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Martyred for the Gospel

Martyred for the Gospel
The burning of Tharchbishop of Cant. D. Tho. Cranmer in the town dich at Oxford, with his hand first thrust into the fyre, wherwith he subscribed before. [Click on the picture to see Cranmer's last words.]

Daily Bible Verse

Saturday, September 27, 2025

Should Women Be Ordained to the Office of Deacon?

 

In addition to these elements of liberty, which particularly concern us in our individual lives, Christian liberty includes liberty of conscience in the face of tyrannical ecclesiastical organizations.  Some years ago a young man presented himself to a Presbytery for ordination.  As he was known to believe that the boards and agencies of that church were infiltrated with modernism, he was asked if he would support the boards regardless of what they did.  When the young man declined to make any such blind promise, the Presbytery refused to ordain him.  

Dr. Gordon H. Clark.  Essays on Ethics and Politics.  John Robbins, ed.  (Jefferson:  Trinity Foundation, 1992).  P. 21.

 

 

Should Women Be Ordained to the Church Office of Deacon?  A Response to the ARP

 

The Reformed view of Scripture is that Scripture and Scripture alone is the final authority in all matters of faith, practice and controversy in the local church or session, the presbytery, and the general assembly.  It is easy to prove this by the fact that the Westminster Confession of Faith says so in the very first chapter:

 

WCF 1.8  The Old Testament in Hebrew (which was the native language of the people of God of old), and the New Testament in Greek (which, at the time of the writing of it was most generally known to the nations), being immediately inspired by God, and, by His singular care and providence, kept pure in all ages, are therefore authentical; so as, in all controversies of religion, the Church is finally to appeal unto them. But, because these original tongues are not known to all the people of God, who have right unto and interest in the Scriptures, and are commanded, in the fear of God, to read and search them, therefore they are to be translated into the vulgar language of every nation unto which they come, that the Word of God dwelling plentifully in all, they may worship Him in an acceptable manner; and, through patience and comfort of the Scriptures, may have hope. (WCF 1:8 WCS)

WCF 1.9  The infallible rule of interpretation of Scripture is the Scripture itself: and therefore, when there is a question about the true and full sense of any Scripture (which is not manifold, but one), it must be searched and known by other places that speak more clearly.

WCF 1.10  The supreme Judge, by which all controversies of religion are to be determined, and all decrees of councils, opinions of ancient writers, doctrines of men, and private spirits, are to be examined, and in whose sentence we are to rest, can be no other but the Holy Spirit speaking in the Scripture.

 (WCF 1:9-10 WCS)  [See:  Westminster Confession of Faith, Chapter 1].

In a recent inquirers class which I attended, the lead pastor or teaching elder, Dr. Neil Stewart, told me in a private conversation that he agreed with me that women should not be ordained as deacons.  That being said, he claimed that the other side has convincing arguments, and that they would win the debate with me should I try to argue with them.  I would like to accept that challenge.  To Dr. Stewart, I challenge him to prove me wrong or produce someone else who can prove me wrong when I say that the Bible unequivocally denies the ordination of women to any church office whatsoever, including the of office deacon.

I am aware that there are differences of opinion among various denominations on the issue.  However, denominations and opinions are irrelevant when they are not the final authority.  The first thing that I notice is that everyone has a different opinion in defining the office of a deacon.  The argument from the other side that women should be ordained as deacons leans heavily into equivocation on the definitions of various church offices.  Their other arguments depend on bad biblical exegesis and the highly controversial “science” of textual criticism.  The principle of the analogy of faith, however, requires that the plain passages of Scripture must prevail over arguments from silence and tendentious arguments which assert the consequent in the premise.

This discussion will be brief but to the point.  Additionally, I will respond to an article posted by Thomas Schreiner at the Gospel Coalition.  The article can be read here:  Does the Bible Support Female Deacons? Yes.  You might ask, why does it matter?  That answer to that question should be obvious.  However, since some will say it is not obvious I will state the issue clearly.  All of the doctrines of the Bible fit together in harmony.  There are no contradictions in the Bible because God is Logic (John 1:1).  Does God breathe out irrational propositions that do not agree with other propositions in the Bible?  Does God breathe out confusion in the Bible?  The Bible is the written word of God.  Once we begin to question one principle of the Scriptures, the rest begins to collapse as well.  Liberal activists infiltrate conservative churches with an agenda.  Their mode of operation is called utilitarianism.  The end justifies the means.  These activists have no problem with outright lying, equivocation, dissimulation or relativism.  Their agenda is to muddy the waters so that once they have a foothold a further compromise can be gained.  Often this takes several generations to take hold.  Even in the Bible we see a cycle of good kings and bad kings in the nation of Israel.  (See 1 & 2 Kings and 1 & 2 Chronicles KJV). 

Many mainline Reformed denominations have gone liberal for good reason.  Once a seed is planted that produces bad fruit, it later produces a harvest of entirely bad fruit.  I grew up in Florida.  To illustrate this point from an agricultural point of view, citrus groves and cattle ranches are an important part of the Florida economy.  When citrus canker infects an orange grove the entire grove must be pulled up by the roots, and the trees must be burned to prevent the spread of the disease to other citrus groves.  A few years ago, there was a scare about mad cow disease that infects the brains of bovines.  Once a herd is infected the entire herd has to be quarantined and put down to prevent the spread of the disease.  Obviously, that approach does not work with Evangelical and Reformed churches and denominations.  That being said, we must take a stand when compromise enters a local session or congregation.  Once the disease takes hold in one session or presbytery, the next thing is that the entire denomination or general assembly is infected with the divisive heresy.  As the Scripture says, a little leaven leavens the whole lump.  (1 Corinthians 5:5-6; Galatians 5:7-9 KJV).

