Do The Genders Have Different Functions
I am creating a new post to continue the great discussion that we have been having on a previous post while I am out of the country. The original discussion is on this post and since we have grown to over 240 comments, I would ask that we continue our discussions with Mark the complementarian here
Date: 2009-10-16
URL: https://mmoutreach.org/wim/2009/10/16/do-the-genders-have-different-functions/
I am creating a new post to continue the great discussion that we have been having on a previous post while I am out of the country. The original discussion is on this post https://mmoutreach.org/wim/2009/07/05/wayne-grudem-part-2/ and since we have grown to over 240 comments, I would ask that we continue our discussions with Mark the complementarian here.
But now we are going to talk about functions in the body of Christ. Is their giving and using based on equality of essence (God’s image), sex (not God’s image), or the “new man/creation”?
In my last post, I was in no way referring to homosexuals or endorsing homosexual activity – just for the record.
I went back to reference the last post and noticed that the comments for it post arn’t showing up. They stop at like #21. Hum…
He touches on this in two books.
I don’t have the reference in this book…but just look at the contents page on this book:
http://www.amazon.com/reader/1581347340?_encoding=UTF8&ref_=sib%5Fdp%5Fpt#reader
In this book, look at pages 31 and 32. See how deftly he slips it in there about God when talking about Ezer and authority. If I remember correctly, he goes into more detail on this in the other book. He says here that the person doing the helping puts themself in a subordinate role. He uses some examples about parents and then deftly slips it in about God. I can see where people really buy into this stuff unless they really analyze it biblically and rationally.
If you read this book it will make you nuts. But it will also help you see where almost all comps are coming from. You can recognize they are parroting Grudem because most pastors teach Grudem and most seminary students have a Grudem book at their side at all times.
Oops, the second book is at this link. Read pages 31-32
“Once again he has swapped ”submission” for ”subordination” – but this time in relation to God with us! He will stop at nothing!”
Bingo! Bingo! Bingo! ;P
“ow concerning Corinthians…
I think it would be helpful to state first before looking deeply at the passage what we all understand head ‘kephale’ to mean. As such i have come across 3 options.”
Please go here…..
http://powerscourt.blogspot.com/2008/01/index-cbmw-grudem-kephale.html
scroll down to the section on kephale and look through the links. It is quite thoroughly researched.
Then we can talk. 🙂
okay now I am curious. What does “Aussie Aussie Aussie oi oi oi” mean? Sounds like a “you go girl” kind of anthem??
Mark,
Would you please give me the definition for the word ‘authority’ that you are using?
That would help clear up a lot of confusion.
You are a bible college student…so I know you drink coffee 😉
Wow, we are up to comment 55 and still haven’t begun looking at the text!
You are correct in assuming that i haven’t read or know alot of what Wayne Grudem has written. In fact i have a book on the way which will help me understand his position. Piper on the other hand i have read much of, heard much of, and find an extroardinary man who seems humble and who’s first priority is glorifying God. You can criticise someones exegesis but i dont think it appropriate to criticise the man, or suggest his motives are bad.
That said i respect Suzanne for her work. I dont see her as a radical feminist but as an evangelical sister in Christ. The link i was given did in fact have very little research of hers. Im not disputing her research, just the link that i was given.
Chuch history is indeed full of ‘bad’ or mislead truth. BUt my point is simple, it is equally misleading to quote Cyril as ‘proof’ of the early church holding to kephale as source. It is simply not true, and history should be reflected accurately. If anyone knows of another church father who understood kephale this way, i would be more than happy to look into that.
I am still hesitant to read into the passage Kay quoted-‘authority’- it is simply poor exegesis to do this in my opinion. The passage has nothing to do with the sadducees wanting authority, they are simply trying to trick Jesus to refute the idea of a resurrection.
Kay, your summary of me made me laugh, but again has pulled me out of context. I dont have a right to demand my authority from my wife, that was point one. I’m not arguing for comp view to keep my authority point 2. Male authority is not linked to his manhood point 3.
Dave, i do think that their is a connection witht the misuse of biblical authority and abuse. I was simply trying to steer the conversation from such accusations as it is not reflective of true comp teaching. IF we are going to be far to both positions is should be based around their understanding of the scriptures. As far as im aware, i have never heard a comp encourage his congregation to beat up his wife. Thus why i am not interested in taking the slippery slope arguments any further.
Finally again i wil assert my three uses of kephale. Lin has said that i am claiming it means authority. This i haven’t said yet nor it is what i beleve it is always implying. These 3 meanings of the word are as far as i know, the accepted use of it.
1. That it does denote auhtority- partly seen in the LXX and other greek literature
2. That it is used as source in other greek literature
3. That it literally means the head on our shouders.
I have not stated which of these i think it means in 1 Cor 11 yet! I was just posting the known uses so we can all be on the same page before we begin.
Mark, here are the links from the page I gave you…..
Response to Johm M. Reynolds
http://powerscourt.blogspot.com/2008/01/response-to-john-mark-reynolds.html
Grudem and kephale
http://powerscourt.blogspot.com/2008/01/grudem-and-ptolemy.html
Grudem and Glare
http://powerscourt.blogspot.com/2008/01/grudem-and-glare.html
Omitted Citations
http://powerscourt.blogspot.com/2008/01/omitted-citations.html
kephale in Literature
http://powerscourt.blogspot.com/2008/01/kephale-in-literature.html
McCarthy’s note on the page I sent was…..
“The foremost example which Grudem uses to prove that kephale means “authority over” is,
“the king of Egypt is called “head” of the nation”
Grudem used this quote on Jan. 19, 2008, on the Gender Blog. However, in Appendix 1A of Recovering Biblical Manhood and Womanhood, he wrote,
19) Philo, Moses 2.30: As the head is the ruling place in the living body, so Ptolemy [Ptolemy Philadelphos] became among kings.
Cervin does not think that head means ruler here because Philo says that Philadelphos is the head of kings, not in the sense of ruling them, but as the preeminent king among the rest. Philadelphos is the top of the kings just as the head is the top of an animal’s body. . . . This example is therefore to be rejected (p. 100).”
Grudem continues in RBMW Appendix 1B to discuss this example. However, he fails to show that it means “authority over.” This is Grudem’s best piece of evidence and proves the opposite of his thesis, which is that kephale means authority. It obviously doesn’t. The rest of Grudem’s examples are similar. However, what is the point of quoting them if Grudem just recycles rejected evidence?
That should help!
Mark wrote: “I would like to be pointed to an actual egalitarian paper which is not about debating anothers paper, and which shows there evidence for why they understand ‘kephale’ to mean source always in the New Testament. I would like to see evidence which actually shows that when a person is called the ‘head’ it means non authoratative source.”
I like your suggestion Kay…but I have another which I discovered and looks pretty good to me… http://searchingtogether.org/kephale.htm
I would love to know what others think of it as a resource. The primary purpose of the essay is not to rebut anyones else’s work.
Kay…crumpets…hmmmm…now your talking…coffee and crumpets…
😉
Interesting observation pinklight!
“2. It was never used in relation between PEOPLE without the notion of authority.”
Wrong!
1 Corinthians 12:21. Head is used metaphorically to represent one person in the body relating to other persons in the body and the context of the verse is specifically the equal standing of all parts of the body from head to foot.
I really don’t know how you can make such a statement Mark. Others have shown over and over how authority is not in view with kephale in either the bible or the contemporary Greek literature. You have yet to coutner any of their claims with any evidence. Instead, you dogmatically insist it implies authority without ever showing an example where it does. To quote one of my favorite lines from Tom Sawyer – “your sayin’ so doesn’t make it so”.
The reality is that you are assuming authority based on a biased cultural paradigm and, as Lin correctly states, the burden of proof is on you. We can’t prove something that isn’t there doesn’t exist. You need to prove that the something that is isn’t there is actually really there. The proof would be within the extended text but Paul never, ever, EVER, says “husbands are in authority over their wives.” Nor does Jesus. Nor does God. Nor does Moses. Nor does Peter. I know you believe that is what they are implying. But you can’t deny they never say it directly. I can’t fathom how it doesn’t make you wonder whay they didn’t say this directly when there are plenty of ways both in Hebrew and Greek to say it directly – ways that are used abundently even by the same authors in other writings within the bible.
This all amounts to circular reasoning. It goes like this.
Comp: “Husbands are in authority!”
Egal: “How do you know that?”
Comp: “Because husbands are ‘head’.”
Egal: “So what?”
Comp: “Well ‘head’ means authority.”
Egal: “How do you know THAT?”
Comp: “Because husbands, who are the head, are in authority – therefore, ‘head’ means authority.”
The same is true for every argument. Here it is regarding created order.
Comp: “Adam was in authority over Eve!”
Egal: “How do you know that?”
Comp: “Because Adam was created first.”
Egal: “So what?”
Comp: “Well first in order has authority.”
Egal: “How do you know THAT?”
Comp: “Because Adam, who was created first, was in authority over Eve – therefore, first in order means authority.”
All we are asking is that you show just one place anywhere in the bible where it says unequivicably (or even marginally) that either first in order is in authority over second or the head is in authority over the body. As Dave is imploring – show us the words.
You, of course, won’t find it. But here is one little glimpse of what you will find. We have mentioned this passage many times before but you ignore it. That won’t make it go away.
Ephesians 1:18 {I pray that} the eyes of our heart may be enlightened, so that you will know what is the hope of His calling, what are the riches of the glory of His inheritance in the saints, (19) and what is the surpassing greatness of His power toward us who believe. {These are} in accordance with the working of the strength of His might (20) which He brought about in Christ, when He raised Him from the dead and seated Him at His right hand in the heavenly {places,} (21) far above all rule and authority and power and dominion, and every name that is named, not only in this age but also in the one to come. (22) And He put all things in subjection under His feet, and gave Him as head over all things to the church, (23) which is His body, the fullness of Him who fills all in all (2:1) And you were dead in your trespasses and sins, (2) in which you formerly walked according to the course of this world, according to the prince of the power of the air, of the spirit that is now working in the sons of disobedience. (3) Among them we too all formerly lived in the lusts of our flesh, indulging the desires of the flesh and of the mind, and were by nature children of wrath, even as the rest. (4) But God, being rich in mercy, because of His great love with which He loved us, (5) even when we were dead in our transgressions, made us alive together with Christ (by grace you have been saved), (6) and raised us up with Him, and seated us with Him in the heavenly {places} in Christ Jesus, (7) so that in the ages to come He might show the surpassing riches of His grace in kindness toward us in Christ Jesus.
