A Vox article I read today talked about how boys are being given conflicting messages regarding masculinity - the public message is about caring and leading, but the private one is, essentially, toxic. I've wondered the same thing about the RPCNA - being more rational/cerebral, I picked up more of the public message, but I see how those promoted to leadership are more reminiscent of the private message.
When "dominance" is praised and praiseworthy men are selected for office, it should be no surprise that churches are quickly becoming more domineering.
When "rationalism" is praised and leaders who can only be happy or angry are selected for office, it's obvious that anyone who is hurt by the church will see rejection. "Hurt" is not a valid emotion. Even "anger" isn't a valid emotion if it comes from a place of hurt. We see the church ignore spiritual and emotional abuse - if people are supposed to be rational and emotionless, then calling someone "worthless" is not a problem. Emotional manipulation to create a culture of fear and fear-based control is not a problem.
Hope Reese - Feminism has opened up possibilities for what it means to be a woman. What’s new about what it means to be a man?
Peggy Orenstein - There is a lot that has changed for young men. Obviously, they’re engaging in the conversation about consent. Obviously, they see women and girls as deserving of their place in the classroom, or in leadership, or on the playing field of professional and educational opportunities. Nobody is going to say, “Girls don’t belong in college,” or something like that, anymore.
At the same time, when I asked them about the ideal guy, it was like they were channeling 1955. The conventional values like dominance, aggression, wealth, athleticism, sexual conquest — and, particularly, emotional suppression — came roaring back to the fore.
In some ways, those have actually grown more entrenched. I actually saw a similar dynamic when I was first writing about girls: We were telling them, on one hand, to stand up, speak out, claim your power, all these things. This was in the early ’90s, yet we hadn’t really stopped telling them in a kind of deeper cultural way, in a more entrenched way, that they should see themselves as about their appearance and that they should be more deferential. The contradictions between the new and the old were creating such tension and conflict within them.So, when the church laments the "feminization" of boys and men, they are reinforcing a cultural stereotype of men as domineering, aggressive, athletic and emotionless. They are reinforcing the stereotype that the only valid male emotions are happiness and anger. When these men take charge in the church, they create a toxically masculine church culture where "negative" emotions are dismissed, whether by men or women.
Hope Reese - When boys are vulnerable, it’s often with women — their girlfriends, mothers, sisters — but you argue that it’s a problem that they aren’t being vulnerable with other guys or with their fathers.
Peggy Orenstein - For mothers, it can feel really sweet and really good seeing your boy express vulnerability. But if we’re not careful about helping boys process their own emotions, rather than processing their feeling for them, and feeling for them, we reinforce the idea that women are there to do male emotional labor. That can feel really good when you’re talking to your son, your little boy, or your teenage boy. But I think most women can attest that it feels a lot less good when you’re in an adult relationship. Why aren’t they being vulnerable with guys? Because men learn not to be vulnerable with one another.
Basically, as boys grow up, the only emotion that is validated for them is happiness or anger. The whole bucket of emotions that involves sadness or betrayal or despair gets funneled into anger. One of the things that we can do with little boys is to actually label their feelings and say, “It seems like you’re really sad,” or “That must be very frustrating,” to give them a broader emotional range.
Hope Reese - Boys learn early on to dismiss girls’ feelings. How does that happen? And do they dismiss their own feelings, too?
Peggy Orenstein - Part of how American boys learn to define masculinity is as adversarial toward femininity. They learn from the kind of incessant bombardment of images from the media and from their own friends about male sexual entitlement and female sexual availability.It's not hard to see what effect this is having on the RPCNA.
When "dominance" is praised and praiseworthy men are selected for office, it should be no surprise that churches are quickly becoming more domineering.
When "rationalism" is praised and leaders who can only be happy or angry are selected for office, it's obvious that anyone who is hurt by the church will see rejection. "Hurt" is not a valid emotion. Even "anger" isn't a valid emotion if it comes from a place of hurt. We see the church ignore spiritual and emotional abuse - if people are supposed to be rational and emotionless, then calling someone "worthless" is not a problem. Emotional manipulation to create a culture of fear and fear-based control is not a problem.
It is also intriguing that the church then has to deny God's female personifications. Jesus likened himself to a mother hen who sought to hold Jerusalem under his wing. He said, "Yet wisdom is vindicated by her deeds" (Matt 11:9) - a reference to Proverbs where God portrays himself as wisdom, a woman calling out in the streets for people to engage and learn. "El shaddai" - a name for God introduced in Genesis 17:1 when Abraham is being blessed with fruitfulness and abundance, is considered by many to mean "God of breasts". Seems a closer match than "God of violence/destruction" in my opinion.
