINESS, which under her able editorship, grew in circulation from 13,000 to
30,000 subscribers. She traveled widely with her husband, conducting evangelistic
meetings during the summer months. In the fall of 1857, she and her husband
traveled to Hamilton, Ontario, where they attracted crowds of several thousand
people when an afternoon prayer meeting became a ten-day revival meeting during
which four hundred people were converted to Christ. They experienced similar
successes in New York City and in England, where they preached for four years to
packed houses at Leeds, Sheffield, Manchester, Birmingham, and dozens of other
places. It is estimated that within her lifetime, Phoebe Palmer brought over 25,000
people to faith in Christ.
Catherine Booth (1829-1890), with her husband, William Booth, founded the
Christian Revival Association in 1865 and the Salvation Army in 1878. The Booths
regarded the active participation of women to be vital to Christianity. Before 1865,
when they were still Methodists, Catherine began preaching. Soon after her pulpit
debut, her husband became ill, and his slow recovery paved the way for her own
preaching ministry. For a time, he was so ill that she had to take over his entire
preaching circuit. She eventually became one of the most famous female preachers of
England, and her last sermon was delivered to an audience of 50,000 people.
Hannah Whitall Smith, author of THE CHRISTIAN'S SECRET OF A HAPPY
LIFE (1875) catalyzed the development of the Holiness movement in Britain and
throughout Europe. Her activities in England led to the Keswick Convention in 1874.
LEADERS OF THE PENTECOSTAL MOVEMENT
Carrie Judd Montgomery was a healing evangelist of considerable prominence
beginning in 1879, and became a founding member, along with A. B. Simpson, of
the Christian and Missionary Alliance in 1887. She later became a part of the
Pentecostal revival and was ordained a minister by the Assemblies of God in 1917,
continuing in ministry until 1946. Maria B. Woodworth-Etter was also involved in the
Holiness movement before she rose to prominence as an early Pentecostal leader. In
1884, she was licensed to preach by the Churches of God general conference,
founded by John Winebrenner in 1825. Within a few months of this time her
meetings were already beginning to receive national press coverage, and in the late
1880s she started twelve churches, added 1,000 members, erected six church
buildings, and started several Sunday Schools. Her work at this time resulted in the
licensing of twelve preachers. The revivals that she held at this time were
accompanied with unusual manifestations of God's power, many healings, and mass
conversions. During the early Pentecostal movement, Woodworth-Etter was in
continual demand, becoming a featured speaker at the Worldwide Pentecostal
Camp Meeting at Arroyo Seco, California, in April 1913. She founded the
Woodworth-Etter Tabernacle in western Indianapolis in 1918, which she pastored
until her death in 1924. Beginning in 1906 and 1907, Florence L. Crawford, Mabel
Smith, Ivey Campbell, and Rachel A. Sizelove were some of the first women to
spread the blessings of the early Pentecostal revival through their separate itinerant
ministries. Florence Crawford planted and pastored several churches in the Pacific
Northwest, founding and becoming general overseer of the Apostolic Faith Church
based in Portland, Oregon, which later became part of the Open Bible Standard
Denomination. Other pioneers of the Pentecostal movement in the U.S. included
Mrs. Scott Ladd, who opened a Pentecostal mission in Des Moines in 1907, the
Duncan sisters, who had opened the Rochester Bible Training School at Elim Faith
Home, "Mother" Barnes of St. Louis, Missouri, who, with her son-in-law, B. F.
Lawrence, held tent meetings in southern Illinois in the spring of 1908, and Marie
Burgess, who preached in Chicago, Toledo, Detroit, and New York City, where she
founded Glad Tidings Hall, which soon became an important center for the spread of
the Pentecostal revival. Another early Pentecostal pioneer in New York was Miss
Maud Williams (Haycroft).
CANADIAN AND EUROPEAN PIONEERS OF PENTECOSTALISM
In Canada, some early pioneers of the Pentecostal movement included Ellen Hebden
in Toronto, Ella M.Goff in Winnipeg, Alice B. Garrigus in Newfoundland, the Davis
sisters in the Maritime provinces, Mrs. C. E. Baker in Montreal, and Zelma Argue
throughout all of the Canadian provinces. Aimee Semple McPherson of Ingersoll,
Ontario, began a preaching ministry in 1915 which began in Toronto and took her
along the U.S. Eastern Seaboard, and across the United States in 1918. She
eventually founded Angelus Temple in 1923, where she continued as senior pastor
until her death in 1944. An outstanding authoress and minister at the turn of the
century was Jesse Penn-Lewis who was directly involved with the revival in Wales.
Evan Roberts, the chief evangelist of the Welsh revival joined Mrs. Lewis in penning
some of her writings on the overcoming life. Mrs. Lewis had a wide public ministry.
Perhaps the most popular book she wrote was WAR ON THE SAINTS, a book
on spiritual warfare.
AN OUTSTANDING HEALING MINISTRY
Kathryn Kuhlman's ministry began in the summer of 1923. After her ordination by
the Evangelical Church Alliance in Joliet, Illinois, she established the Denver Revival
Tabernacle in 1935, which she pastored for three years. In the mid-1940s, she went
to Franklin, Pennsylvania, where she began to thrive as a preacher and radio
evangelist. Many people were healed with notable miracles at her meetings beginning
in 1947, and she gained a reputation as one of the world's outstanding healing
evangelists, carrying on as a leading figure during the charismatic movement until her
death in 1976.
PASTORS OF THE CHARISMATIC MOVEMENT
A few of the women working as Pentecostal pastors during the charismatic
movement of the 1960s and 1970s included Charlotte Baker, Myrtle D. Beall, Helen
Beard, Aimee Cortese, Sue Curran, B. Maureen Gaglardi, Anne Giminez, Ione
Glaeser, Hattie Hammond, Alpha A. Henson, Marilyn Hickey, Violet Kitely, Janet
Kreis, Freda Lindsay, Fuchsia T. Pickett, Iverna Tompkins, and Rachel Titus. A
sampling of a few of the other women who were vital during the time of the
charismatic movement as speakers, authors, or evangelists, would include Eleanor
and Roberta Armstrong, Rita Bennett, Edith Blumhofer, Hazel Bonawitz, Roxanne
Brant, Mary Ann Brown, Shirley Carpenter, Jean Darnall, Josephine Massynberde
Ford, Katie Fortune, Shirlee Green, Nina Harris, Sue Malachuk, Daisy Osborn,
Dorothy Ranaghan, Agnes Sanford, Gwen Shaw, Bernice Smith, Ruth Carter
Stapleton, Jean Stone, Joni Eareckson Tada, and Corrie Ten Boom. Mother Teresa
was also an outstanding woman who ministered in the helps ministry to the poor of
India. The women mentioned here are, of course, a mere sampling of important
figures who have been mightily used of God in every conceivable capacity of
leadership in the church throughout history.
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This article was taken from a recent issue of the IRN Reports with copyright
permission.
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