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Kezia Dennison's avatar

I get a bit frustrated when I hear egalitarians act like we just haven't done enough research as complementarian women. I grew up under a "complementarianism" that was more sexism hiding under the umbrella than anything else. My father believed he could marry me to whomever he wanted (with or without my consent) and also that, as his daughter, I belonged to him (in his words) "like slaves belong to their master." So when I left home (I had to flee, leave the state, and go into hiding), I was very keen on becoming egalitarian. I don't think it's an overstatement to say I felt like my faith hinged quite heavily on becoming egalitarian. And in pursuit of that, I read every egalitarian book on the topic that I could get my hands on. And I talked to every egalitarian I could talk to. And then I studied the Scriptures. And then more books. And more conversations. And more Bible study. And to my great dismay, I ended up a complementarian. I didn't end up there because I wanted to. I didn't just read my "side" and say, "Yeah that sounds right." I was desperately trying to escape my "side". I was heavily heavily heavily biased towards believing the egalitarian side. But based on their own best arguments, I just could not get there. Fortunately my studies along the way gave me a complementarianism that is, if anything, entirely anti-sexist and a total opposite to my parent's beliefs. And now my faith is stronger than ever and I'm a leader in my church. But damn, its irritating when they act like if we just read this or that book, we'd understand. Because I've read most of them. Every one that was recommended to me certainly. And they, and my own studies (and to date not a single complementarian book) made me a settled complementarian (still a little begrudgingly at times 😅).

Nick O'Brien's avatar

As an egalitarian, let me say thanks for this challenge. I completely agree that it’s absurd to claim complementarianism is only held by people who haven’t studied enough yet. I just published an article responding to Al Mohler claiming egalitarianism is just liberalism caving to culture without any biblical or theological consideration. That’s wrong to say of the “other side,” regardless of who says it.

If a farmer goes out into two fields to sow daisy and tulip seeds, and if one field produces hundreds of each flower growing together, while the other field produces hundreds of daisies, but just a few tulips, it is good and right to question why the second field wasn’t hospitable to tulips. That’s not to say the tulips that *did* grow in that field are inconvenient data points. The tulips are the goal, just like the daisies. We just want more of them.

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