This comes from the same letter that contains Ephesians 5. The head and body metaphor is used both here and in chapter 4. Several questions/challenges for you Mark.
- Do you believe Paul uses the head/body metaphor inconsistently in Ephesians, or is Paul consistent in his view of how head and body inter-relate?
- Show me in the above passage where Christ has authority over the body.
- Conversely, rebute the plain reading of this text that shows Christ’s authority is over “all rule and authority and power and dominion, and every name…”, not over the body, and that this authority is for the benefit of the body, and that the body will be place along side of Christ in the seat of authority and share in His dominion “far above all rule and authority and power and dominion, and every name…”
I simply can’t hold back any more. Sorry for the length but this simply must be resolved. Below is a breakdown I did some time ago on the use of kephale in the NT. I present this as textual proof that this Greek word is not used to convey authority, let alone authority of the head over the body. Mark – the challenge to you is to prove the opposite from the same texts. I have shown the absence of authority in these texts. Moreover, I have shown the presence of equality. It is no longer sufficient for you to baselessly claim that kephale “was never used in relation between PEOPLE without the notion of authority”, you must prove it. No more circular reasoning, arguments from silence, and simply “sayin’ it’s so”.
The word kephale occurs 75 times in the NT. It is used literally in all the occurrences in the gospels EXCEPT for the synoptic references to Psalm 118 where it is used as “cornerstone”. This is also its use in Acts 4:11 and 1 Peter 2:7. All the other non-Pauline uses in Acts and Revelation are essentially literal (referring to a person’s or things anatomical head).
That leaves us with the Pauline uses, which are predominantly metaphorical.
Only in two of those uses – Ephesians 1:22 and Colossians 2:10, is there an implication of authority, rule, or “Lordship” associated with kephale.
In Ephesians, the church, as body, is mentioned in the very same verse. But it is not as the object of Christ’s lordship, but as the benefactor of it. The object of Christly “rule” is every “rule and authority and power and dominion and name” (vs. 21). This authority is given to Christ “for the church, (23) which is His body, the fullness of Him who fills all in all.” Later, in Ephesians 2:6, we are told that God “raised us up with Him (Christ), and seated us with Him in the heavenly {places}…” So, we are seated with Christ “at His (the Father’s) right hand in the heavenly {places,}” (Eph 1:20) and SHARE his authority over the powers, etc. In summary, the authority Christ has as head in Ephesians 1 is not OVER the church but for the benefit of and shared with the church.
Colossians 2:10 expresses a similar vision for Christ’s authority as Head: “and in Him you have been made complete, and He is the head over all rule and authority”. Although the church/body side of the metaphor is not fleshed out in the text of this passage, it is clear that “you” is the church which is still in view AND “you”, the church, are not the object of the authority which dwells in Christ but are instead the benefactor of it. (this passage has more to do with worldly rules and whether or not we are free in Christ. It is hard to make any marriage parallel here.)
Those are the only two times that authority is referenced in the Pauline metaphorical uses of Christ as “head”. But, of course, Paul uses the metaphor more than that.
The only major passage which uses the head/body metaphor referring strictly to the marriage relationship is Ephesians 5. Complimentarians read authority into that passage but it is not even remotely implied by Paul. In fact, the only thing that headship relates to in Ephesians 5 is love. Complimentarians apparently believe authority and agapeo love can coexist. To me they seem mutually exclusive.
The other major passage which uses kephale and has any semblance of a marriage context (although no corresponding “body” reference) is 1 Corinthians 11. This is, of course, an infamous passage in the comp/egal debate. Cheryl does a great job, IMO, of making the case that head in this passage means source. Anyone can read her verse by verse commentary by looking under her 1 Corinthians 11 section of the blog. What seems to me very clear in this passage is that head does NOT mean “authority”, unless one dogmatically assumes that head universally means authority. Never-the-less, authority is not implied in the passage. Because the passage is more about the conduct of worship and far less about marriage, and is focused on how one shows the glory that is inherent in Christ, it is a very big leap to even assume husbandly authority over the wife is the topic here.
The head/body metaphor is used again in Colossians 1:18. Here, that relationship is simply given amongst a list of the attributes of Christ. In essence, it is stated as a matter of fact. There is no teaching about the head/body relationship involved. Again, no authority can be derived from this brief citation.
The final two references to Christ as “head” are in Ephesians 4:15 and Colossians 2:19. These are kind of a mixed metaphor in that it is using the literal head and body arrangement but referring to Christ and the church. Both passages are very similar. Here is the Colossians (starting with vs. 18):
“Let no one keep defrauding you of your prize by delighting in self-abasement and the worship of the angels, taking his stand on {visions} he has seen, inflated without cause by his fleshly mind, (19) and not holding fast to the head, from whom the entire body, being supplied and held together by the joints and ligaments, grows with a growth which is from God.”
These verses have nothing to do with authority but echo much of what Ephesians 5 says about the “head” and support the argument that “head” in Pauline metaphor means something much more closely related to “source”. The church/body “grows out of” Christ/head; Eve was “fashioned” from Adam’s rib; Christ “proceeded forth” from the Father. None of these references imply a hierarchy of authority; one has to read that in based on presumptions about the English word for kephale.
The final instance of head and body being used in metaphor by Paul is in 1 Corinthians 12:21. Here, Christ is not involved. Instead, the “head” refers to any member of the body in relation to other members of the body. The teaching here is that no member of the body, including the head, has more preeminance than any other. In fact, the lesser members of the body are to be elevated “in honor” above the greater. Not only is authority not granted or even in view here, but the passage suggests exactly the opposite relational paradigm – equality.
That’s it – just two direct applications of Christ’s authority as “head”, both of which explicitly remove the “body” as an object of that authority and one that directly imparts that authority equally onto the body. All the other references with head/body as a metaphor lack any authority component. In order for one to believe it, they have to read it into the text (and presume it as a universal truth). That isn’t to say that all those other references don’t teach a lot about headship. On the contrary. But what they teach is that the head, rather than taking authority over the body, is to sacrifice for, serve, nurture, build up, and love the body. Again, if one believes that authority has a place in that list, it has to be read in. The bible surely doesn’t say it.
Dave,
Nope. And I don’t think any of us would, could or should!
And that, my brother, is my point.
🙂
It was the coffee that made me ask…
Oops.I typed in the wrong e-mail for my last comment so it’s in moderation box! ;P
Well, it seems the discussion with Mark has gone to quite some length. And I’m sorry got to it much later than Lin did; I wish I could have commented on some of these points myself. But I think everyone–Dave, Kay, Gengwall, Pinklight, etc.–gave some good responses and challenges to his assumptions about roles being rooted in and determined by one’s maleness or femaleness, and his unwarranted insistance that kephale could only mean “authority over” in 1 Cor 11 and Eph 5. So the observations and comments I now make will be brief.
1. Lin, in comment #8, you mentioned a dispute among comp scholars as to whether or not Adam was with Eve though whole temptation or not. Well, I checked the NIV Interlinear Hebrew-English OT, the NIV, the NAB, and the NLT. All confirmed that Adam was there the whole time, allowed Satan to convince her that eating the fruit would make them both wise, and then took the fruit ate it, without ever rebuking, or even questioning, either Eve or Satan.
2. The insistence that kephale in 1 Cor 11:3 must mean “authority over” and not “source” so as to weigh an argument in one’s favor against his opponent’s is not something new. For it was used by the Arians to argue that since the man was in “authority over” the woman, because he was superior in being and function; therefore, since the Father was in “authority over” the Son, he was superior and the Son was inferior. And of course, Athanasius, Gregory the Theologian, Cyril , and others argued against this heretical understanding of the Father-Son and man-woman relationships. A destable heresy, I might add, that Wayne Grudem promotes in order to have a theological ground for the permanent subordination of women, while gutting the heart of the Gospel in the process. And so Dave, I have a far lower opinion of Prof. Grudem than you do for this very reason.
Well, I think that is all I wish to say on this posting. As I have already said, I think you all did a fine job in both responding to and challenging Mark.
“Kephale does not actually mean “authority” or “origin” but has been interpreted as metaphorically representing one or the other.”
Interesting! It is also interesting that with Grudem’s research he is the one who decides what Kephale should be interpreted as metaphorically representing. He then tells us that this is what it “means”, and people accept what he says without looking into it themselves. One bloke I was reading said this about Grudem, “Grudem lays waste the egalitarian word games that seek to muddy the waters concerning the meaning of kephale, hypotasso, authenteo.” http://www.pressiechurch.org/Issues.html
Can I call him a “Rude, Crude, Grude Machine”, if I don’t question his motives? 🙂
Frank,
You make this claim:
2. The insistence that kephale in 1 Cor 11:3 must mean “authority over” and not “source” so as to weigh an argument in one’s favor against his opponent’s is not something new. For it was used by the Arians to argue that since the man was in “authority over” the woman, because he was superior in being and function; therefore, since the Father was in “authority over” the Son, he was superior and the Son was inferior. And of course, Athanasius, Gregory the Theologian, Cyril , and others argued against this heretical understanding of the Father-Son and man-woman relationships. A destable heresy, I might add, that Wayne Grudem promotes in order to have a theological ground for the permanent subordination of women, while gutting the heart of the Gospel in the process. And so Dave, I have a far lower opinion of Prof. Grudem than you do for this very reason.
A few points need to be mentioned as I fell you are equally guilty of half truths.
1. I am not arguing that man is superior in being or function. I am saying we are equal in being (essence) and have different functions. I am not saying a mans role is more superior than the womens. Obviously you haven’t read me properly.
2. The Athanasian- Arian debates were indeed over the subordination of the son in both function AND essence. This is not what Grudem is saying as far as I have seen, so you are wrong in linking the two. Grudem and Piper do use the term subordination but only in relation to function NOT ESSENCE which was what the Arian heresy was. Therefore you are being misleading by claiming that Grudem is a heretic holding to a condemned heresy. This clearly shows me your poor understanding of either topic.
3. I would also like to dispute that the Arain heresy stemed primarily from the roles of men and women- where do you see the evidence for this claim? It was clearly over the issue of the divine essence in the son(or lack of in their opinion). You are misrepresenting history to further your view and thus leading others on this blog to false conclusions.
4. What the great theologians of the past showed us as true orthodoxy was one God, in three distinct persons, all equally divine, although all uniquely their own ‘homoousios’- person/function. I think I translated that into English properly, forgive me if I didn’t.
I’m still fascinated at how we managed to turn “the man” into plural??!! It’s like, (now that I see it) what in the world??
“The authority over another paradigm keeps you from the true message of this passage.”
I agree. But why the paradigm? Simply, because of the meaning of the English word “head”.
