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The Danvers Statement
The Council on Biblical Manhood and Womanhood
Recovering Biblical Manhood and Womanhood
A Response to Evangelical Feminism
Wayne Grudem and John Piper
Rationale
We have been moved in our purpose by the following contemporary
developments which we observe with deep concern:
- The widespread uncertainty and confusion in our culture regarding the
complementary differences between masculinity and femininity;
- the tragic effects of this confusion in unraveling the fabric of
marriage woven by God out of the beautiful and diverse strands of manhood
and womanhood;
- the increasing promotion given to feminist egalitarianism with
accompanying distortions or neglect of the glad harmony portrayed in
Scripture between the loving, humble leadership of redeemed husbands and
the intelligent, willing support of that leadership by redeemed wives;
- the widespread ambivalence regarding the values of motherhood,
vocational homemaking, and the many ministries historically performed by
women;
- the growing claims of legitimacy for sexual relationships which have
Biblically and historically been considered illicit or perverse, and the
increase in pornographic portrayal of human sexuality;
- the upsurge of physical and emotional abuse in the family;
- the emergence of roles for men and women in church leadership that do
not conform to Biblical teaching but backfire in the crippling of
Biblically faithful witness;
- the increasing prevalence and acceptance of hermeneutical oddities
devised to reinterpret apparently plain meanings of Biblical texts;
- the consequent threat to Biblical authority as the clarity of
Scripture is jeopardized and the accessibility of its meaning to ordinary
people is withdrawn into the restricted realm of technical ingenuity;
- and behind all this the apparent accommodation of some within the
church to the spirit of the age at the expense of winsome, radical
Biblical authenticity which in the power of the Holy Spirit may reform
rather than reflect our ailing culture.
Purposes
Recognizing our own abiding sinfulness and fallibility, and acknowledging
the genuine evangelical standing of many who do not agree with all of our
convictions, nevertheless, moved by the preceding observations and by the
hope that the noble Biblical vision of sexual complementarity may yet win
the mind and heart of Christ's church, we engage to pursue the following
purposes:
- To study and set forth the Biblical view of the relationship between
men and women, especially in the home and in the church.
- To promote the publication of scholarly and popular materials
representing this view.
- To encourage the confidence of lay people to study and understand for
themselves the teaching of Scripture, especially on the issue of
relationships between men and women.
- To encourage the considered and sensitive application of this Biblical
view in the appropriate spheres of life.
- And thereby
- to bring healing to persons and relationships injured by
an inadequate grasp of God's will concerning manhood and womanhood,
- to help both men and women realize their full ministry
potential through a true understanding and practice of their God-given
roles,
- and to promote the spread of the gospel among all
peoples by fostering a Biblical wholeness in relationships that will
attract a fractured world.
Affirmations
Based on our understanding of Biblical teachings, we affirm the
following:
- Both Adam and Eve were created in God's image, equal before God as
persons and distinct in their manhood and womanhood.
- Distinctions in masculine and feminine roles are ordained by God as
part of the created order, and should find an echo in every human heart.
- Adam's headship in marriage was established by God before the Fall,
and was not a result of sin.
- The Fall introduced distortions into the relationships between men and
women.
- In the home, the husband's loving, humble headship tends
to be replaced by domination or passivity; the wife's intelligent,
willing submission tends to be replaced by usurpation or servility.
- In the church, sin inclines men toward a worldly love of
power or an abdication of spiritual responsibility, and inclines women
to resist limitations on their roles or to neglect the use of their
gifts in appropriate ministries.
- The Old Testament, as well as the New Testament, manifests the equally
high value and dignity which God attached to the roles of both men and
women. Both Old and New Testaments also affirm the principle of male
headship in the family and in the covenant community.
- Redemption in Christ aims at removing the distortions introduced by
the curse.
- In the family, husbands should forsake harsh or selfish
leadership and grow in love and care for their wives; wives should
forsake resistance to their husbands' authority and grow in willing,
joyful submission to their husbands' leadership.
- In the church, redemption in Christ gives men and women
an equal share in the blessings of salvation; nevertheless, some
governing and teaching roles within the church are restricted to men.
- In all of life Christ is the supreme authority and guide for men and
women, so that no earthly submission-domestic, religious, or civil-ever
implies a mandate to follow a human authority into sin.
- In both men and women a heartfelt sense of call to ministry should
never be used to set aside Biblical criteria for particular ministries.
Rather, Biblical teaching should remain the authority for testing our
subjective discernment of God's will.
- With half the world's population outside the reach of indigenous
evangelism; with countless other lost people in those societies that have
heard the gospel; with the stresses and miseries of sickness,
malnutrition, homelessness, illiteracy, ignorance, aging, addiction,
crime, incarceration, neuroses, and loneliness, no man or woman who feels
a passion from God to make His grace known in word and deed need ever live
without a fulfilling ministry for the glory of Christ and the good of this
fallen world.
- We are convinced that a denial or neglect of these principles will
lead to increasingly destructive consequences in our families, our
churches, and the culture at large.
The "Danvers Statement" was prepared by several
evangelical leaders at a CBMW meeting in Danvers, Mass., in December, 1987.
It was first published in final form by the CBMW in Wheaton, Ill., in
November, 1988. We grant permission and encourage interested persons to use,
reproduce, and distribute the Danvers Statement. Additional copies of this
brochure are available for a donation of $9.00 for 50, and $15.00 for 100,
postpaid, from CBMW, P.O. Box 317, Wheaton, IL 60189.
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