My first point will be to define the office of a deacon as it is defined in the Bible.  There are those who will argue that the deacon is not a teaching office or an office that asserts authority over men.  But the biblical evidence for that argument is weak at best and based on asserting the consequent at worst.  According to the apostle Paul, the qualifications for the office of an elder and a deacon are exactly the same qualifications regarding the biological gender of the person taking the office:

A bishop then must be blameless, the husband of one wife . . .  (1 Tim. 3:2 KJV) 

Let the deacons be the husbands of one wife . . .  (1 Tim. 3:12 KJV)

According to the principle of the plain text of Scripture being the primary source of biblical authority and interpretation of the text, then it should be obvious to everyone that however we define the offices of elder and deacon, both offices require male leadership as the qualification.  However, the naysayers, in this case Thomas Schreiner, try to flip the script and proclaim the exact opposite using obscure biblical references and a questionable exegesis of 1 Timothy 3:1-15.

I will skip over the definition of a teaching elder since that is not in dispute here.  Teaching elders must be apt to teach and preach the word of God.  There is another issue here that I cannot delve into in this discussion.  That issue is the presbyterian church office of “ruling” elder.  I see no such office mentioned in the text.  Of course, the dispute over different kinds of church polity or church government.  The most basic forms of church polity are congregational, associational, presbyterial, and episcopal.  I am committed to the presbyterian form of church government as it is expressed in the Westminster Standards:  The Westminster Confession of Faith, the Larger Catechism, and the Shorter Catechism.  That being said, church officers, presbyters and synods can and often do err:

WCF 31.4  All synods or councils, since the Apostles' times, whether general or particular, may err; and many have erred. Therefore they are not to be made the rule of faith, or practice; but to be used as a help in both. (WCF 31:4 WCS)  [Westminster Confession, Chapter 31].

What exactly is the office of a deacon according to the Holy Scriptures.  The definition of the office of deacon cannot be divorced from the very first appointment of deacons in the church after the inauguration of the New Testament church on the day of Pentecost.  After Jesus ascended into heaven on the fortieth day after His resurrection, the disciples and the apostles gathered in the upper room to choose another apostle to replace Judas Iscariot and to discuss the promise given by Jesus.  (Acts 1:1-4, 8-15).  Ten days later on the day of Pentecost the Holy Spirit came to empower the New Testament church to be witnesses of Him (Acts 1:8; 2:1-42).  The first thing that happened after Peter’s sermon was that 3,000 of the Jews gathered for the feast of booths on the day of Pentecost were converted by the Holy Spirit, baptized by water, and added to the church (Acts 2:41).  The next thing that happened is that those who gladly received the message of the Gospel continued hearing the Old Testament Scriptures preached and taught in conjunction with the breaking of bread or the sacrament of the Lord’s supper or the table of the Lord.  (Luke 24:27; Acts 2:14-36; Acts 2:35, 42).  The text here does not say who administered the two sacraments of baptism and the Lord’s supper.  However, we can infer from the evidence that the apostles administered both and that due to the huge numbers of persons—namely 3,000 new converts—that there must have been some delegation of the administration to the other disciples and the lesser apostles.  There is no mention of women being involved in the administration of either of the two sacraments here.

The next problem for those who advocate for women being ordained to the office of the diaconate is that the very first ordination service of deacons exactly specifies who was chosen to be deacons:

Wherefore, brethren, look ye out among you seven men of honest report, full of the Holy Ghost and wisdom, whom we may appoint over this business. 4 But we will give ourselves continually to prayer, and to the ministry of the word. 5 And the saying pleased the whole multitude: and they chose Stephen, a man full of faith and of the Holy Ghost, and Philip, and Prochorus, and Nicanor, and Timon, and Parmenas, and Nicolas a proselyte of Antioch: 6 Whom they set before the apostles: and when they had prayed, they laid their hands on them. (Acts 6:3-6 KJV)

One would think that if the apostles had intended to ordain women as deacons of any kind whatsoever that we would see a prescription for the ordination of women deacons in the Scriptures.  But we see none of that and for good reason.  There were no women ordained to the diaconate in the New Testament church as recorded in Scripture.  Of course, this is an argument from silence, according to the other side.

Thomas Schreiner, for example says:

. . .  another argument in support of female deacons is from silence, but it’s an important one. The argument goes like this: If the reference is to the wives of deacons, why does Paul omit a reference to the wives of elders, particularly since elders exercise pastoral oversight and overall leadership in the church? It would seem the character of the wives of elders would be even more important than the wives of deacons—and thus focusing on the wives of deacons, but not on the wives of elders, is strange. Yet if the reference is to female deacons, we have an elegant explanation for why the wives of elders aren’t mentioned—for the wives of deacons aren’t included either. In other words, Paul isn’t referring to wives at all, but to female deacons.  (Does the Bible Support Female Deacons? Yes).

Although this paper is not about Bible translations or the reasoned eclecticism approach to textual criticism, the thrust of Schreiner’s argument for the ordination of women to the office of deacon is derived from the New International Version of the Bible:

The issue is addressed directly in only two verses (Rom. 16:1; 1 Tim. 3:11), and the meaning of both is disputed. The disagreement surfaces in English translations. Romans 16:1 in the NIV reads, “I commend to you our sister Phoebe, a deacon of the church in Cenchreae.” The CSB translates the same verse, “I commend to you our sister Phoebe, who is a servant of the church in Cenchreae.” (Ibid.).

The other argument that Schreiner proposes is based the fact that the Greek verse leaves out the pronoun that the women were the wives of the deacons, but this is assumed from the both the text and the fact that in the Scriptures there is not a single instance of females being ordained or having hands laid upon them in an ordination service as noted above in Acts 6:3-6.  It is an historical fact that Schreiner’s position has never been taken by any of the Reformed denominations prior to recent times when the cultural accommodation of the liberals had infiltrated mainline Reformed denominations in the 20th century.  The only exception that I was able to find was the Reformed Presbyterian Church of North America, which affirmed women as deacons in 1888 according to Bryan Schneider at the Gentle Reformation blog.  (Women and the Deacon’s Office).  According to the history given by Schneider, one activist congregation decided to push the issue by ordaining one single woman to the office of the diaconate.  ( See:  An Extremely Brief History).