Kay,
No need to apologize. I think that your questions are worthy of being asked and your point is well taken. And thanks for the welcome back! These posts have been so busy, I didn’t think anyone missed me at all 😉
Dave,
It is nice to be missed! Feels like a warm hug.
My full permission to advertise the good stuff!
Ooooh.
I could really use a fresh pot of coffee and a good book.
Thanks for the link TL
I posted something written by John Starke from CBMW here http://www.achurchinryde.com/blog/?p=349#comment-681
Well, John has responded to my post! He has said he might not be able to interract a lot, but if you would like to talk to John feel free!
Please though, stay here and talk to Mark too! Wow, perhaps the Comps have been drinking too much coffee, they don’t usually want to talk!
I hope it was ok to do that Cheryl. 🙂
Perfectly fine to advertise Pastor Dave! I just added a comment myself and encourage others to do so.
Mark, I apologize for the terseness of my previous comment. It was addressed more to Cheryl, Dave, Lin, and Kay who know me better than you do, and who understand where I am coming from. For on both Cheryl’s site and CBE’s The Scroll, I have previously demonstrated my knowledge of past and present Trinitarian controversies, and why I believe, contrary to what they say, Wayne Grudem and Bruce Ware are promoting a novel and dangerous form of Arianism, or Subordinationism. Now you may not agree with me, but on the basis of my own studies of the Trinity over the last two years, that is the conclusion I have come to, and that is why I so fiercely oppose them. However, I recognize that I need to clarifiy what you regard as my “apparent” misrepresentations, so you at least understand why I am taking this stance. So let me make the following points:
1. Now how, I don’t know how well versed your are in the disputes between the Nicene and Post Nicene Fathers with the Arians, but the one of main contentions made by Athanasius, Basil the Great, Gregory the Theologian, and John Chrysostom against the Arians was that it was logically inconsistent and incoherent to argue that two persons, divine or otherwise, are essentially equal if, at the same time, one is in permanently and obligatorily in subordination to the other. Kevin Giles sums it up this way:
From the time of Athanasius, theologians have recognized that if the Son is eternally subordinate in his work, function or operations, it must mean he is eternally subordinated in being, essence, nature, person or subsistence. If the Son or any human being is a personal equal to another, they may choose to subordinate themselves to another; but when subordination is both permanent and obligatory, the personal inferiority of the subordinate is implied. If one party is always and necessarily subordinate to the other, the subordinate person must lack something the superior person possesses (Cf. “The Subordination of Christ and the Subordination of Women”, Discovering Biblical Equality: Complementarity Without Hierarchy, IVP, 2005, p.348).
So, if of necessity the Son is eternally subordinate to the Father in all things, and not by choice and for a limited time for a specific purpose, then he is inferior to the Father in being. By the same token, if women are, of necessity, permanently subordinate to men in all things–not by choice and for a limited for a specific purpose–then they are inferior to men in their essence or being. And so both the denials of the Son’s inferiority to the Father, and of women to men, as so often made by complementarian, are meaningless.
2. You accuse me of misleading people, twisting history to my own ends, because I argue that “the Arian heresy stemmed primarily from the roles of men and women.” If that is what you think I said or meant to say, you are incorrect. Nevertheless, there is evidence that 1 Cor. 11:3 was a text Arians later used to argue their case that the Son was inferior to the Father, using the “lesser to greater” analogy. Perhaps you are unaware that John Chrysostom (ca. 347-407 A.D.), a younger contemporary of Athanasius, Basil, and Gregory, addressed the Arians’ misuse of this text? Here’s what he said in one of his homilies:
“But the head of the woman is the man; and the head of Christ is God” (1 Cor 11:3). Here the heretics rush upon us with a certain declaration of inferiority, which out of these words they contrive against the Son. But they stumble against themselves. For if “the man be the head of the woman,” and the head be of the same substance with the body, and “the head of Christ is God,” the Son is of the same substance with the Father. “Nay,” say they, “it is not His being of another substance which we intend to show from hence, but that He is under subjection.” What then are we to say to this? In the first place, when any thing lowly is said of him conjoined as He is with the Flesh, there is no disparagement of the Godhead in what is said, the Economy admitting the expression. However, tell me how thou intendest to prove this from the passage? “Why, as the man governs the wife, saith he, “so also the Father, Christ.” Therefore also as Christ governs the man, so likewise the Father, the Son. “For the head of every man,” we read, “is Christ.” And who could ever admit this? For if the superiority of the Son compared with us, be the measure of the Father’s compared with the Son, consider to what meanness thou wilt bring Him. So that we must not try all things by like measure in respect of ourselves and of God, though the language used concerning them be similar; but we must assign to God a certain appropriate excellency, and so great as belongs to God. For should they not grant this, many absurdities will follow. As thus; “the head of Christ is God:” and, “Christ is the head of the man, and he of the woman.” Therefore if we choose to take the term, “head,” in the like sense in all the clauses, the Son will be as far removed from the Father as we are from Him. Nay, and the woman will be as far removed from us as we are from the Word of God. And what the Son is to the Father, this both we are to the Son and the woman again to the man. And who will endure this? (“The Life and Work of St. John Chrysostom,” NPNF, IX, 3-23).
Now, it seems to me he is refuting a heretical view of Subordinationism that has many parallels to that advocated by Grudem and Ware. So compare what Chrysostom says about this text with what Grudem and Ware teach about it, and then draw your own conclusion.
3. Subordinationism, in all its forms, was a heresy condemned by both the Eastern and Western Churches. For example, at the Roman Council of 382 A.D., where the Nicene Creed was confirmed as authoritative and binding on all Christians, Bishop Damasus made 24 pronouncements regarding heretical departures from orthodoxy, among which are these: “If anyone denies: That the Son of God is true God, just as the Father is true God, having all power, knowing all things, and equal to the Father, he is a heretic;…that the Father,Son, and Holy Spirit have one divinity, authority, majesty, power, one glory, one dominion, one kingdom and one will and truth, he is a heretic.” And so however you may wish to deny it, the Subordinationism being advocated by Grudem and company is a new form of an old and deadly heresy. Advocated, I will add, for neither just nor good reasons. Here again, Kevin Giles has a pertinent comment:
In the Trinity, we are told, ontological equality and permanent role or functional subordination coexist without one canceling the other. If this is how the Trinity is ordered, the argument continues, the the Trinity justifies women’s permanent functional subordination. Furthermore, it is claimed that the differences between the sexes and the differences between the divine Persons can be preserved only if role differentiation–understood in both instances as the subordination of one party to another–is upheld. This argument seems to have persuaded many, but at this point two things should be noted. First, prior to the 1980’s no theologian had ever spoken of the Son’s subordination in “role” only. This use of the term, as well, as the idea of the permanent role subordination apart from personal subordination, came from the woman debate, where it appeared for the first time in the mid-1970’s. The language and reasoning that was invented to make an acceptable-sounding case for the permanent subordination of women was introduced into theological discourse about the Trinity and, in turn, the newly devised doctrine of the Son’s role subordination was used to support the doctrine of the role subordination of women. Second, this new doctrine of the Trinity, formulated by evangelicals opposed to the full emancipation of women, undermines the complete unity of person and work in the Godhead so clearly taught in Scripture. On this view, the works of the Son do not indicate that he is fully equal with the Father in divinity, majesty, power and authority. This novel doctrine of the Trinity makes the Son eternally subordinate to the Father in what he does. In his works he is less in power and authority (Cf. “The Subordination of Christ and the Subordination of Women,” Discovering Biblical Equality, pp.338-339).
4. Here I will only make two additional, but necessary comments on this matter. First, as regards how orthodox Christians are to think properly about the relationship between the Father, the Son and the Spirit. This matter, along with other Trinitarian concerns, was settled long ago by the Nicene Fathers, as T. F. Torrance explains:
What then does it mean to think of the three divine Persons specifically as ‘Father,’ ‘Son,’ and ‘Holy Spirit’? This is a question that had been cropping up in the Church since the Arian controversy, when attempts were made to speak of divine Fatherhood and Sonship on the analogy of human fatherhood and sonship. While there is certainly a figurative or metaphorical ingredient in the human terms ‘father’ and ‘son’ as they are used in divine revelation, they are to be understood in ways that point utterly beyond all sexist connotations and implications.Both the generation of the Son and the procession of the Spirit are incomprehensible mysteries which are not explicable through recourse to human modes of thought. Hence, as Athanasius and Gregory Nanianzen insisted, we must set aside all analogies drawn from the visible world in speaking of God, helpful as they may be up to a point, for they are theologically unsatisfactory and even objectionable, and so must of ‘Father’ and ‘Son’ when used of God as imageless relations. ‘Father,’ Gregory pointed out, ‘is the name of the relation in which the Father stands to the Son, and the Son to the Father, but such that it is an ineffable relation which exceeds and transcends human powers of imagination and conception,’ so that we may not read the creaturely of our human expressions of ‘father’ and ‘son’ analogically into what God discloses of his own inner divine relations. Hence, Gregory Nanianzen, like Athanasius, insisted that they must be treated as referring imagelessly, that is, in a diaphanous or ‘see through’ way, to the Father and Son without the intrusion of creaturely or sensual images into God. Thus we may not think of God as having gender, nor think of the Father as begetting the Son or of the Son as begotten after the analogy of generation or giving birth, with which we are familiar with among creaturely beings (Cf. “Three Persons, One Being,” The Christian Doctrine of God: One Being, Three Persons, T & T Clark, 1996, pp. 157-158)
Secondly, not only is this heretical component of hierarchical complementarianism based on a defective theological method, but it also rests on a false analogy that actually contradicts the very view these people are seeking to promote. So I both agree with and endorse the excellent expose’ and critique of this false analogy given by Rebecca Merrill Groothuis:
Unlike the subordination prescribed for women, there could be no subordination in the eternal Trinity that would involve one divine Person acting against his own preference or best judgment under orders issued from the contrary will of another divine Person. When the Father sent the Son, it was not along the lines of an earthly father who says, “Well, son, here’s what I’m going to have you do,” at which point the son learns what he better do or else. Rather, with the Father, Son and Holy Spirit of one mind on how to redeem sinful humans (as they always are on every matter), it was the Son’s will to go as much as it was the Father’s will to send him (Phil. 2:5-11). Moreover, in Christ’s own description of his earthly ministry, he states that the Father has given him all judgment and authority (Mt. 28:18; Jn. 5:21-27; 17:2). Even during his earthly incarnation, when Jesus did only the Father’s will (Jn. 5:30; 8:28-29), the relationship of the Father and Son was not at all like that of a husband and wife in a patriarchal marriage, where the husband holds final decision-making authority and is neither expected nor required to share this authority with his wife. Even if there were an eternal subordination of the Son to the Father, it would fail to model the key elements of the woman’s lifelong subordination to man. What would female subordination to male authority look like if it were truly analogous to the subordination of the Son to the Father? First, the authority of the man and the submission of the woman would not be decided or demanded by their different male and female natures. Second, there would never be an occasion in which the man’s will would or should overrule the woman’s will; the man therefore would “send” the woman to do only what was in accordance with her own will. Third, every husband would willing and consistently share all authority with his wife, acknowledging her full authority to make judgments and decisions on behalf of both of them. In short, the oneness in being of the divine Persons, which results in oneness of will, precludes invoking the Trinity as either illustrating or vindicating the doctrine of woman’s subordination to man (Cf. “Equal in Being, Unequal in Role,” Discovering Biblical Equality: Complementarity Without Hierarchy, IVP, 2005, pp. 330-331).
