Today in 1848, the first U.S. women's rights convention was held in Seneca Falls, New York. Among the demands made by the women assembled was the right to vote.
I could make the argument that it's historical events like this one that set us on the road towards expanded pulpits, although it would be many more years after women started exercising their right to vote (in 1920) before we'd see women in Protestant pulpits. The major exception to that sentence would be the Pentecostal churches. The Pentecostal branch of Protestantism was more open to women preachers early on, since the movement was founded by women.
Of course, I must admit that we're still far away, very far away, from full parity. We still see very few female senior pastors compared to males. We still see very few female bishops, when we compare those numbers to the bishoprics held by males. But we've made amazing progress in the 162 years since the Seneca Falls Convention.
What I find most exciting about the various human rights movements of the past few centuries is how the idea of rights for one group expands to affect other disenfranchised groups. I'm a Lutheran, and as a denomination, we're still wrestling with the idea of homosexual people serving as pastors. The ELCA allows homosexual people in lifelong committed relationships to serve as pastors, but also allows churches to decide not to invite homosexual pastors to serve them.
And of course, there are still plenty of mainstream Protestants who aren't comfortable with women serving. The work is not done.
And I'm not even taking on the Catholic church.
But today, let us celebrate Seneca Falls. Let us celebrate those few brave women who dared to dream of a more inclusive world. Let us offer prayers of gratitude for those women and for human rights workers everywhere. Jesus constantly reminded us that we're to look out for the poor and the oppressed. Those who work for human rights show us ways that we might fulfill Christ's mission.
thinking too hard
4 years ago
2 comments:
You continually confuse social and Biblical issues. The Bible dictates how you view social issues -- not the other way around.
You are very misguided. Gay marriage is certainly neither God glorifying, nor moral, and homosexual pastors do not reflect God's will for the church. But the Lutheran church, having been split by post modernist progressive theologians, social activism, and secular humanism, now bears the rotten fruit of a heretical church. ELCA is an unfaithful church which mixes truth with grave error, and in doing so, does not perceive its blindness, but seems to believe it is doing God's work. That is Satan's delusion, and you have fallen for it yourself.
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