As stated by the late Dr. Gordon H. Clark, the issue of ordination of women to the office of deacons is that it is an issue of women being in authority over men in the church:

To quote, the Form of Government, V, 5 says, “The formal steps by which a young man becomes an ordained minister....” It does not say “a young person,” and it does not say “a young man or woman.” Since even a few years ago, no one advocated the ordination of women, this reference to a man rather than a woman was neither emphasized nor repeated. At V, 8, the Form of Government simply says, “The qualifications of both teaching elders and ruling elders....” “Laymen, ordained to the eldership” is another phrase. It is also said that these elders have “a certain ruling or governing authority.” The section on deacons is not so explicit. Had women been envisioned as possible candidates it would have had to be explicit. The Report takes the position that Scripture allows the ordination of women as deacons but prohibits their ordination as elders. If this were the Reformed Presbyterian position, the Form of Government would have had to state the difference explicitly, clearly, and emphatically. It does not do so. What is explicitly said is, “The minister shall then propound to the elder- or deacon-elect the following questions: See Section 3 of this chapter.”

Thus, pastors, elders, and deacons all take the same vows, with the one exception that pastors assent to question 8; while other ministers-not pastors, elders, and deacons-assent to question 9. None of these nine vows explicitly mentions authority to teach. But if this authority is assumed for an elder, it is also assumed for a deacon, because ruling elders, deacons, and non-pastoral ministers are treated as a single class. Then further, in V, 9, d, upon the ordination of a deacon, the minister says, “We give you the right hand of fellowship to take part of this office with us.” Note that this is not an ordination of deacons-elect by previously ordained deacons, with the idea that then elders are ordained by elders. Such might indeed greatly distinguish elders from deacons. It is the minister who says to the deacon-elect, “We give you the right hand of fellowship to take part of this office with us.”

But the clinching formula is that which the Form of Government imposes on the congregation: “Do you, the members of this church, acknowledge and receive this brother as a ruling elder (or deacon) and do you promise to yield him all that honor, encouragement, and obedience in the Lord to which ... the Constitution of this Church entitles him?”

At this point it seems proper to conclude that the Report bases its thesis on a mistaken view of Reformed Presbyterian government. The Reformed Presbyterian Church, Evangelical Synod does not distinguish between an elder and a deacon by the latter’s lack of ecclesiastical authority. On the contrary, it explicitly asserts this authority. The application to women-in the light of Scripture yet to be discussed-is automatic. Ignoring our constitution the Report continues, “If this distinction is maintained, there need be no question of setting women in authority over men by ordaining them as deacons.” But if this unconstitutional distinction were maintained, there would be no need or reason to ordain either men or women deacons. Ordination is induction into an authoritative order. This now returns the discussion from the ordination of women as deacons to the fundamental question of ordination.  (Dr. Gordon H. Clark, The Ordination of Women).

To be fair, Gordon Clark did concede a possible compromise that there could be a ministry of deaconesses as long as it was not an ordained office in the church.  That’s because, as he argued in the paper, deacons do exercise authority by administering the sacraments of baptism and the Lord’s supper.  But Tim Keller got around this by "commissioning" both men and women as deacons.  He simply changed the language to get around the PCA book of common order.

This is the issue that troubles me about the Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church.  Like the RPCNA, the ARP affirms women not as a special category of lay ministry called deaconess but as a lifelong appointment to the office of the male diaconate, leaving the decision to each local session or congregation.  (See:  FORM OF GOVERNMENT of the ASSOCIATE REFORMED PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH, 2023, section 8.4.  P. 42).   Anyone wishing to join an ARP congregation that affirms women to the male office of the diaconate is required to agree to at least several vows.  The foremost vow that troubles me is:

Congregational vows to deacons:

“Do you, the members of this congregation, acknowledge and receive these fellow members as deacons, and do you promise to give them all the honor, encouragement, and assistance in the spirit of love to which their office, according to the Word of God and the Standards of this Church, entitles them?” (Synod 2021)  [See:  FORM OF GOVERNMENT of the ASSOCIATE REFORMED PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH, 2023, P. 48

I am unable to acknowledge any woman as a legitimate appointment to the male only office of the diaconate.  Thus, I would be unable to take the vows of membership as well.  That's because, as you can see below, that I would be vowing to obey the church by accepting women as deacons.  That I could never do.

When a congregation votes on any particular issue, the vast majority of the time it is simply a rubber stamp of what the church officers have already decided.  That’s because if half of the congregation approves by a voice vote, it is a done deal and there can be no dissent from the floor or any discussion, particularly in very large churches.  So, for all practical purposes most sessions are run by an authoritarian style of leadership.  (See:  Imperious Presbyterianism, by Kevin Reed).  In order to become a member of an Associate Reformed Presbyterian session or congregation the inquirer must take the following vows:

i.  Do you profess that you are a sinner in the sight of God; that you deserve His punishment; that you are unable to save yourself; and that you are without hope of salvation except for God's love and mercy?

ii. Do you believe in the Lord Jesus Christ as the Son of God and the Savior of sinners; and do you receive and trust in Him alone for your salvation?

iii. Do you accept the Bible, comprised of the Old and New Testaments, as the written Word of God; and that it is the only perfect rule of faith and how to live?

iv.  Do you promise to trust in the guidance and strength of the Holy Spirit so that you can live all of life as a Christian, following the example set by Jesus Christ?

v.  Do you promise to exercise faithful stewardship of God's resources entrusted to you for the furtherance of God's Kingdom and purposes?

vi.  Do you accept that the doctrines and principles of the Standards of the Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church are founded upon the Scriptures?

vii.  In loving obedience, do you submit yourself to the government and discipline of this church, promising to seek the peace, purity, and prosperity of this congregation as long as you are a member of it?  (ARP Form of Government, pp. 25-26).