So, Mark I hope I sufficiently clarified what you regarded as “apparent” misrepresentation, or unclear and misleading statements; have given a clearer indication as to what I regard as the true, orthodox doctrine of the Trinity; and why I am a staunch opponent of what I regard as heretical teaching.
Frank,
Thanks for all the good research and quotes that you give and for the strong support you bring to the unity and equality of the Trinity! Good job!
TL,
Excellent information about the Hebrew as head/beginning/first. Thanks for sharing that!
“Couldn’t have been an apple. Apple’s have seeds, so they were among the allowed fruit.”
;P
“theos” is the word translated as ‘God’ there in I Cor. 11:3 – it means the Godhead/the Trinity – according to Strong’s.
7A man ought not to cover his head,[b] since he is the image and glory of God; but the woman is the glory of man.
Who’s “God” in verse 7? Was Adam made in God’s image or the Father’s?
To be more precise…is the man the image of God or the Father?
I think that Paul is pretty consistent in 1 Cor. 11 when he uses the term “God” to mean the Godhead. Or should we see that women are in the image of the “Father”? Men and women are in the image of the Triune God.
The entire contextal use of the term supports that the Godhead is the head of Christ.
By the way Dave, I loved your comments!
pinklight,
It is also so interesting to see you process information. Always serial comments. Always questions and deep thoughts. Keep up the good work!
Thanks, Cheryl!
Sorry for the absence. I got H1N1’ed (we think). Trying to catch up.
Sorry to hear that, Gengwall – it seemed you’d been awfully quiet! Hope it wasn’t too bad.
“H1N1?ed” means” Swine Flu…
I have had the injection so I guess it is safe for me to continue blogging with a possibly infected person…I hope all is well gengwall.
Was it tough going gengwell?
Was it as bad as they are all saying?
It’s getting awful close to where I live.
Were you vaccinated?
Mark #233,
You said:
Where do you NOT blend their persons?
Frank your research is no doubt extensive and you continue to pursue the idea that the early church denied distinction in roles somehow- I disagree. The whole battle the early theologians faced was a subordinationism of essence. I think you are wrong to read back into that debate a subordinationism of function.
“blending their persons” means that one attempts to make them into one person. When one says that they believe in three persons who are in an intimate relationship with each other, that cannot be a “blending of their persons”.
Also subordination of function necessitates a subordination of essence. If, for example, the Father is said to have more power than the Son, then that function must be tied into the person’s nature for power and authority are part of God’s essence. God is omnipotent. If the Son would have less power and less authority to use His will and power, then He is no longer omnipotent. I understand your desire to hold to the complementarian view of God because it is helpful in your view of women, but I would like to gently encourage you to try to understand the issue of essence. God’s power and authority cannot be divorced from His essence.
If Jesus was raised as a physical human man, and is now seated at the right hand of the father, what now is his ‘role’ in your opinion? If Jesus still has his humanity now and according to egalitarians, that is the ONLY thing that makes him subordinate, how is he not then eternally in that position? Maybe you think his humanity is now insignificant?
Jesus is a resurrected human and He will be sitting in a place of judgment shortly. All judgment has been given to Him. When He completes His return to earth and earthly reign and the 1,000 years and future judgment are complete, He gives back into the Father’s hands everything that the Father has turned over to Jesus alone.
I really recommend you to get a copy of The Trinity Eternity Past to Eternity Future for my two sections on the second DVD will fill in all the gaps for you. Email me if you would like a deal on the shipping to Australia.
As far as Jesus eternal subordination, no that will not continue. The Godhead will be seen as ONE in eternity with no role divisions. Again, I recommend that you get a copy of the DVD because it will make it much easier to dialog on this subject.
Also, I have received a request to invite you to my post at http://strivetoenter.com/wim/2009/10/31/women-on-trial/ where I have placed three segments of my talk that deals with a trial against two of God’s women. There are many of us who would like to have you interact with the material. I still have another 3 or 4 segments to post, and I will try to get them all up within the next week.
Again, welcome back Mark. I think I can speak for us all that we really missed you! You are a joy to have on this blog even if we disagree. We love to talk about our disagreements and even in the end if we must agree to disagree, I believe that we can be as iron sharpening iron.
“I do not believe that Jesus is subordinate to the Father, even during his earthly ministry.”
Me neither. That idea was somewhere in the back of my mind as I was making my last comment.
Sex makes a woman subordinate.
Flesh makes God subordinate.
Humm…
Now I got God’s prophecy in my mind from Gen 3, about the woman’s seed…
I meant, Now why couldn’t I say it simple like that?
And since compism is a doctrine of subordination then it needs a new and more precise name.
Dave,
I love everything you write! There is so many times I have read your answers and wish I had said that!
pinklight,
Did you say “apple” gengwall??
Pinklight you caught this one and it made me laugh so hard. I am just getting ready to load the next audio clip for the youtube clips on this post http://strivetoenter.com/wim/2009/10/31/women-on-trial It will take a few hours to upload but the info in the latest clip will show why our dear old “apple” can never be listed as a possible fruit from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil.
As always I am very interested to hear Mark’s feedback.
I’m excited and waiting for the new audio clip! I love the things I’ve learned in the past, in Genesis regarding Eve!! 🙂
I’m sorry it has taken me longer, than I originally intended, to make a response to Mark’s latest comments ( #228) of my critique of the ESS teaching. But as you well know, Cheryl, the responsibilities and demands of everyday life often put restraints on the time you can give to studying and preparing any kind of a presentation for a debate. And I am glad that you and a couple others have made some helpful and insightful comments in the mean time. Nevetheless, I will now try to give a final summing up and conclusion to what I have already said, hopefully giving Mark a sufficiently complete answer that will end on a positive note for all. Anyway, here we go.
Mark, I am very glad that, at least in principle, you agree with the Trinitarian teaching of the Athanasian Creed. I agree with it fully myself. Though not written by Athanasius himself, it clearly was written by someone who, in understanding the teaching of Athanasius, Gregory the Theologian, and Augustine, made a great effort to both clarify and expand on this teaching with the intent that no one would have any doubt as to what the Christian Church, as a whole, regarded to be the orthodox and authoritative Doctrine of the Trinity. However, I think it would be good to quote it in full, and then see what light it really sheds on our differences over the matter of “the Eternal Subordination of the Son.” The Athanasian Creed reads as follows:
We worship one God in Trinity, and Trinity in Unity, neither confounding the Persons nor dividing the Substance. For there is one Person of the Father, another of the Son, and another of the Holy Spirit. But the Godhead of the Father, of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit, is all one: the Glory equal, the Majesty coeternal. Such as the Father is, such is the Son, and such is the Holy Spirit. The Father uncreated, the Son uncreated, the Holy Spirit uncreated. The Father infinite, the Son infinite, and the Holy Spirit infinite. The Father eternal, the Son eternal, and the Holy Spirit eternal. And yet they are not three eternals, but one eternal. As also there are not three uncreated, nor three infinites, but one uncreated, and one infinite. So likewise the Father is Almighty, the Son is Almighty, and the Holy Spirit is Almighty. And yet they are not three Almighties, but one Almighty. So the Father is God, the Son is God, and the Holy Spirit is God. And yet there are not three Gods, but one God. So likewise the Father is Lord, the Son is Lord, and the Holy Spirit is Lord. And yet there are not three Lords, but one Lord. For as we are compelled by Christian truth to acknowledge every Person by himself to be God and Lord, so we are forbidden…to say “There are three Gods, or three Lords.” The Father is made of none, neither created nor begotten. The Son is of the Father alone, not made, nor created, but begotten. The Holy Spirit is of the Father and of the Son, neither made, nor created, nor begotten, but proceeding. So there is one Father, not three Fathers; one Son, not three Sons; one Holy Spirit, not three Holy Spirits. And in this Trinity, none is before, or after, another. None is greater, or less, than another. But the whole three Persons are coeternal, and coequal. So that in all things, as was said before, the Unity in Trinity, and the Trinity in Unity, is to be worshipped (Cf. James R. White, “The Trinity and Church History,” The Forgotten Trinity: Recovering the Heart of Christian Belief, Bethany House Publishers, 1998, pp. 190-191)
Now I agree with this teaching on the Trinity, not because Athanasius, Gregory the Theologian, and Augustine taught it, nor because it was codifed and ratified by both the ancient Greek and Roman Churches in 381 A.D. and 382 A.D. Nor do I believe it because it was later reaffirmed by Reformed theologians, such as John Calvin, John Gill, B.B. Warfield, and Thomas F. Torrance. Not at all. I believe it because I am convinced that it is the only rationally consistent and coherent explanation of what the Scriptures themselves teach about the One God who is Three Persons, and the Three Persons who are the One God. Yet, I would never argue that this explanation places God in such a tight-fitting box that anyone can ever say, “Well, we now know all there is to know about the Triune God, his works and his ways.” What it essentially does is set the boundries within which an orthodox exploration of the Triune God’s nature, works and ways can be conducted without falling back into old heresies abandoned long ago. And so having said that, let me now make the following observations on the Creed itself:
- Clearly, the author(s) intent in writing this creedal definition of the Trinity so precisely was in order that the four great heresies, i.e. Modalism, Sabellianism, Arianism, and Subordinationism—which have again and again cropped up within the Church at various times and in various forms–may once and for all be expelled from the Christian’s mind as an acceptable way to understand both the Unity and Diversity of the Triune God. Wouldn’t you agree, Mark?
