Building on the prior point, women contribute to and enrich so many different ministries in the church. Examples include: missions, counseling, evangelism, discipleship, women’s ministry, mercy ministry, youth ministry, children’s ministry, administration, college ministry, and more. And for each of these ministries, women bring a wonderful set of gifts, abilities, and perspectives. Members of the church, both male and female, have much to learn from their sisters in each of these areas.
A couple of weeks ago, here at the RTS Charlotte campus, my wife Melissa (see her blog here) and I gave a lunchtime presentation on the topic of “Why Churches Should Hire More Women on Staff.”
The desire to talk about this issue was motivated by several things. For one, Melissa has served in a paid staff position (part-time) at our home church, Uptown PCA, for about a decade. And so, part of the discussion was her reflections on serving on a church staff and how that has shaped her thinking on this issue.
The second reason for discussing this topic is because of what is happening here at the Charlotte campus. I have been so excited to see more and more female students coming to RTS to pursue theological education. There is a vibrant community of women on campus led by our Community Life Coordinator, Mallie Taylor.
And these women are some of our best and brightest students. Every semester we give awards for the best student papers, and this past semester two out of the three winners were female students.
But, in the midst of this positive development, I know many of these women are wondering what comes next after graduation. There are a limited number of paid ministry opportunities for our female grads and this can raise questions about whether seminary for women is worth the time and cost.
And third, the topic of hiring women on church staffs was raised last year at the PCA General Assembly. The report of the ad-interim committee on women serving in the ministry of the church included this recommendation:
The committee encourages sessions in churches that have unordained staff positions to consider hiring qualified women, possibly even before qualified men. The church staff will of necessity have primarily ordained men, and women will never be ordained. Thus, the committee encourages preferring women for non-ordained staff positions.
Part of the committee’s rationale for this recommendation was because women “are increasingly turning to para-church ministries” instead of the church. While para-church ministries have their place, the church needs these women and thus the committee was looking for ways to address this issue.
A Few Caveats
Before diving into the issue more fully, a couple of caveats might be order. First, the encouragement to hire more women staff is offered in full recognition of the fact that most churches are struggling financially and already feel understaffed.
Indeed, staffing issues for churches are complex, multi-dimensional, and vary from church to church. My only point here is that churches ought to at least have a category for hiring women on staff as finances and circumstances allow.
Second, it is important to acknowledge that the core ministry of the church is, and ought to be, the preaching of the word, the administration of the sacraments, and the shepherding of the flock. Therefore hiring an ordained pastor (or pastors) will always be priority one. This proposal is not designed to change that.
What I am arguing for here is that, as a church grows, hiring additional pastors should not be the only option considered. There are other types of paid staff that bless the ministry of the church, including ministry roles filled by women. Hopefully this post will at least put that option on some folks’ radar screens.
OK, so here are five reasons to consider hiring women on staff.
#1: Having Women on Staff Fits with Complementarianism
The first reason to consider hiring female staff is because of the complementarian manner in which God made men and women. Now, this may sound like a surprising place to begin. In the minds of some, complementarianism could be seen as a reason not to hire women on staff.
But, complementarianism provides a rich reason for including women on staff teams because it affirms that men and women are not the same. They are not, as our culture insists, merely interchangeable in every way. Men and women bring different perspectives and different gifts.
And those different perspectives and gifts complement each other and make both men and women essential to the ministry of the church. Our goal is familial in nature—brothers and sisters, fathers and mothers, daughters and sons—all serving together in their kingdom labors.
[Editor’s note: One or more original URLs (links) referenced in this article are no longer valid; those links have been removed.]
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