Vow number v is troublesome because it precedes the two vows that are linked to the promise to affirm women as part of the male diaconate.  So, I must tithe and support the church first, then consider if I want to vow to obey the church?  Vow number vi contradicts Westminster Confession 1:6 which says that the confession is deduced from the Bible by good and necessary consequence, not that the standards are founded on the Bible.  The word “founded” is a weasel word in my opinion.  If vow iii is taken at face value, then the church member has a moral obligation to oppose the church whenever the church violates the clear teaching of the Bible on doctrinal matters that are above matters of indifference or adiaphora.

The problem with ordaining women to any male office is that it is a direct violation of the Scriptural prohibition of women being in authority over men in the visible church.  (1 Timothy 2:12; 1 Corinthians 14:34; Titus 2:5; Genesis 3:16.  All proof texts are from the KJV).  A further problem for the innovationists is that John Calvin did not agree with ordaining women to male only offices in the church:

For my own part, though I do not deny that the order of deacons might sometimes be the nursery out of which presbyters were taken, yet I take Paul’s words as meaning, more simply, that they who have discharged this ministry in a proper manner are worthy of no small honour; because it is not a mean employment, but a highly honourable office. Now by this expression he intimates how much it is for the advantage of the Church to have this office discharged by choice men; because the holy discharge of it procures esteem and reverence.  (Commentary on 1 Timothy 3:13).

Furthermore, Calvin contradicts Thomas Schreiner’s argument that a missing pronoun makes the verse ambiguous enough to allow for women deacons:

Likewise the wives He means the wives both of deacons and of bishops, for they must be aids to their husbands in their office; which cannot be, unless their behavior excel that of others.

Let the deacons be Since he mentioned wives, he lays down the same injunction about deacons as he had formerly down about bishops; namely, that each of them — satisfied within having but one wife — shall set an example of a chaste and honorable father of a family, and shall keep his children and his whole house under holy discipline. And this refutes the error of those who understand this passage as referring to domestic servants.  (Calvin, 1 Timothy 3:11).

It is true that Calvin says that Phoebe had an office in the church but Calvin never calls Phoebe a deacon as Schreiner does in his article cited above.  (See:  Calvin, Romans 16:1).  The word for servant in the Bible is the same word as the word for deacon.  However, even if the Greek word is in the masculine gender, it does not necessarily refer to a male office of the diaconate as asserted by the proponents of females being elected to the diaconate.

Lastly, I would like to respond to the charge that those who oppose the ordination of women to any church office as being mean-spirited and uncharitable.  In the light of the current situation where mainline Reformed denominations have in the past gone completely over to the social justice gospel of the temporal here and now, it seems to me that the compromises made for the sake of peace end up in the frog in the kettle analogy.  The frog does not realize that the water is boiling until it is too late to hop out of the pot.  Even the venerable and late presbyterian minister, Dr. R. C. Sproul was compromised early on in his vocation.  He admits that he was ordained with the United Presbyterian Church, which later became part of the Presbyterian Church, U.S.A. where women were indeed ordained as teaching elders.  Sproul by his own account disagreed with the ordination of women because of the biblical prohibition of women being in authority over men.  He tried to compromise by asking for an exception that he would not participate in the ordination services for women but that he would submit to their authority after they had been ordained.  The liberals would not compromise and forced Sproul to resign peaceably.  (See:  Table Talk:  Women’s Ordination and R.C. Sproul).

I have recently thought again about becoming a member of First Presbyterian Church in Columbia, South Carolina.  I had forgotten about an earlier study I had done in regards to the issue of the ordination of women when I was considering joining the ARP church plant in Lexington, South Carolina.  I wrote a letter to the pastor of the church plant, whose name is Jeff Tell.   You can read the three part series on my blog at:  Reasonable Christian:  Should Women Be Ordained to Ministry?  Part 1, Part 2, Part 3.  (See also:  An Open Letter to Pastor Jeff Tell). 

As proof that the ARP has problems with liberalism, I can cite and even quote a minister who helped to craft the resolutions for the ordination of women as deacons in the ARP.  His name is Dr. William B. Evans, who resigned from the ARP and was received in good standing into the Presbyterian Church U.S.A. not too long ago.

Although I disagree with the doctrine of common grace as outlined by the three points of common grace, and I disagree with the free offer of the gospel, I do like the preaching and teaching of R.C. Sproul, Derek Thomas, and Neil Stewart.  Probably the most conservative Reformed pulpit in my area is First Presbyterian Church in Columbia, SC.  But I cannot join there or support that church due to the fact that it would violate my conscience and the written word of God to vow to uphold an unbiblical mandate for women to be ordained to the male office of the diaconate.  While Dr. Stewart did say to me in private that he also disagrees with the ordination of women to the diaconate, apparently, he is contradicting himself.  I say that because he has for several times presided over the ordination of deacons which included two or three women.  The same can be said of the two previous pastors from the Ligonier background, namely Derek Thomas and Sinclaire Ferguson.  Both men read the ordination vows for the ordination of both males and females to the office of deacon.  Is the ordination of women just a matter of adiaphora or indifference?  I do not agree.  Also, if women are not in authority in the office of the diaconate, neither are any of the men.  Why ordain anyone to the office of deacon at all?

As Dr. Gordon H. Clark pointed out, if there is no authority over anyone in the congregation, why ordain either men or women?  R.C. Sproul was willing to submit to women in authority, unfortunately, and he openly admitted as much in the linked article from Table Talk.  This is disappointing because doctrine matters.  Finally, since excommunication and the keys to the kingdom are exercised by teaching elders, ruling elders, and--by delegation to deacons in the matter of serving the outward signs of the Lord’s supper--deacons are likewise in authority over members of the congregation as well as visitors.