- Note that while the distinction of the Three Persons is maintained throughout, it is never stated that the distinction is ever based on one divine Person possessing some divine attribute, whether in part or full, which is not commonly shared by the Three Persons, who equally and fully share the One Divine Being and all its attributes, such as Glory, Majesty, Infinity, Eternality, Lordship, etc. Therefore, may I ask how anyone can one derive from this Creed the concept of an eternal subordination of the Son to the Father, which is defined by those who teach it as a hierarchical ranking of the Father over the Son rests on the “fact” that the Father’s Lordship contains more power and authority than does that of the Son? Does this not clearly imply that the Father, because his attributes are fuller and greater in some sense to those of the Son, in some sense also possesses more Divine Being than does the Son?
- Note also that the distinctions that are recognized to exist among the Three Persons are strictly defined in terms of their eternal, internal relationships: Fatherhood, Sonship, and Procession. The Father is the Father of the Son before all things, yet the Son is all the Father is as God, except he is not the Father. The Son, though “begotten” of the Father, as God is everything the Father is, except he is not the Father who begot him. And the Holy Spirit, who proceeds from both Father and Son, as God is everything that the Father and Son are, yet he is neither the Father nor Son from whom he proceeds. However, if we understand the Father’s begetting of the Son, and the Spirit’s procession from the Father and the Son such that they are in some sense “derived” from the Being of the Father alone and are dependent on him for their “deification,” possessing less glory, majesty, power, and authority than does the Father himself–have we not fallen back into the subordinationist heresy of Arius that this Creed refutes? After all, it was Arius who argued that the divine Father-Son relationship, if we are to truly understand it, must be analogous to the human father-son relationship, which he understood and defined in terms of Superior to Inferior. So how should we think about the “Father,” “Son,” and “Holy Spirit”? Here, again, I refer to the statement made by T. F. Torrance on this subject:
What then does it mean to think of the three divine Persons specifically as ‘Father,’ ‘Son,’ and ‘Holy Spirit’? This is a question that had been cropping up in the Church since the Arian controversy, when attempts were made to speak of divine Fatherhood and Sonship on the analogy of human fatherhood and sonship. While there is certainly a figurative or metaphorical ingredient in the human terms ‘father’ and ‘son’ as they are used in divine revelation, they are to be understood in ways that point utterly beyond all sexist connotations and implications. Both the generation of the Son and
the procession of the Spirit are incomprehensible mysteries which are not explicable through recourse to human modes of thought. Hence, as Athanasius and Gregory Nanianzen insisted, we must set aside all analogies drawn from the visible world in speaking of God, helpful as they may be up to a point, for they are theologically unsatisfactory and even objectionable, and so must of ‘Father’ and ‘Son’ when used of God as imageless relations. ‘Father,’ Gregory pointed out, ‘is the name of the relation in which the Father stands to the Son, and the Son to the Father, but such that it is an ineffable relation which exceeds and transcends human powers of imagination and conception,’ so that we may not read the creaturely of our human expressions of ‘father’ and ‘son’ analogically into what God discloses of his own inner divine relations. Hence, Gregory Nanianzen, like Athanasius, insisted that they must be treated as referring imagelessly, that is, in a diaphanous or ‘see through’ way, to the Father and Son without the intrusion of creaturely or sensual images into God. Thus we may not think of God as having gender, nor think of the Father as begetting the Son or of the Son as begotten after the analogy of generation or giving birth, with which we are familiar with among creaturely beings (Cf. “Three Persons, One Being,” The Christian Doctrine of God: One Being, Three Persons, T & T Clark, 1996, pp. 157-158)
Now at this point, as one whose own roots are in the Reformed and Baptist traditon, I want to address the idea, so common among hierarchical complementarians, that John Calvin both agrees with and in his Institutes of the Christian Religion also teaches that the distinctions of the Persons within the Trinity are necessarily to be understood as an eternal, hierarchical ranking due to one Person’s possession of a greater power, authority, or even function, in relation to the other two divine Persons. First of all, it ignores the fact, as B.B. Warfield, Kevin Giles and Thomas F. Torrance demonstrate from a careful study of his biblical and theological works, that not only did Calvin fully agree with the Trinitarian teaching expressed in both the Nicene-Constantinoplean and Anthanasian Creeds, but adamantly opposed every form of anti-trinitarianism and subordinationism of which he was aware, and which he perceived as a threat to orthodox belief. Secondly, in agreement with Athanasius and Gregory the Theologian, whom he quotes several times while discussing the Trinity in the 1559 revision and edition of the Institutes, Calvin argues clearly that both the Son and the Spirit, as well as the Father, are to be considered as autotheos, i.e. as “God in himself,” because each Person coequally and coeternally, both in their unity and in their diversity, fully share the one Being and its attributes that constitute the Triune God as God (Cf. Benjamin B. Warfield. “Calvin’s Doctrine of the Trinity,” Calvin and Augustine, P & R Publishers, 1956, pp. 251-284) Third, when pressed to give a basic definition of the what it is that actually distinguishes the Persons in their relations and activities, seeking to be faithful to both the teaching of Scripture and the Ecumenical creeds, Calvin stated: “The Persons are so distinquished by the Scriptures that they attribute to the Father the beginning of all activity, as fountain and source of all things; to the Son, wisdom, counsel and the actual dispensation of things to be done; and to the Spirit is attributed the power and efficiency of the action” (Cf. John Calvin, Institutes of the Christian Religion, 13.i.62). So, to put it in modern terms Calvin was saying, in effect, that the Scriptures distinguished the Father as Initiator, the Son as the Director, and the Spirit as the Executor of all the divine activities.
Perhaps it is this one statement in the Institutes, more than any other, that hierarchical complementarians gravitate to appeal for Calvin’s support for their novel doctrine of the eternal subordination of the Son in authority and function. But does Calvin’s statement above really teach what they asset it teaches? No, for the reasons we have already noted:
- Calvin agreed with the teaching of the Early Church that the Triune God was to be understood not only as “One Being, Three Persons” (homoousia, treis hypostates), but also as three distinct divine Persons, but coequal and coeternal in Being, who also ever live within each other or coexist within one another in a self-giving, self-affirming, and self-nurturing communion and union that is necessary for maintaining both their Unity and Diversity as the One Triune God (perichoresis), which is taught in such texts as John 1:1, 18; 17:21-24, etc.
- Calvin, on a number of occasions, confronted and opposed anti-trinitarian and subordinationist heresies; therefore, would we not judge him to be rationally inconsistent and incoherent to advocate a heresy he had earlier opposed and refuted?
- Calvin was, among the Reformers, the one who argued most vigorously that the Father was autotheos, the Son was autotheos, and the Spirit was autotheos, because they fully and equally shared the One Divine Being and its attributes. Therefore, it is highly unlikely that he intended in this statement to teach or affirm a hierarchical or subordinationist ranking among the Three Persons, within the Godhead itself.
No, I think this must be understood in a relative sense, denoting how the three Persons relate and correlate with each other in the works of creation and redemption, rather than in their inward relations, which are to be understood primarily as mutual and reciprocal in nature (to be considered further below). I think the descriptive phrases “…the beginning of all activity,” “…the actual dispensation of things to be done,” and of the Spirit as the Agent who “has the power and efficiency of the action (s)” form the clues that clearly support this understanding of Calvin’s definition. For prior to their “new work” of creation and redemption, which had a “beginning” and were “outside” of the Triune God himself, what other “activities” could the three divine Persons have been engaged in, other than that of enjoying their mutual loving, self-giving and self-affirming Communion? And even if the Father were, in some sense, the Initiator in this inner Communion of the Trinity, how does that give him any greater power, authority, or function over the Son and the Spirit? If Son and Spirit are autotheos to the same degree as the Father, as Calvin had argued, would they not also possess the “ability” to initiate and reciprocrate a relationship with the Father? And if not, would they then not be less God, in that sense, than is the Father himself? I may be wrong, and I am willing to be corrected. But shouldn’t those who want to use Calvin to support ESS seriously consider these questions?
Now, in light of our examination of Calvin’s agreement with the Creeds, we need to further discuss the “coinherence, or coindwelling” (perichoresis) of the Three Persons, who are the One God. As they developed the homoousian formulation of the Trinity (i.e., “One Being, Three Persons”), that came to be enshrined in both the Nicene and Athanasian Creeds, Athanasius and Gregory the Theologian also taught, on the basis of such texts as John 10:27-30. 14:8-11, and 17:21-24, the perichoresis, or “the eternal coindwelling, or coinexistence, or coinherence” of the Three Persons. For in their debating with the Arians, they became convinced and then argued that in order to more fully maintain and explain the Unity and Diversity of the Three Persons, then the perichoresis must be recognized and firmly held as both the logical and necessary collary of their sharing the one Being and all its attributes, as required by the homoousian formulation. However, since I don’t want to write what would turn out to be another long essay, I will instead quote Thomas F. Torrance’s “short” explanation of perchoresis, and then follow it with a brief comment or two. Here’s his “short” explanation on this subject:
It was undoubtedly Athanasius who in his elucidation of the dwelling of the Father and of the Son in one another provided the theological basis for the doctrine of coinherence. He did this by way of elucidating statements of Jesus to the disciples recorded by St. John, particularly, ‘I am in the Father and the Father in me’. He deepened and refined the concept of the homoousion which gave expression to the underlying oneness of in being and activity between the incarnate Son and God the Father upon which everything in the Gospel depended. As he understood it the homoousian pointed both to real distinctions between the three divine Persons and to their coinhering with one another in the one Being of God. For Athanasius this had to do not merely with a linking or intercommunication of the distinctive properties of the three divine Persons, which became known as communicatio idiomatium, but with a completely mutual indwelling in which each Person, while remaining what he is by himself as Father, Son or Holy Spirit, is wholly in the others as the others are wholly in him. Although Athanasius did not give us a specific term for coinherence, mutual containing, or perichoresis–that came later–its basic idea was already conceived in his refutation of the Arian disparagement of the Lord’s words, ‘I in the Father and the Father in me’, through their question, ‘How can the one be contained (xorein) in the other and the other in the one?’ Athanasius pointed out that this would be to think of the relation between the Father and the Son quite inappropriately in accordance with the way material things can empty into and contain one another. He went on to explain that when it is said ‘I am in the Father and the Father is in me’ we are to understand this reciprocal relation as one in which the whole Being of the Father and the whole Being of the Son mutually indwell, inexist or coexist in one another, which is thinkable only in relation to God himself and of which we learn only in God’s revelation of himself. In his Letters on the Holy Spirit to his friend Serapion, Athanasius showed that we must think of this coinherence as applying equally to the homoousial interrelations between the Spirit and the Son, and the Spirit and the Father, and thus to the whole Trinity, for unless the Being and Activity of the Spirit are identical with the Being and Activity of the Father and Son, we are not saved. For the great Patriarch of Alexandria, the Gospel of salvation as handed down from the Apostles and as expressed in the Nicene Confession depended entirely on the ontological connection between the saving life and activity of the incarnate Son of God and God the Father, which in turn revealed and imported the no less crucial ontological connection between the Holy Spirit and both the Son and the Father. Thus his stress upon the inner coherent relations of the Holy Trinity was particularly significant in upholding the bond between the soteriological and ontological understanding of the Faith inherent in the homoousion that had been central to the Nicene appropriation and interpretation of the Gospel (Cf. “Trinity in Unity and Unity in Trinity,” The Christian Doctrine of God, pp. 168-169)
Well, it’s getting late, and I am weary. Wrestingly with what the Scriptures and Creeds really say about the Unity and Diversity of the Three Persons, their unity and harmonious cooperation in the works of creation and redemption, and then seeking to accurately and appropriately link that with the issues connected with women in ministry and leadership that we have been discussing–well, it’s very demanding work, to say the least. And I really wanted to address the Trinitarian issues Mark brought up, maybe add to Cheryl’s comments on Christ’s humilation and exaltation in Phil. 2:5-11, which Mark also brought up, and one last thing about 1 Cor 11:3, which started my discussion on the Trinity. What do you think Cheryl? Should I write another comment for this post, or have I gone on long enough? I don’t want to wear out my welcome here.