So, it seems that fighting off the "emasculated male" concept has left the church mired in toxic masculinity, mired in domineering leadership, and ripe for spiritual and emotional abuse for which members and leaders are completely unequipped to deal with.
[P.S. I guess I shouldn't have been surprised that bringing my own history of emotional and spiritual abuse to the attention of RPCNA leaders resulted in, essentially, a call to suck it up and be a man.]
Also worth noting the character of more and more pastors - how many are primarily thoughtful academics and how many are primarily, for lack of a better word, jocks?
7 comments:
The most dangerous place in North America may well be the spot a woman in NAPARC- North American Presbyterian and Reformed Council.- denomination.
Right now there stands a wife being put through the ringer only for a beloved system, not for her Lord. Shame!! Shame the pastor of idols! Shame the elder of idols! If a true Church were to give way to a true expression of Biblical faith, there one would find the Priesthood of ALL believers and a man who admits to abuse or unfaithfulness charges would be brought by the empowerment of the wife (rather than the good old boys to the abusive husband or abusive system) before people she has chosen as brothers and sisters of THE Church Spiritual, not the church institutional. This one thing would be huge, but it only will start when so call church leadership and The Christian flock hold to NOT the church, but rather God in Christ as there way of Salvation
May that someday be. God grant it so, in Christ’s name we pray.
Groups, individuals or even organizations claiming to be a church who primarily uplift institutional identity and institutional fidelity as a chief value for all its members, instead of primarily uplifting Christ, are engaged in Churchianity more than they are Christianity.
“”Whether or not the western institutional church as we know it survives is of no ultimate consequence. What God has accomplished and will accomplish in Jesus Christ will always stand. His church, in whatever form it takes, will stand with Him”
Why did women flock to Jesus if what he had to offer was perpetual subjugation?
Yes. Spot on. And was Jesus, (Lord and Savior of humankind, Lord of all the earth), was He anywhere near the hyper authoritarian that a typical RPCNA or NAPARC session are?
Does Jesus have authority? Yes. But our Lord certainly does not come off as making authority all about a system.
Contrast that with the Sacerdotalism of Reformed sessions......”its all about authority, it’s all about the church, it’s all about us the session, in fact if you have not a membership in one of our authoritarian structured churches, well you are probably outside of Salvation.”
( WCF #25— but zero scripture backing, in fact if one actually takes the time to look up the scripture proof texts so often attached to WCF 25:2 you will find out what a lie 25:2 really is- they don’t have the goods people- it’s a shell game- a circular argument)
The Lord Christ states ...”I am the way, truth and the Life: no man comes to father but by me.” (Not by the session). What else does our Triune God tell us.......
“There is one God and but one mediator between God and humans, the man Jesus Christ.” 1Tim 2:5
Does every organization need some structure to it of leadership, sure, but is the hyper always male only authoritarian ethos of NAPARC the biblical model? No way!!! Does authority matter. Yes. But to hear NAPARC sessions speak of it and make it an over emphasis is like that pathetic father or mother who instead of developing a loving relationship over time with their kids, instead insists on lectures, hoops to jump though, etc. People with real credibility/ authority are not the ones running around wearing it on their chest in a prideful manner like Barney Fife or worse a bully.
For all those sisters out there who believe that they will become a liberal if they don’t hold on to their hyper patriarchal idea of what “submission” means. Sister, let go of that lie, trust in Christ! It’s the Priesthood of ALL believers, male and female.
Women should have way more empowerment in the conservative evangelical church than they currently do. And I’m not a wacky theological liberal because I think that!
The NAPARC answer to that is that the Westminster Divines refused to put prooftexts in the WCF because they felt it was the system of doctrine presented in scripture and not the result of one verse.
The real problem, IMO is the treatment of the 5th commandment in the WLC. They portray all human relationships as having a superior and inferior, and then paint with broad brushstrokes the relationship of the inferior as one of submission and the superior as one of dominance. Note that nothing like abuse or domineering is listed as a sin of superiors, which is, at bare minimum, negligent. The result of that omission is the authoritarianism we see today in NAPARC.
When you leave the RP church, you find that the Bible speaks much more broadly about submission. For example, "submit to one another" is a command, yet the best excuse for an interpretation is that it really doesn't mean "one another" like the 99.9% other mentions of "one another" (i.e. love one another). Instead, what it means is that the collective "inferiors" (the recipients) submit to the collective "superiors" (anothers).
I'm sure that was in a holy "exegetical sermon" and not like those liberal pastors who just make the Bible say what they want it to say.
Sanctimonious, for sure. Also self indulgent. Jesus never used His authority or power to be self indulgent. Yet many elders use 1 Timothy 5 as such toward only women in fact. The “self indulgent” who are spiritually dead in 1Tim 5, does NOT just refer to widows or women. To be sure, we have walking dead among us and they oft be named Elder Lad!
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