In the modern era it is difficult to keep unqualified persons from partaking of the Lord’s supper or table in very large congregations unless the excommunicated person is well known.  For all practical purposes, church membership is a useless endeavor because the church member has no say in what the elders and church officers decide to do in the session or in the presbytery.  Church officers lord it over the congregation, and those who have any legitimate disagreements are invited to peaceably withdraw or to peaceably not join, which is what Dr. Neil Stewart suggested in my case.  However, since I believe in the priesthood of believers, even a lay person has the moral duty to disagree publicly with equivocation, compromise, and dissimulation wherever it happens in supposedly Evangelical or Reformed churches or denominations.  The peace of the church depends on church discipline both individually and corporately.  Unfortunately, most denominations are more concerned about sex scandals, their political standing with the government, and individual immorality than with the biblical mandate to continually reform the church according to the doctrine of Sola Scriptura.

Since I am unable in good conscience to agree with ordaining women, I cannot vow to support any woman who is wrongly ordained to a position of authority over men in any church office whether it be teaching elder, ruling elder or deacon.  The slippery slope might be a fallacious way of arguing, but it seems to me that the example of William B. Evans makes it apparent that the agenda of liberal presbyters in the Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church is to finally get to the point of ordaining women to the offices of teaching elder and ruling elder.  Why else would Evans join the Presbyterian Church U.S.A. and be accepted into membership by women presbyters?  It is good that R.C. Sproul left the Presbyterian Church U.S.  But why did he try to compromise to stay?  A better question is why did Sinclaire Ferguson, Derek Thomas, and Neil Stewart all ordain women to a male only office of deacon in the Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church?  Also, why did Sproul invite these men to be part of the Ligonier Ministries if he was opposed to women in church offices?  The answer is that Sproul and Ligonier compromised on this issue and said that deacons do not exercise authority.  But if that is so, why did Stephen preach to the Jews causing him to be martyred?  (Acts 6:5-8:2 KJV)

The qualifications for deacons found in 1 Timothy 3:8–13 overlap in many ways with the qualifications for elders given in verses 1–7. Those who are ordained as deacons must be honest and run their households well. There has been debate within the Reformed tradition as to whether Paul allows for women to be deacons, but regardless of the position one takes, the Apostle stresses that deacons must “not [be] greedy for dishonest gain” (v. 8).

"The Vocation of Deacon."  Ligonier. 

The problem, as I pointed out above, is that the office of deacon is not a matter of adiaphora.  Stephen was chosen because he was able to preach and to perform miracles.  There were no female deacons chosen.  Gordon H. Clark was correct again. 

The Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church has a position paper arguing for ordaining women to the male only office of deacon, but says that ordaining women to the offices of teaching elder or ruling elder is forbidden because it would split the church.  That's because those who could not in good conscience vow to support the authority of women would be forced out:

First of all, the unity of the church is threatened in that moves to ordain women to the offices of minister and elder in the context of Presbyterian polity will eventually result in the exclusion of those who cannot, for reasons of conscience, assent to the new policy. W. B. Evans has written:

While traditionalists have often been tolerant of progressive thinking, they themselves are often not tolerated once women’s ordination is instantiated in a denomination. That has been the trend in the Church of Scotland, the PCUSA and elsewhere. The pattern here is for conservatives to be grandfathered for a time, but sooner or later ordination requirements are rewritten to include support for women’s ordination. This is due primarily, not to liberal meanspiritedness, but to the logic of Reformed polity. The offices of minister and elder are the foundation of the polity, and everybody has to own the polity, to accept the ground rules of the game. Reformed churches cannot tolerate the presence of those who would challenge, even implicitly, the legitimacy of a large group of officeholders.32

Women in the Life of the Church:   A Position Paper Approved by the General Synod of the Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church.  June 2005.  P. 14.

Ironically, as stated above, Evans left the ARP and joined the PCUSA because he could not tolerate the influx of ministers from the Reformed Theological Seminary in Charlotte, NC.  Those ministers, according to Evans, oppose the ordination of women deacons.  I am unable to become a member of any ARP church that ordains women deacons because of the vow that new members must take to support women deacons.

What's worse is that Evans actually lied about his agenda, which was to ordain women to all offices of the church.  Evans is the author of the quote in the ARP position paper above.  Will the ARP split over this issue?  Maybe not if the ARP is willing to reverse its unbiblical position to ordain women to the office of deacon. 

 

Soli Deo Gloria.

Charlie J. Ray

 

Further Resources:

Women in the Life of the Church.  A Position Paper Approved by the General Synod of the Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church.  June 2005.

PCA Historical Center.  Reformed Presbyterian Church, Evangelical Synod.  OVERTURE N:  RECONSIDERATION OF WOMEN DEACONS.  [156th General Synod Minutes, 16 June 1978, pp. 133-134; Documents of Synod, pp. 156-157.]

PCA Historical Center.  Dr. Gordon H. Clark.  The Ordination of Women.  (Dr. Clark’s view prevailed and to this day, the Presbyterian Church in America does not ordain women to any church office, including the office of deacon.  The RPCES merged with the PCA in 1978 or so and shortly thereafter, Dr. Clark withdrew and joined the Covenant Presbytery.)

 Did the RPCES have Deaconesses? Yes and No.  Posted on November 22, 2021, by Zachary Groff.  By Jared Nelson | November 22, 2021.

The Case Against Deaconesses.  Robert Vandoodewaard.  Table Talk:  February 2024.  

Dr. William B. Evans:  The Ecclesial Presbyterian.  A Change in Ecclesial Affiliation for the Ecclesial Calvinist!

Reasonable Christian:  Should Women Be Ordained to Ministry?  Part 1Part 2Part 3.  (See also:  An Open Letter to Pastor Jeff Tell). 