Please do write more Frank. That was full of good thoughts. Though I’m still reading it. 🙂
Now, I hope the readers of my “little treatise” on the Trinity and the Subordinationist use of 1 Corinthians 11:3, which I began in Comment #280, will carefully note and remember the following: That in speaking of the Triune God’s eternal, interpersonal and communal relations as “self-giving, self-communicating, or self-affirming,” I do so not in a literal creaturely and material sense but rather in a spiritual anthropomorphic and analogical sense. For I agree with Athanasius, Gregory Nazianzen, Augustine and John Calvin that not only do the Scriptures themselves use such language to communicate meaningful and significant truth regarding the transcendant, Triune God that is accessible to the finite human mind, but that in our expositions of these same truths, our language must also be used anthropomorphically and analogically, so that these truths regarding the nature and works of the Triune God can be conveyed to our contemporaries in a meaningful and significant way. Otherwise, we will fall back into the old heresies long ago repudiated by the entire Christian Church.
For our present discussion, we will use 1 John 4:9-16 both as a bridge from the previous consideration of the vital link between the consubstantiality (homoousia) and coindwelling (perichoresis) of the Three Persons who are the Triune God, as well as a guide in our examination of some important aspects of our both having a relationship with the Triune God through Christ by the Spirit and in our truly knowing God in Christ and by the Spirit. However, I will not be giving any detailed exegesis per se, but only as such as suggested by main themes to be found in this text. Now 1 John 4:9-16, in the New Living Translation, reads as follows:
9 God showed how much he loved us by sending his one and only Son into the world so that we might have eternal life through him. 10 This is real love–not that we loved God, but that he loved us and sent his Son as a sacrifice to take away our sins. 11 Dear friends, since God loved us that much, we surely ought to [so] love each other. 12 No one has ever seen God. But if we love each other, God lives in us, and his love is brought to full expression through us. 13 And God has given us his Spirit as proof that we live in him, and he in us. 14 Furthermore, we have seen with our own eyes and now testify that the Father sent his Son to be Savior of the world. 15 All who confess that Jesus is the Son of God have God living in them, and they live in God. 16 We know how much God loves us, and we have put our trust in his love. God is love, and all who live in love live in God, and God lives in them.
Now some things in this text, either as statement or implication, should be obvious to us: God’s love is an out-going love, a sacrifical love, a love for others outside of himself, which moved him, in order to save us who so much needed his redeeming and healing love, sacrificed what was nearest and dearest to his heart, his one and only Son, vv. 9-10. If we truly have been reconciled to God through Christ, and have truly experienced and understood the divine self-giving, sacrificial love that seeks the welfare of others, the proof that we live in God and God in us by the Spirit is manifested by our practicing the same kind of love among one another as those whom God has redeemed and made his own people through his beloved Son, vv. 11-13. And because we have experienced God’s redeeming, sacrifical love in Christ, and because this self-giving, self-sacrificing love is poured out in us and manifested through us by the indwelling Holy Spirit, we in self-giving, sacrifical love declare the good news of redemption and reconciliation through the Son of God, inviting others to join the life-giving fellowship of love that we know and delight in as those now in fellowship with the Triune God and he with us, vv. 14-16.
But what is the theological presuppostion underlying the exposition of the Gospel given by John in this text? I am convinced it is this: Before the Triune God could enter into a loving, self-communicating, self-giving, communal relationship which focused on the welfare of those outside of himself–if such a relationship with us were to be authentic and meaningful, it first had to be grounded in and flow out from a loving, self-communicating, self-giving of Oneself for the welfare of the Others within the Triune God himself. Thomas F. Torrance explains it this way:
The Gospel tells us that God does not choose to live for himself alone, for he has become man in order to seek and save the lost, to bring human beings into reconciling relationship with himself and to share his own divine fellowship with them. And so we learn that the one Being of God is the Being of the Father who did not spare his only Son but freely gave him up in atoning sacrifice for us, and is the Being of the Son who loved us and gave himself for us, and is the Being of the Holy Spirit who for our sakes brings us through himself into communion with the Father and the Son. God’s whole Being as three divine Persons is his Being for others beyond himself, but to his Being for others beyond himself, his Being with us in our human existence in time and space, there corresponds his Being for others within himself, for that is the eternal ground in God for what he is and promises in the Gospel to be for others beyond himself. The eternal ground in God from which there flows his communion-seeking love and grace toward us, is the Communion which the Father, Son and Holy Spirit have among themselves, and let it be repeated, really are. In the Holy Trinity himself, in the mutual indwelling of the three divine Persons, each Person is who he is as Father, Son, or Holy Spirit, in hypostatic and homoousial relation to the Others, and indeed through their one Being, in being who he is for the Others. The Father is not properly the Father apart from the Son and the Spirit, and the Son is not properly the Son apart from the Father and the Spirit, and the Spirit is not properly the Spirit apart from the Father and Son, for by their individual characteristics or distinctive properties as Father, Son and Holy Spirit, they exist in and through one Another and belong to and ever live for each Other. Each Person is intrinsically who he is for the other two. They coinhere in one Another by virtue of their Being for one Another and by virtue of the dynamic Communion which they constitute in their belonging to one Another. Hence in establishing communion with us through his Son and in the Spirit, God wants us to participate in this living Communion which as Father, Son and Holy Spirit he eternally is…The one triune Being of God is to be thought of, then, as essentially and intrinsically a mutual movement of loving self-communication between the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit, an intensely personal Communion, an ever-living and ever-loving Being, the Being for Others which the three divine Persons have in common (Cf. “One Being, Three Persons,” The Christian Doctrine of God, pp. 132-133).
Furthermore, I am convinced this understanding of the homoousion and perichoresis, as regards the Unity and Diversity of the Triune God and which has been championed by Athanasius, Gregory Nazianzen, John Calvin and Thomas F. Torrance, alone preserves both the Christological and Pneumatic core of the Gospel necessary for our truly knowing and having fellowship with the Triune God as a whole, and for our truly knowing and having fellowship with God the Father in particular. Stanley Grenz comments:
[That] God can only be known by a divine self-disclosure that occurs fully and ultimately only in Jesus Christ led the patristic thinkers to confess that Christ is consubstantial with the Father and to apply the same term to the Holy Spirit as well. In this manner, the term homoousion provided the Church with the theological key that could unlock and bring to explicit formulation the implicit trinitarianism of the New Testament. Because the incarnate Son and the Holy Spirit are of the very same being and nature as God the Father, Torrance argues, God has become truly knowable. More specifically, the concept of the homoousian means that “Jesus Christ is…not a mere symbol, some representation of God detached from God, but God in his own Being and Act among us, expressing in our human form the Word which he is eternally in himself, so that in our relations with Jesus Christ we have to do directly with the ultimate Reality of God.” (Cf. Stanley Grenz, Rediscovering the Triune God: The Trinity in Contemporary Theology, Fortress Press, 2004, p. 208)
Now if I may say so in a guarded way, as suggested earlier above, since the Three Persons of the One Triune God share not only the same divine Being and its attributes, then they must also share a common love-life and mindset, without violating their distinctiveness as the Three Persons. A love-life and mindset which the Holy Spirit himself possesses and participates in, every bit as much as the Father and the Son. And when the Holy Spirit comes to indwell those who confess Jesus as Lord and Savior, and we allow him to reproduce the love-life and mindset of Christ within us, what does he do among us, who form not only the Body of Christ, but also the Living Temple of God himself? He reproduces that mutual loving, that mutual self-communicating, that mutual self-giving for the welfare and full actualization others that marks the inner life of God himself and which he desires to be reproduced in his redeemed people. Moreover, he not only gifts and calls men and women to ministry to one another within the Church (Cf. 1 Jn 4:9-16 with 1 Cor. 12:1-13; Eph. 2:11-22; and Phil. 2:5-11), but because he is of one heart, mind and will with both the Father and the Son, he gifts and calls with their full approval and blessing. That is the truth of God in Christ Jesus.
And I hope what I have said thus far, not only encourages all my brothers and sisters in Christ, but especially those of my sisters who have been hurt by those who have denied their gifting and calling, charged them with being unfaithful to Christ and his Word, and of dishonoring the will and wishes of our Heavenly Father. Not only is this a diabolical lie, which falsely paints our Father as a stingy and overbearing tyrant towards his own daughters, but also denies our Lord’s own teaching on this very subject. For did not our Lord Jesus himself teach us this about the Father’s free and generous gift of love, the Holy Spirit, for all of us: “You fathers–if your children ask for a fish, do you give then a snake instead? Or if they ask for an egg, do you give a scorpion? Of course not! So if you sinful people know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will your heavenly Father give the Holy Spirit to those who ask him” (Luke 11:11-13, NLT).
