Women in Leadership and Christian Unity
Women in leadership is the central question as Mark A. Taylor reflects on publishing multiple perspectives and holding convictions with humility. The article emphasizes Scripture, careful study, and the Restoration Movement principle of liberty in matters of opinion.
- Christians who respect Scripture may still disagree on women in leadership.
- Publishing differing perspectives can itself be a principled editorial stand.
- Unity in mission remains essential even amid unresolved disagreements.
By Mark A. Taylor
Some readers will remember Paul Williamsโs wry column (March 2 issue) that mentioned his friend who always saw both sides of an issue. โOn the Other Handโ was Paulโs title and the mantra of the friend he mentioned.
โI am drawn to reflective people,โ Paul wrote. โThey know what they donโt know and are not inclined to speak until they thoroughly understand an issue.โ
Actually, I would have been pleased for Paul to tell you Iโm the friend he described. But maybe what followed the above sentences is the reason he didnโt mention my name. (Itโs bad form to criticize a colleague in print!)
Of these reflective people, he wrote, โToo often they are inclined never to speak at all. โToo much uncertainty,โ they say. Itโs hard to change the world that way.โ
On the Other Hand
I thought of Paulโs column after a conversation at the North American Christian Convention this summer. Someone came up to me and said, โI know how you feel about women in leadership.โ
โHow do you know that?โ I said as I thought, Iโm not sure myself what I believe about women in leadership!
โBecause of what youโve printed,โ he replied.
I didnโt press him to produce examples, but Iโm pretty sure heโll change his mind after reading this weekโs issue. And next weekโs.
Women in Leadership and Differing Perspectives
All our feature articles in these issues address the question of women in church leadership. All of them examine Scripture, some of them the same Scriptures. These writers all believe the Bible and agree it should drive our decisions. All of them are immersed believers, members of Christian churches or churches of Christ. Each of them is a careful student; next weekโs authors all teach in Christian colleges.
And yet they couldnโt be more disagreed on this issue. Itโs a paradise for the โon the other handโ crowd.
But those convinced of their position on this question may not be happy with these articles. Theyโll find plenty of โerrorโ to criticize here. Some will wish we had taken a stronger stand.
In Opinions, Liberty
But taking a strong stand is exactly what we have done by publishing these varying perspectives. Itโs a stand upheld throughout the generations of our movementโs history: โIn opinions, liberty.โ Sometimes that must even include liberty to allow a different opinion about whatโs an opinion!
By agreeing on that principle, we can, as Paul Williams wishes, โchange the world.โ We can work together to help the hurting and share the gospel and grow the church regardless of how we may disagree about women in leadership. We can do this, if we will.
And we must. Thereโs no โon the other handโ to that conclusion.