R. Scott Clark:  Heidelblog:  Two Conference Talks Worth Hearing: Ligon Duncan And Tim Keller On Women And The Diaconate  [Toward the end of this audio in the question and answer session, Tim Keller openly said that if the BCO did not forbid it that he and his session would ordain women as deacons.  You have to ask why there are no men in Keller's church if the church is so large?  Maybe his pragmatism only works on women?]

A Historical and Biblical Examination of Women Deacons.  Brian Schwertley 

The PCA Goes Back to Where It Started: Women's Ordination.  Sarah Eekhoff Zylstra.  The Aquila Report.  June 29, 2016.

The Problem with Commissioning Deaconnesses.  Zachary Garris.  May 1, 2025.

Thursday, May 08, 2025

Divine Simplicity: Part 2

 

“STILL TO BE DISCUSSED is God’s nature in relation to the panoply of divine attributes and to the persons of the Trinity. All God’s attributes known through his self-revelation are to be identified with what theologians properly designate as God’s being, essence, nature or substance, and identified with what the Scriptures call the deity or divinity of God who makes himself known. The divine essence is not to be differentiated from the divine attributes, but is constituted by them; the attributes define the essence more precisely. But are all attributes ultimately the same? Or do they differ, and if so, how? Are divine nature and divine personality identical conceptions? Only the self-revealed God of the Bible, to be sure, can authorize us to speak definitively of his existence, nature and personal life. But how are the three persons of the Godhead related to divine essence and attributes?”

 

Carl F. H. Henry.  God, Revelation and Authority (Set of 6) (Kindle Locations 59280-59286). Crossway. Kindle Edition.  1982.  2nd edition.  (Wheaton:  Crossway, 1999).  P. 127.

 

Book Review:  Divine Simplicity:  Part 2

 

James E. Dolezal.  God Without Parts:  Divine Simplicity and the Metaphysics of God’s Absoluteness.  (Eugene:  Pickwick, 2011).

 

This book is an excellent discussion of the issues of divine simplicity.  However, as a supporter of Gordon H. Clark's apologetics, I have to point out that the greatest weakness of the book is Dolezal's Thomistic two-fold view of truth as both God's archetypal truth and man's ectypal truth.  According to Cornelius Van Til, ultimately God is unknowable because man's truth and God's truth do not coincide at any single point, even in Scripture.  Dolezal also rejects propositional truth on this same basis and ends up advocating for analogical revelation instead of propositional revelation.  This opens the door wide for neo-orthodoxy and dialectical theology.  Most of the followers of Van Til over-emphasize the transcendence of God to the point that God is unknowable.  The obvious implication of that position is that all knowledge is relative, humanistic, and creaturely.  But even apologists like Arthur Holmes said that all truth is God's truth.  If man knows any truth at all, doesn't God know that same truth?  Does God know that 2 + 2 = 4?  Or is 2 + 2 = 5 for God?

Dolezal is a Reformed Baptist, not a Presbyterian.  That has little to do with his view of the doctrine of God, however.  It is ironic that Dolezal did his Ph.D. on the doctrine of divine simplicity under the guidance and supervision of Dr. Scott Oliphint, professor of apologetics and philosophy at Westminster Theological Seminary, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.  Oliphint retired in December of 2024.  The irony is that shortly after Dolezal’s book came out, Oliphint released his own book in which he contended against divine simplicity by asserting that God’s being has “covenantal properties” which allows God to be immanent and to condescend to the creaturely level.  Oliphint did not anticipate the backlash over the controversy and was forced to withdraw his book from publication.

[You can read my review of Oliphint’s book, which I had obtained from Barnes and Noble in ebook format before it was withdrawn from the paperback publication and from the ebook publication.  Barnes and Noble no longer offers the book for purchase.  My brief review is posted here:  Covenantal Properties.  My extended review of the book is posted here:  A Critical Review of God With Us:  Divine Condescension and the Attributes of God.  You can also read a response by Dolezal to his doctoral supervisor here:  Objections to Scott Oliphint’s Covenantal Properties Thesis.  See also:  K. Scott Oliphint.  God With Us:  Divine Condescension and the Attributes of God.  (Wheaton:  Crossway, 2011).]

The Reformed Forum also strongly objected to Oliphint’s view, because in their view it violated Van Til’s Creator/creature distinction.  Oddly, enough, prior to this controversy, Oliphint appeared numerous times on the Reformed Forum podcast to critique Gordon H. Clark’s so-called “rationalism.”  Camden Bucey, Jeff Waddington, and Lane Tipton were all mutual friends with Oliphint.  Behind the scenes I wonder if there were some strong disagreements between Dolezal and his supervisor for his Ph.D. dissertation?  It would seem so, because both books came out in 2011 at around the same time.  It seems that Dolezal has prevailed, because his book is still available while Oliphint had to withdraw his book under the strong disagreements between supporters of Van Til’s apologetics and the supporters of Oliphint’s book.  (Jeff Waddington of the Reformed Forum also wrote a rebuttal of Oliphint’s book here:  Something So Simple I Shouldn’t Have to Say It,” June 5, 2019). 

Camden Bucey’s critique focuses more on God’s knowledge, which Oliphint ironically says is subject to change and growth due to this third category of “covenantal properties.”  (See:  Bucey, “Addressing the Essential-Covenantal Model of Theology Proper”).  My own view is that Oliphint seems to have bought into Open Theism to some extent because Oliphint has attributed to God the ability to change, which is a contradiction of the Westminster Confession of Faith 2:1.  WCF 2:1 affirms that God is immutable.  I wonder if Oliphint is using ectypal knowledge or archetypal knowledge of God to come to these conclusions?

So far, I have digressed from the review of Dolezal because of the covenantal properties controversy.  However, it seems to me that the two cannot be divorced because of the implications of both books coming out at the same time.  