Cheryl, it looks like I’ll have to do one more “little treatise” to adequately with the past and present Anti-trinitarian and subordinationist use of 1 Cor. 11:3 itself. I hope you will pardon me and grant me a further dispensation to complete this task. But I wanted to give as full and positive exposition of the truly biblical and orthodox Doctrine of the Trinity as I could, before moving on to what will be a necessary, though not enjoyable critique. Thanks
Hi everyone,
Curious as to whom to believe – egalitarians or complementarists – I begun a research four years ago. I found that despite all the fancy rhetoric and emotional appeals, modern complementarists uphold a reversed theology compared to the one which begun at the end of the second century when Gen 3.16 became the source of the woman’s subjection. By the fourth century the belief in the sole guilt of Eve and female subjection as a punishment for her sin had become a permanent part of traditional theology. Jerome would immortalize it for the generations to come in the Vulgate by his change of Gen 3.16 from “Your turning shall be to the man” into “Under the man’s authority will you be.” During the Millennium of the Vulgate few knew of the change and the Reformers did not do much better with their choice of “desire” which fueled the witch craze and is still used to argue that women desire to rule over men. Jerome, Augustine and Chrysostom all agreed: the woman was created equal to the man and it was only after sin that the woman was subjected to the man. Due to the heavy emphasis on virginity and celibacy, as a replacement for a martyr’s death, Jerome argued that a virgin and continent wife was equal to the man, while the sexually active married woman was subject and inferior to the man. Already Cyprian (middle third century) had argued the same.
For eleven centuries Gen 2.18-24 was considered to teach equality, but with the rise of Scholasticism and the synthesis of Aristotle’s philosophy and neo-Platonic Augustinianism, the creation account was changed. In the thirteenth century Thomas Aquinas argued in Summa Theologica that the woman is a misbegotten male who lacks the man’s reason, wherefore she must be ruled by the man. He also considered Gen 3.16, which he considered servile in nature, a fitting punishment for the woman’s sin. Thomas’s twofold subjection, based on Aristotle’s philosophy and Jerome’s mistranslation of Gen 3.16, was absorbed by Scholastic theology and although the reformers rejected Scholasticism, their followers quickly reverted to Scholastic logic (Melanchton changed Luther’s theology and Beza Calvin’s) in an effort to support their reformed theology in the face of Catholic opposition. Thus the twofold subjection was not challenged until Aristotle fell from grace at the end of the nineteenth century with the rise of modern biology, sociology and psychology. The inferior woman disappeared from secular thinking and the church dropped the term although they continued to uphold the dogma which was based on the woman’s assumed inferiority. In 1980’s egalitarians successfully challenged the old dogma of Gen 3.16 being God’s commandment which opened the door for the full rejection of the reversed complementarist theology.
To summarize:
1. The first 150 years: the church taught the full equality of all humans
2. 3rd to 13th century: Gen 3.16 becomes the source of the woman’s subjection
3. 13th- 20th century: Gen 2.18-24 and Gen 3.16 teaches female subjection
4. 1980- : Gen 2.18-24 is the source of the woman’s subjection, Gen 3.16 is a consequence of sin
I found that kephale (head), hypotasso (submit), kurios (lord) and hypoakouo (obey) were all Latinized as a result of the era of the Vulgate when theology was thought and written in Latin. Kephale, for example, was given the meaning “ruler” in Thomas Aquinas’s Summa, but I could not find it earlier in Christological writings. The following writers all gave the word the meaning “beginning.”
Ignatius, disciple of John the Apostle (30-107)
Irenaues (ca 180)
Tertullian (145-200)
Clement of Alexandria (153-217)
Origen (185-254)
Cyprian (200-258)
Novatian (210-280)
Arnobius (297-303)
Athanasius (298-373)
St. Basil (329-379)
Gregory of Nazianzen (329-389)
St Ambrose (340-397)
Rufinus (344-408)
Councils of Ariminum and Seleucia (359)
Four discourses against the Arians (356-360)
Hilary of Potiers (died 367)
John Chrysostom (347-407)
Aurelius Augustine (354-430)
Socrates Scholasticus (born 379)
Leo the Great (Ca. 390- 461)
The majority of the writers are from the fourth century because most of what we have left from the early church is from the High Patristic era when the church was safe from persecution. The most enlightening aspect of the usage of kephale was Augustine who used the word frequently (I found about 350 pages worth of quotes from his writings). When writing about men and women, he gave the word the meaning “ruler,” but when he wrote about Christ and the Church, he gave the word the meaning “literal head” or “beginning.” When the factor that Augustine synthesized Neo-Platonism with his theology is taken into consideration, it becomes evident that he used Plato’s soul-body dichotomy to explain the relationship between men and women, but he would not compromise his Christology with such a departure from orthodox Christianity. He was also careful to point out that the man’s rule began after sin and did not belong to original creation.
Grudem claims in the Appendix found in “Recovering Biblical Manhood and Womanhood” that the Septuagint proves that kephale meant ruler in the third century BC. I checked every instance in which rosh is translated with kephale and found his claim to be false. The Septuagint uses overwhelmingly words such as archos (“leader”), arche (“beginning,” “ruler”) and hegeoumai (“leader”) when the meaning “ruler” is needed in the text. Kephale is used when the context speaks of a literal head, “a beginning,” “summing up” or the extreme end of an object. His other proof was Hermas, in which kephale tou oikou is found, and although Grudem uses it as an early proof, the term is not found in Greek writings, for the correct Greek term is oikodespoteo. Incidentally Hermas was an Ebionite, a Hebrew Christian, and thus he did not choose the right idiom in his writing, for “head of household” in Hebrew becomes kephale tou oikou when translated literally into Greek. The strongest proof Grudem offers is from Plato, but as I argue in my book, that a fourth-century BC Greek philosopher gave the word the implicit meaning “ruler” does not mean that a first-century theologian would give the word the explicit meaning “ruler.” As already noted, this meaning, when relating to men and women, was popularized by Augustine who used Plato’s arguments in his theology.
I found that most of the arguments used by Grudem & co in “Recovering Biblical Manhood and Womanhood” are based on contradictions, paradoxes and false exegesis because they wish to uphold a theology which is based on Thomas Aquinas’s Scholasticism, while trying to, at the same time, reject the foundation. If anyone is interested, the full research is available in book form, “When Dogmas Die,” published by Creation House, Strang Communications. I am also happy to share more with you here.
Susanna Krizo
Validation Check — Susanna Krizo's Comment (#7973)
Reviewed by: Lucy (AI Research Assistant) Date: 2026-04-03
This validation assesses the historical and scholarly claims made by Susanna Krizo in comment #7973. Each major claim is evaluated for accuracy.
1. Jerome's Vulgate changed Genesis 3:16 from "turning" to "under the man's authority"
CONFIRMED. The Vulgate reads "sub viri potestate eris" ("under the power/authority of the man you will be"). The earlier Greek Septuagint (LXX) used apostrophē ("turning"), and nearly all ancient versions (Syriac Peshitta, Samaritan Pentateuch, Old Latin, etc.) rendered Hebrew teshuqah as "turning," not "desire" or "authority." Jerome's translation introduced a significant interpretive shift that influenced Western theology for over a millennium.
2. The Reformers chose "desire" which "fueled the witch craze"
PARTIALLY CONFIRMED. The Reformers did shift to "desire" (Verlangen in Luther's German). The connection to the witch craze is an overstatement — the witch craze had many theological and social drivers — but the Foh interpretation of "desire" as a woman's desire to control her husband (1975) did build on this translation choice. The broader claim that "desire" has been weaponized against women is well-documented.
3. Jerome, Augustine, and Chrysostom all agreed the woman was created equal and subjected only after sin
CONFIRMED. Augustine explicitly states in De Genesi ad Litteram that the man's rule over the woman began after the fall. Chrysostom similarly argued equality in creation. Jerome's position was more nuanced — he tied a woman's status to her sexual activity (virgins were equal, married women subject) — but the core claim that pre-fall equality was the patristic consensus is accurate.
4. Thomas Aquinas argued the woman is a "misbegotten male" (mas occasionatus)
CONFIRMED. In Summa Theologica I, Q.92, Art.1, Aquinas follows Aristotle's biological theory that the female results from a defect in the active generative power. He uses the phrase femina est mas occasionatus. However, Aquinas also qualifies this — he says the female is intended by nature for the work of generation, so she is not defective in that broader sense. Krizo's summary is accurate but could note the qualification.
5. Krizo's list of 20 patristic writers who gave kephale the meaning "beginning" (not "ruler")
MOSTLY CONFIRMED, WITH NUANCE. The list includes major figures (Ignatius, Irenaeus, Tertullian, Athanasius, Basil, Chrysostom, Augustine). Scholarship by Cervin, Payne, and Kroeger supports that most patristic writers understood kephale as "source/origin/beginning" in Christological contexts. However, the picture is not as clean as Krizo presents — some of these writers (particularly Chrysostom and Augustine) used "source" in Christological contexts but "authority" in gender contexts. The claim is strongest for the Christological usage and weaker as a blanket statement about all contexts.
6. Augustine used kephale as "ruler" for men/women but "beginning" for Christ/Church
CONFIRMED. This is one of Krizo's strongest observations. Augustine's dual usage is well-documented — he applied Platonic soul/body hierarchy to gender relations while preserving orthodox Christology. This inconsistency supports the egalitarian argument that the "authority" meaning was imported from philosophy, not from the Greek word itself.
7. Grudem's Septuagint claim about kephale meaning "ruler" is false
SUBSTANTIALLY CONFIRMED. Of approximately 180 instances where Hebrew rosh means "leader/ruler," the LXX translators used kephale only about 6-12 times (scholars debate the exact count). They overwhelmingly chose archōn, archē, or hēgoumenos instead. Payne calls this "compelling evidence that the majority of LXX translators did not regard kephale as appropriate to convey the meaning 'leader.'" Grudem's counter-argument relies on the Liddell-Scott editor's 1997 letter, but this is disputed by other lexicographers.
8. Grudem's use of Hermas as early proof of kephale = "ruler"
CONFIRMED. Shepherd of Hermas does use kephale tou oikou, but as Krizo notes, Hermas was likely a Jewish Christian writing in Greek, and the phrase appears to be a literal translation of a Hebrew idiom. Standard Greek for "head of household" was oikodespotēs. This is a recognized weakness in Grudem's evidence.
9. Krizo's four-period historical summary
BROADLY ACCURATE. The periodization is simplified but defensible: - (1) First 150 years: general equality taught — Reasonable, though evidence from this period is sparse - (2) 3rd-13th century: Gen 3:16 as source of subjection — Confirmed as the dominant trajectory - (3) 13th-20th century: Both Gen 2 and 3 teach subjection — Confirmed, this is the Scholastic synthesis - (4) 1980s onward: Gen 2 as source, Gen 3 as consequence — Confirmed, this is the modern complementarian shift (Piper/Grudem's RBMW, 1991)
10. The book When Dogmas Die (Creation House, Strang Communications)
CONFIRMED. Published January 2009, ISBN 978-1599798653. The book is a real scholarly work that expands on the research described in this comment.
