November Article
A
Woman's Contribution to the Local Church
by Gary Henry
c/o 2011 Folsom Point church of Christ
Timothy,
whose mother and grandmother taught him well, is not the only Christian
whose
life has been shaped by godly women. There is likely not a person who
is strong
in the Lord and effective in his work who does not owe profound
gratitude to
several women for the role they have played in his or her spiritual
development. It would be hard to overestimate the contribution that
women make
to the local congregation. Since their special endowments suit them for
important work, women are not merely useful to the Lord's work, they
are
absolutely critical.
Paul's remarks
about Phoebe are instructive. He wrote to the church in Rome: "I commend to you Phoebe our sister,
who is a servant
of the church in Cenchrea, that you may receive her in the Lord in a
manner
worthy of the saints, and assist her in whatever business she has need
of you;
for indeed she has been a helper of many and of myself also" (Rom.
16:1-2). He does not specify what kind of service Phoebe was rendering,
but
Paul's language clearly shows that this sister was doing things in the
Lord's
work that amounted to far more than a token contribution. She is
described as
a "servant of the church in
Cenchrea."
Paul said that she had been "a
helper of many
and of myself also." Her
work was important enough that Paul
instructed the church in Rome to assist her in whatever way she had
need while
she was there. This passage alone is enough to teach us that there is
ample
scope within the Lord's work for women to serve in deeply significant
ways.
Benevolence. Seeing to
the needs of
those brethren who are sick, those who are impoverished, etc. is not
just work
for women. The words of God direct us in these efforts.
The Lord's people, men no less than women,
need to do more than we sometimes do to help meet physical needs among
the
saints (Jas. 2:14-16; 1 Jn. 3:17,18). There can be no question,
however, that
sisters in the Lord are capable of bringing to this important work a
grace and
a beauty that men are normally not capable of. Certainly, the women who
waited
upon the physical needs of the Lord himself (Matt. 27:55; Lk.8:3) added
a touch
of grace that his male disciples were hardly able to supply. Being a
disciple
of the Lord means putting ourselves on the line for those who need us
(Jn.
13:12-17), and the unique at-tributes of femininity make the work of
benevolence far more heartening than it would be without them.
Edification. Numerous
passages speak
of our need, whether men or women, to encourage and strengthen our
fellow
saints. The specifics will vary depending on whether it is a man or a
woman
doing the edifying, but I believe instructions like the following have
important implications for the spiritual work of women as well as men: "bear one another's burdens, and so
fulfill the law of Christ"
(Gal. 6:2); "comfort each
other and edify one
another" (1 Thess. 5:11); "comfort
the fainthearted, uphold the weak" (1 Thess. 5:14).
This writer can personally testify to the powerful and unique ability
of
sisters in the Lord to encourage. Time and again in my life I have been
the
beneficiary of words and actions of edification that have come from
women among
the Lord's people. I do not doubt that, as a gospel preacher, my
survival
spiritually and my continuation as a preacher is largely the result of
strength
imparted to me by sisters who knew exactly what to say and how to say
it. In
the "hospital for souls" that is the local congregation, we
desperately need what women can do to bind up wounds and lift spirits.
Especially in a day when personal crises, difficulties in
relationships,
emotional problems, and family breakdowns are so widespread, the gift
of
encouragement that God has made women able to give is essential.
There is a special need for women to see themselves as teachers of
other women and
of young people. We have already mentioned the impact on Timothy's life
of his
mother's and his grandmother's teaching. The Scriptures also indicate
that
older women are to teach younger women: "the
older women likewise, that they be reverent in behavior, not
slanderers, not
given to much wine, teachers of good things, that they admonish the
young women
to love their husbands, to love their children, to be discreet, chaste,
homemakers, good, obedient to their own husbands, that the word of God
may not
be blasphemed" (Tit. 2:3-5). As the family unit in society
continues to deteriorate and the teaching network of the extended
family is
lost, I believe there will be all the more need for spiritually mature
women in
congregations to assume the role of edifiers and teachers of the wisdom
that
used to be passed down by parents and grandparents. Without this
womanly wisdom
about the basic business of living life, our congregational work is
seriously
hindered.
Evangelism. Not only are
women
capable of being edifiers, it is possible for them to play an important
role in
evangelism, the work of teaching those who have not yet obeyed the
gospel. The
realm of personal evangelism contains many opportunities for women to
plant the
seed of the gospel in the hearts of those who are lost. We are told
that
both Aquila and Priscilla were involved in teaching Apollos the way of
God more
perfectly (Acts 18:26). In more than one place, Paul speaks of women
who were
fellow workers in the gospel (Rom. 16:3,6,12; etc.). Of Euodia and
Syntyche, he
said, "Help these women who
labored with me in
the gospel, with Clement also, and the rest of my fellow workers, whose
names
are in the Book of Life" (Phil. 4:3).
The scriptural limitations on the teaching work of women (1 Tim. 2:12;
etc.)
should never be thought of as barring women from any participation in
the work
of rescuing lost souls. Indeed, there are times when individuals can be
won to
the Lord by the efforts of a woman when it is not likely they could be
won any
other way. Women who have both a deep love for the Lord and a skilled
understanding of the Scriptures are powerful forces in the work of
evangelism.
We need more women who will accept the challenge of doing all they can
do,
uniquely as women, to win the world to Christ. The imperative of the
Great
Commission applies not just to men, but to all the saints of God.
To conclude, there is much that women can do to invest themselves in
the work
of the local church. The very act of praying for the work is no small
thing.
Beyond that, there is a wide range of specific activities by which
women,
without at all stepping beyond scriptural boundaries, may contribute to
the
benevolence, edification, and evangelism that their fellow Christians
are
engaged in. Every single member of the body has the duty to "adorn the
doctrine of God" (Tit. 2:10). It is not too much to say, considering
the
high gifts granted by God to women, that the gospel is never adorned
any more
beautifully than when women of the Lord love and work and serve
faithfully in
his work.
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