 

Wednesday, April 30, 2025

Book Review: God Without Parts: Part 1



"In summary, knowledge of the divine attributes, no less than of the divine proper names, involves a knowledge of God's inmost essence.  Our knowledge is not exhaustive, to be sure, since God's incomprehensibility, which evangelicals affirm, means that we know no more concerning the divine nature than what God intends and enables us to know by revelation.  Although Luther and Calvin speak of the incomprehensibility of God's essence--it is unknowable by a priori speculation concerning divinity--they do not deny authentic knowledge of God's essential nature on the basis of scriptural revelation."  

Carl F. H. Henry.  God, Revelation, and Authority.  Vol. 5.  1982.  2nd edition.  (Wheaton:  Crossway, 1999).  P. 140.



Book Review:  God Without Parts:  Divine Simplicity and the Metaphysics of God’s Absoluteness

By James E. Dolezal

 

[James E. Dolezal.  God Without Parts:  Divine Simplicity and the Metaphysics of God’s Absoluteness.  (Eugene:  Pickwick, 2011).

 

I read this book some time ago.  I had intended to review it earlier but never seemed to find the time.  Honestly, I had never considered this doctrine before since it is only briefly mentioned in chapter 2 of the Westminster Confession of Faith.  I had assumed that it was simply a rejection of the patripassionism view that was made popular by Jürgen Moltmann.  That being said, I will be reviewing this book from the point of view of the apologetics and theology of the late Dr. Gordon H. Clark.

The first indication of trouble is a remark by Paul Helm in the foreward to the book: 

God the Creator is one God, and not creaturely. Because God is timeless he is changeless, immutable. Not simply in the sense that he has chosen to be so, or covenanted this, proposals which offer a rather unstable account of God’s changelessness and are probably incoherent. He is metaphysically changeless. Such changelessness in turn entails divine impassibility, an idea frequently misunderstood and derided. But impassibility is not to be confused, as it often is, with impassivity or with dispassion. Although it may seem paradoxical, the stress on impassibility is meant to safeguard the fullness of God’s character. He is eternally impassioned, unwaveringly good, not moody or fitful as he is buffeted by the changes of his life, some of them, perhaps, unexpected changes.

Dolezal, James E. God without Parts: Divine Simplicity and the Metaphysics of God's Absoluteness. Pickwick Publications, An Imprint of Wipf and Stock Publishers. Kindle Edition.

The late Dr. Gordon H. Clark held that the body has emotions and sensations, but the mind itself thinks in terms of propositions.  Since God has no body, God cannot literally have any emotions.  Emotions as defined by Dr. Clark were outbursts of bodily sensations.  Since God is a spirit, He has no bodily sensations or emotions or passions.  (John 4:24 KJV).  Dr. Clark referred to the emotions attributed to God in the Bible as anthropopathisms.  Just as God has no physical body parts such as a nose or mouth or hands or feet, God cannot and does not have emotions or passions of any kind whatsoever.  The idea that God has body parts attributed to Him metaphorically in Scripture is called anthropomorphism.  The problem with the comment of Helm above is that he contradicts the doctrine of God’s impassibility by using another word that is practically synonymous to affirm that God does indeed have passivity or emotions.  Oddly, Helm only holds that God has good feelings of love, not feelings of wrath or anger as Scripture clearly says.  The most obvious passage of Scripture that affirms that God has anthropopathic wrath or anger is Romans 1:18-21 KJV.  Evangelicals are too caught up in the idea of God’s benevolence and beneficence to face the reality that God cannot be manipulated by our tears, sufferings, or situational case studies. 

There is no partiality with God.  (Romans 2:11-14 KJV).  He does what He pleases in the heavens.  (Psalm 115:3).  The Lord God Almighty has no problem whatsoever with condemning the wicked to hell.  (Matthew 7:21-23; Psalm 6:8; 2 Timothy 2:19 KJV).  Apparently, Dolezal holds to this view, although it is not unusual.  Even the late Dr. Robert L. Reymond held to the idea that even though God is dispassionate, He must also have some kind of feelings for the elect.  However, Dr. Gordon H. Clark defined love, as seen from the human perspective, as obedience to God.  If you love me, obey my commandments.  (John 14:15 KJV).  On the other hand, God’s love for humanity is seen in His unconditional election to save some humans in His supralapsarian and logical order of the dual or double decree to election and reprobation.  This double decree is the first decree in the logical order according to the supralapsarian view.

A further problem with asserting that God has feelings or emotions of any kind, including feelings of love or beneficence, is that such emotions would violate God’s absolute immutability.  Although certain portions of Scripture seem to indicate this, the anthropopathism actually points toward God’s eternal volition to save His elect: 

The LORD hath appeared of old unto me, saying, Yea, I have loved thee with an everlasting love: therefore with lovingkindness have I drawn thee. (Jeremiah 31:3 KJV).

Even the term lovingkindness is a Hebrew word that indicates mercy or grace or favor rather than an emotion.  God never breaks His covenantal promises to save His elect people and elect persons within the congregation of Israel.

In the preface to the book, Dolezal presupposes an analogical view of Scripture rather than a propositional view of Scripture.  In a recent podcast, I prematurely advocated that my listeners read Dolezal’s book.  (See:  Reasonable Christian: Divine Simplicity, Logic, and the Foreknowledge of God).  It has been some time since I had read the book or listened to Dolezal’s YouTube videos on the topic.  Unfortunately, this goes directly back to the Clark/Van Til controversy of the 1940’s.  It seems to me that history is repeating itself.  Dolezal reveals his beginning axioms for his book in the preface:

The classical doctrine of simplicity, as espoused by both traditional Thomists and the Reformed scholastics, famously holds forth the maxim that there is nothing in God that is not God. If there were, that is, if God were not ontologically identical with all that is in him, then something other than God himself would be needed to account for his existence, essence, and attributes. But nothing that is not God can sufficiently account for God. He exists in all his perfection entirely in and through himself. At the heart of the classical DDS is the concern to uphold God’s absolute self-sufficiency as well as his ultimate sufficiency for the existence of the created universe.

