Categories
Leadership Journal's Out of Ur blog Personal Women in Ministry

Being a pastor’s wife is sometimes the only way a woman can be involved in church leadership

Another outstanding piece from Lauren Winner at Leadership Journal's Out of Ur blog.   Laurenwinner1a

Married to the Ministry: has the pastor’s wife’s role changed for better or worse?

She says that some women who were not allowed to pastor themselves, married pastors and thus found some fulfillment by engaging in the limited amount of pastoral work expected of a pastor's wife.

I have also seen extremely competent pastorally gifted women who have found their way into roles as "administrative assistant" or church secretary. In another setting, these competent gifted women may have considered seminary and become outstanding pastors themselves. Interestingly, according to 2005-2006 report by the Association of Theological Schools, there are almost as many "Black" women pursuing their Masters of Divinity degree these days as men (2,366 Men and 2,330 Women). However, for "White", the numbers are still quite far apart: 16,268 Men and 6,791 Women.

Other pastorally gifted women have gone into "Christian Education," chaplaincy, or counseling as the acceptable approximations for church ministry. And others struggle wondering what to do with their pastoral gifting when they haven't met the right man and what to do with their time when they are struggling with infertility. (See the journeys of Carolyn Custis James and Gretchen Gaebelein Hull as told in their books).

Sadly for many of our young women growing up in evangelical churches, becoming the pastor's wife still seems like their best shot at being involved in church ministry. The number one nonfiction book on the Christian Bestsellers List for September 2006 is Captivating by John and Stasi Eldredge. As a professor at Taylor University, an evangelical Christian college, I can tell you that young Christian women are reading it in droves. Unfortunately as Agnieszka Tennant points out in her Christianity Today article "What (Not All) Women Want: The finicky femininity of Captivating by John and Stasi Eldredge", the Eldredge's advocate a "tame idea of beauty" – one exemplified by "Pioneer women [who] brought china teacups into the wilderness." There are other ways of being beautiful. I know because I have a pastor's wife who has her MDiv just like me. I'm thrilled to be a pastor's husband.

Lauren Winner is great.  My wife Amy uses her book Real Sex in the Personal Foundations for Ministry course.  Lauren came to Taylor this spring to speak as well.  She is married to a friend of ours from Regent College.

See my post about Captivating here 

Categories
Megachurches

Read Granger Pastor Blog Summaries of the Willow Leadership Summit

I’m thoroughly enjoying vicariously the Willow Creek Leadership Summit by reading the blogs of the Granger Community Church pastors. Leadership_summit

Here is the schedule of the summit so you can follow along.

Here are the blogs:

Mark Waltz | . . . because People Matter – first post here

Tim Stevens – LeadingSmart – first post here

Tony Morgan | one of the simply strategic guys – first post here

Mark has written the book: First Impressions: Creating Wow Experiences In Your Church

Tim and Tony have written the books: Simply Strategic Growth: Attracting a Crowd to Your Church, Simply Strategic Stuff: Help for Leaders Drowning in the Details of Running a Church, and Simply Strategic Volunteers: Empowering People For Ministry

Categories
Books Women in Ministry

Eldredge’s Captivating Distorts Christian Femininity So Read These Books Instead

See the excellent article just released on the web today by
Christianity Today senior associate editor Agnieszka
Tennant
entitled:

What (Not All)
Women Want

The finicky femininity of Captivating
by John and Stasi Eldredge.Captivating_2

This is the most popular non-fiction book on the Christian Bestsellers List,
September 2006
.  This is also a hugely popular book on Christian college campuses like Taylor University where I teach.

Tennant responds personally and thoughtfully to the
stereotypical view of Christian femininity advocated by the authors.  I
hope many students will read this article and begin to think more critically
about the book’s content.

I never like to be just negative without providing an
alternative so here are . . .

Some books we should be buying for the women in our lives.

On becoming a thoughtful Christian female theologian:

Confessions
of a Beginning Theologian

by Elouise
Renich Fraser

On femininity by Van Leeuwen of Eastern University:

Gender
& Grace: Love Work & Parenting in a Changing World

by Mary
Stewart Van Leeuwen

On the story of a woman with traditional views being
inspired by the Bible:

When
Life and Beliefs Collide

by Carolyn
Custis James

Lost
Women of the Bible: Finding Strength & Significance through Their Stories

by Carolyn
Custis James

On the journey of a woman searching the Scriptures:

Equal
to Serve: Women and Men Working Together Revealing the Gospel

by Gretchen
Gaebelein Hull

On the biblical issues:

Discovering
Biblical Equality: Complementarity Without Hierarchy

by Ronald
W. Pierce
(Editor), Rebecca
Merrill Groothuis
(Editor), Gordon
D. Fee
(Editor)

To be fair, see also the critique of this book at:

Journal
of Biblical Manhood and Womanhood Responds to Discovering Biblical Equality
(IVP,2004)

For parents by McMinn of Wheaton College:

Growing
Strong Daughters: Encouraging Girls to Become All They’re Meant to Be

by Lisa
Graham McMinn

On scholarship and women:

Living
on the Boundaries: Evangelical Women, Feminism And the Theological Academy

by Nicola
Hoggard Creegan
, Christine
D. Pohl

On struggles as a woman:

Redeeming
Eve: Finding Hope Beyond the Struggles of Life

by Heather
P. Webb

On femininity and spirituality:

Eve’s
Revenge: Women and a Spirituality of the Body

by Lilian
Calles Barger