Icons of Christ

BAYLOR UNIVERSITY PRESSISBN: 9781481316668

A Biblical and Systematic Theology for Women's Ordination

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By William G. Witt
Imprint:
BAYLOR UNIVERSITY PRESS
Release Date:
Format:
HARDBACK
Dimensions:
228 x 152 mm
Weight:
330 g
Pages:
447

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Description

William G. Witt is Associate Professor of Systematic Theology and Ethics at Trinity School for Ministry.

Preface Part 1. Introduction 1 Preliminaries 2 Non-Theological Arguments against the Ordination of Women 3 The Argument "from Tradition" Is Not the "Traditional" Argument Part 2. Protestant Arguments 4 Hierarchy and Hermeneutics 5 Beginning with Genesis 6 Disciples of Jesus 7 Mutual Submission 8 Women in Worship and "Headship" 9 Speaking and Teaching Part 3. Catholic Arguments 10 A Presbytera Is Not a "Priestess" Old Testament Priesthood 11 Women's Ordination and the Priesthood of Christ Biblical and Patristic Background 12 Women's Ordination and the Priesthood of Christ In persona Christi 13 The Argument from Symbolism God, Priests, Incarnation, and Apostles 14 The Argument from Symbolism Transcendence and Immanence Part 4. The Ministry of Women in the New Testament 15 Women's Ministry in the New Testament Office 16 Women's Ministry in the New Testament Bishops, Presbyters, Deacons Conclusion

Icons of Christ will be the book for Christians to engage with as the long debate over women's ordination continues in the various streams of Christianity. Its ecumenical engagement with both Protestant and Catholic arguments makes it stand out as a unique contribution, equally capable of grappling with biblical exegesis and the historic Christian tradition. --Alex Strohschein "Reading Religion" Witt's presentation of the confessional divide that emerges in these debates is his greatest gift and the most innovative thing about the book as a whole. His insight that Protestant and Catholic resistance to women's ordination does not take the same form or come from the same place, and is even contradictory on a fundamental level, is valuable and important for women, and particularly for women clergy, to understand. --Hannah W. Matis "Interpretation: A Journal of Bible and Theology" Witt is to be commended for his groundbreaking methodology that exposes how both Catholic and Protestant theologians support male leadership by interpreting key passages in ways that esteem women as inferior to men--a view at odds with the entire canon. In doing so, Witt also reveals how this longstanding, but failed interpretative path also promotes a distorted worldview that devalues women simply because they are born female. --Mimi Haddad "CBE International"

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