The pages that follow set forth both metaphysical and theological arguments in favor of divine simplicity. Along the way I seek to answer some of the leading recent critics of the doctrine—most notably those objecting from within the modern school of analytic philosophy. The assumption that God and creatures are correlatives within a univocal order of being dominates this school of philosophy and is arguably the chief reason why their criticisms of the DDS fail to hit the mark. By appealing to God’s simplicity, I aim to show that God and the world are related analogically and that the world in no sense explains or accounts for God’s existence and essence. If God were yet another being in the world, even if the highest and most excellent, then the world itself would be the framework within which he must be ontologically explained.

Ibid., Dolezal. Kindle Edition.

The problem here is that Dolezal presupposes that reformed epistemology is essentially Thomistic and that God’s knowledge and man’s knowledge do not coincide at any single point.  This results in the parallel lines analogy where truth is seen to be twofold, and the creature’s knowledge and God’s knowledge do not meet anywhere.  The two parallel lines continue into infinity with no meeting anywhere at any single point whatsoever.  Logic must be curbed, and the Bible must never be explained, nor should any apparent contradiction or paradox be resolved.  A further problem with Dolezal’s remark is that he does not define what the “world” is.  Does he mean creation?  Or does he mean epistemology or truth?  Even the philosopher Arthur Holmes once remarked that all truth is God’s truth.  In other words, if humans know anything that is true, then surely God knows that same truth.  I have argued elsewhere that Gordon H. Clark did not confuse the creature with the Creator when he insisted that the Bible is the univocal word of God; that is because Clark distinguished between God’s omniscience as intutive and man’s knowledge as discursive or limited to thinking one thought after another. 

Van Til insisted that logic is created and that man’s knowledge of logic is merely human logic.  The implication of this is that God’s logic and man’s logic must be different and that logical contradictions do not require any resolutions; instead, the paradoxes should just be left standing and at any points of cognitive dissonance in preaching to congregations the minister should just appeal to mystery.  Van Til went so far as to say that all Scripture is apparently contradictory, or at least that is what John Frame said in one of his lectures on Van Til.  (See:  Gordon H. Clark lecture:  John Frame and Cornelius Van Til, page 4).  Clark says that Van Til took vows to uphold the system of doctrine in the Westminster Confession of Faith.  Unfortunately, the Van Tilians get around this by saying that the Westminster Confession is an analogical system of doctrine, not a propositional system of doctrine.  But this would seem to contradict the WCF in paragraph 1:6, which says: 

The whole counsel of God, concerning all things necessary for His own glory, man's salvation, faith and life, is either expressly set down in Scripture, or by good and necessary consequence may be deduced from Scripture: . . .  (WCF 1:6 WCS)

Another way of saying this is that logic is the science of necessary inference.  Plainly, the Westminster divines were not appealing to Thomist philosophy when they wrote section 1:6.  This is an appeal to propositional logic, not analogical philosophy.  In other words, Gordon H. Clark was correct to say that the WCF is a system of propositions which is logically deduced from the propositions in the Bible and that that system is deduced by necessary inference.

Dolezal’s argument that this is an issue of being or essence misses the mark because no one on the Clarkian side of the issue is saying that the human nature or essence is participating in the divine essence whatsoever.  This is an argument about Reformed epistemology, not an argument about divine simplicity per se.  Dolezal confuses categories by saying that this is an ontological issue or an issue of the divine being versus the limitation of the human being or nature.  The issue here is one that focuses on not only divine simplicity but also the issue of special revelation and the epistemological issue of how do we know God at all?  If God is totally transcendent, and there is no point at which we can know God, then the obvious conclusion is that even the Bible is merely human information, not special revelation from God.  A shadow of God’s truth is not the truth itself.  In other words, God’s truth and man’s truth as revealed “analogically” in the Bible are totally separated and do not coincide at any single point whatsoever.

As this will be an extended review of Dolezal’s book, I will end here and continue the review in subsequent posts.  I would like to close with a quote from one of Dr. Gordon H. Clark’s students, Dr. Carl F. H. Henry.  Both Clark and Henry did uphold the doctrine of divine simplicity and this is evidenced by the following:

Evangelical theology insists on the simplicity of God. By this it means that God is not compounded of parts; he is not a collection of perfections, but rather a living center of activity pervasively characterized by all his distinctive perfections. The divine attributes are neither additions to the divine essence nor qualities pieced together to make a compound. Peter Bertocci has well said that God “never was, nor will ever be, ontologically divisible” (The Person God Is, p. 219). God’s variety of attributes does not conflict with God’s simplicity because his simplicity is what comprises the fullness of divine life. Augustine wrote of God’s “simple multiplicity” or “multifold simplicity.” 

For this very reason the statement “God is”— if we know what we are saying— exhausts all that a course in theology can teach concerning him. If we give the subject “God” and the predicate “is” their true and full sense, we must speak of God’s essence, names, attributes, and triunity, and do so expressly on the basis of his revelatory self-disclosure addressed to his created and fallen creatures. If we say “God is” on any other basis than God’s self-revelation our predications have no sound epistemic ground. Augustine declares that “in God to be is the same as to be strong or to be just or to be wise.”

 

Henry, Carl F. H. God, Revelation and Authority (Set of 6) (Kindle Locations 59369-59380). Crossway. Kindle Edition. 

This is a quote from Vol. V.  I could not locate the exact page number, but it is from chapter 6, “God’s Divine Simplicity and Attributes.”  Pp. 127-140.  [The exact quote comes from page 131].

Part 2 will be posted in the next installment.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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