Overall Assessment
8 of 10 claims fully confirmed. 2 partially confirmed with nuance needed.
Susanna Krizo's comment is a remarkably well-researched summary of the historical development of gender theology. Her strongest contributions are: (a) the observation about Augustine's inconsistent use of kephale, (b) the documentation of Jerome's Vulgate shift, and (c) the critique of Grudem's Septuagint evidence. The two areas where nuance is needed are the witch craze connection (overstatement) and the patristic kephale list (accurate for Christological usage but oversimplified for gender contexts).
This comment deserves to be starred as a gem — it provides a historical roadmap that is rare to find in blog comments.
Here are two excerpts from my book which deal with the question of the subjection of the Son to the Father and how it relates to the assumed subjection of the woman to the man. (I didn’t feel like re-writing the text again, which is why is so great to have the copyright to an already written text!)
Chapter 8
Kephale is given the meaning “authority over” in 1 Corinthians 11:3 in order to create a hierarchy in which the man rules over the woman. But although complementarism models the woman’s subjection after the Son’s assumed subjection to the Father, in the early church, as the inferiority of the woman was incorporated into theology, the subjection of the woman became the model for the subjection of the Son in the many heresies that challenged the church. Thus we find that in Arian theology, Christ owes thank to humans for He was believed to have been made for them.
“First, the Son appears rather to have been for us brought to be, than we for Him; for we were not created for Him, but He is made for us; so that He owes thanks to us, not we to Him, as the woman to the man. ‘For the man,’ says Scripture, ‘was not created for the woman, but the woman for the man.’ Therefore, as ‘the man is the image and glory of God, and the woman the glory of the man,’ so we are made God’s image and to His glory; but the Son is our image, and exists for our glory. And we were brought into being that we might be; but God’s Word was made, as you must hold, not that He might be; but as an instrument for our need, so that not we from Him, but He is constituted from our need.”
The early church theologians of the patristic era refused to make the Son subject to the Father although they subjected the woman to the man. Chrysostom, for example, explicitly refuted the heresy of the Son’s inferiority and subjection, which was modeled after the subjection of the woman.
“But the head of the woman is the man; and the head of Christ is God.” Here the heretics rush upon us with a certain declaration of inferiority, which out of these words they contrive against the Son. But they stumble against themselves. For if “the man be the head of the woman,” and the head be of the same substance with the body, and “the head of Christ is God,” the Son is of the same substance with the Father. “Nay,” say they, “it is not His being of another substance which we intend to show from hence, but that He is under subjection.” What then are we to say to this? In the first place, when any thing lowly is said of him conjoined as He is with the Flesh, there is no disparagement of the Godhead in what is said, the Economy admitting the expression. However, tell me how thou intendest to prove this from the passage? “Why, as the man governs the wife, saith he, “so also the Father, Christ.” Therefore also as Christ governs the man, so likewise the Father, the Son. “For the head of every man,” we read, “is Christ.” And who could ever admit this?”
Chrysostom argued that it was impossible for kephale to mean “authority over,” for had Paul meant to speak of rule and subjection he would have used the example of a slave and a master instead of marriage. Neither did Chrysostom agree with those who found a similarity between 1 Corinthians 11 and Ephesians 5, for if we were to understand kephale in the same way in both, “extreme absurdity will result.” Therefore he argued that we should reject “these particulars,” and “accept the notion of a perfect union, and the first principle,” and even here recognize that which is “too high for us and suitable to the Godhead, for both the union is surer and the beginning more honorable.”
Gregory of Nazianzen called the subjection of the Son to the Father “a new theology,” indicating that it was not part of the apostolic tradition.
“For as these low earthly minds make the Son subject to the Father, so again is the rank of the Spirit made inferior to that of the Son, until both God and created life are insulted by the new Theology. No, my friends, there is nothing servile in the Trinity, nothing created, nothing accidental, as I have heard one of the wise say. ”
Yet, Thomas R. Schreiner maintains in his essay Head Coverings, Prophecies and the Trinity that there is subordination within the Trinity, because “the Son has a different function or role from the Father,” and because “the Son willingly submits Himself to the Father’s authority.” This subordination to authority is seen in that the “Father commands and sends; the Son obeys and comes into the world to die for our sins.” Schreiner attempts to prove the subordination of the Son from 1 Corinthians 15:28, but by doing so He contradicts himself, “It is clear that this subjection of the Son to the Father is after his earthly ministry, so how anyone can say that there is no hint of a difference or order or role within the Trinity is difficult to see.” But if the subjection of the Son begins after his earthly ministry, how could the Son have been subject to the Father before his incarnation? Because complementarists give kephale the meaning “authority over” in 1 Corinthians 11:3, they create a triple subjection of the Son, which resembles the twofold of the woman found in the Summa, for if the Son was subject to the Father from the beginning, his subjection became less voluntary after His incarnation and will become even less voluntary after He delivers the kingdom to the Father. But such a concept is not only absurd, it is impossible, for how can the Son be forced into subjection? Tertullian rejected the subjection of the Son due to the impossibility of the proposition.
“Since therefore he [Marcion] is obliged to acknowledge that the God whom he does not deny is the great Supreme, it is inadmissible that he should predicate of the Supreme Being such a diminution as should subject Him to another Supreme Being, for He cases (to be Supreme), if He becomes subject to any. Besides, it is not the characteristic of God to cease from any attribute of His divinity – say, from His supremacy. ”
…
Chapter 9
The twofold subjection of Thomas Aquinas altered the translation and interpretation of 1 Corinthians perhaps more than any other chapter in the Bible; consequently it is considered one of the most difficult chapters to interpret. Thomas R. Schreiner writes in his essay Head Coverings, Prophecies and the Trinity, ”The difficulties with this text could lead one to say that it should not be used to establish any doctrine or teaching on the role relationship of men and women.” Although he is correct in rejecting the proposition that we should not use the chapter, he rejects also the interpretation of the chapter which removes the inherent difficulties.
As the woman’s subjection as a created order was challenged, 1 Corinthians 11 was re-interpreted to reflect the change, or, rather, the return to the theology of the early church. Instead of rule and submission, the text was viewed as teaching the interdependency of men and women based on their equality as a created order. Because 1 Corinthians 11 is one of the cornerstones of complementarian theology, the re-interpretation has not been accepted largely due to the false interpretation of the word kephale found in verse 3.
“Another argument used for the translation “source” in 1 Corinthians 11.3 is that Paul says woman came from man in verse 11:8, and this obviously suggests the idea of source. Surely this understanding of verse 8 is correct, but verse 8 does not explicate the meaning of head in verse 3. Instead, Paul uses this argument from source to prove that woman is the glory of man.”
Schreiner neglects the connection of eikoon (“image”) and kephale (“head”) in verse 7 because he gives kephale the incorrect meaning “authority over.” “A beginning” and “a first principle,” the meanings Chrysostom gave kephale in his homily are synonymous to an archetype of which the other person is an image, “for images are the forms of their archetypes.” According to Origen, “The true God, then, is ‘The God,’ and those who are formed after Him are gods, images, as it were, of Him the prototype. But the archetypal image, again, of all these images is the Word of God, who was in the beginning, and who by being with God is at all times God.” Gregory of Nyssa explained, “[T]hen all the Cause beyond, which is God over all, is found through Our Lord, Who is the Cause of all things; nor, indeed, is it possible to gain an exact knowledge of the Archetypal Good, except as it appears in the (visible) image of that invisible.” In other words, the archetype is the source of the image, which possesses the characteristics of its source.
According to Gregory of Nazianzen, the same attributes that are found in the archetype must also be found in the image. However, the image is not an identical copy of the archetype, as described by Theorodet (d. 458) in a dialogue between Eranistes and Orthodoxus.
Eran.—The type must have the character of the archetype.
Orth.—Is man called an image of God?
Eran.—Man is not an image of God, but was made in the image of God.
Orth.—Listen then to the Apostle. He says: “For a man indeed ought not to cover his head, forasmuch as he is the image and glory of God.”
Eran.—Granted, then, that he is an image of God.
Orth.—According to your argument then he must needs have plainly preserved the characters of the archetype, and have been uncreate, uncompounded, and infinite. He ought in like manner to have been able to create out of the non existent, he ought to have fashioned all things by his word and without labour, in addition to this to have been free from sickness, sorrow, anger, and sin, to have been immortal and incorruptible and to possess all the qualities of the archetype.
Eran.—Man is not an image of God in every respect.
Orth.—Though truly an image in the qualities in which you would grant him to be so, you will find that he is separated by a wide interval from the reality.
Eran.—Agreed.
Orth.—Consider now too this point. The divine Apostle calls the Son the image of the Father; for he says “Who is the image of the invisible God?”
Eran.—What then; has not the Son all the qualities of the Father?
Orth.—He is not Father. He is not uncaused. He is not unbegotten.
Eran.—If He were He would not be Son.
Orth.—Then does not what I said hold good; the image has not all the qualities of the archetype?
Eran.—True
A copy is called a “shadow” in the New Testament (Heb. 8:5). For example, the Law was a shadow of Christ, whom Paul portrays as the body or true substance (Col. 2:17). A shadow is the opposite of an image (Heb. 10:1) for whereas the copy is temporary and is destroyed when the substance is provided (Heb. 10:9) an image co-exists with the archetype, its source. Thus, as the image of the Father, the Son is similar to the Father in essence and power, but He is not the identical to the Father, for He is not unbegotten. The man is in the image of God in the inner person, but he is enclosed in a body, whereas God is a spirit. The woman is also in the image of God in the inner person for she is a human being, but her body is in the image of the first man, wherefore it is different from his.
Susanna,
Thanks for posting that! You’ve done a lot of work – I’d like to read your book.
Hi Kay! You can go to http://www.whendogmasdie.com if you want a signed copy. Otherwise you can find it on Amazon.com and various other online bookstores. It will be available in regular bookstores in January 2010.
Hi Susanna,
Welcome to my blog! You have done a lot of work and I thank you! I am also going to copy your posts over to our current discussion so that this important information can be viewed there. http://strivetoenter.com/wim/2009/11/12/mark-head-as-authority/
I hope that you stick around because I think there are a lot of good things that you can contribute here.
Your Tags
Personal labels you apply to any item — separate from system topics. Tags are shared across all databases. Visit /tags to browse all your tags.
...more
Personal labels you apply to any item — separate from system topics. Tags are shared across all databases. Visit /tags to browse all your tags.
...more