New Church Life Mar/Apr 2015 | Page 56

new church life: march/april 2015 question of whether women can be priests has come up and undergone serious debate. Perhaps this is a slow labor in providence. We are at a point now where we have considered it intensely yet again and have as a church put together thorough doctrinal arguments in favor and against the idea of women in ministry. One critical idea that has come out of this most recent effort is the general acknowledgement from clergy and lay people alike that the Writings do not state explicitly that the priesthood must be male. Indeed, the very same passages that touch on the complementary natures of men and women are used to argue for and against women in the ministry. (See the papers by Jon and Karin Childs and the Rev. Solomon Keal’s at http://www.newchurchperspective. com/possible-ordination-of-women/). It seems the Church is more widely spread out than ever in its understanding of the doctrine relating to this issue. Freedom in how we choose to understand is essential. Though, given the widespread variance in our understanding of the teachings related to the natures and roles of men and women and the fact that it is acknowledged that the Writings never state explicitly that the members of the priesthood need be male, I am given to think that the Church reaffirming the current ordination policy as official constitutes a “ruling from without,” “an external bond” on the Church. To give the context of this claim, I will quote portions of W. F. Pendleton’s Notes on the Government of the Church, with a few of my own brief notes. Pendleton’s Notes begin: The quality of a Church is according to the quality of its government, or according to the idea of government which rules within it; if a natural idea of government rules then the Church will be natural, but if government is seen under a spiritual idea, this idea reigning in all its parts, then the Church will be a spiritual Church. A true idea of government, which is a spiritual idea, is then of supreme importance to the members of the Church… The Church is not a spiritual Church until it is under such a form of government as exists in heaven; before this it is a natural Church. The angels of heaven govern – still they do not govern, but the LORD through them. (Arcana Coelestia 8728) In the Church the priest is to govern, and yet he is not to govern, but the LORD through him. Government in heaven is the government of mutual love (Heaven and Hell 213); from mutual love springs mutual confidence, which flourishes only in an atmosphere of freedom, where external bonds have been removed. There must come a time when the Church cuts loose from external bonds, and freely trusts the LORD and the neighbor. Heaven is ruled by influx and hell by afflux. When the Church is in evil, the LORD rules it by afflux, or from without, or from the world; but when the Church is in good, the LORD rules it by influx, or from within, or from heaven. To endeavor to rule the Church from without, to place it under bonds from the world, whether this 166