Marrow Man
Drunk with Powder
I was having lunch today with a professor and another student. We are both going to be working as graduate assistants for an upcoming church history class (this is part of my requirement for completing my M.Th.). During the course of conversation on Luther and Calvin, the prof just sort of mentions something about Calvin, and insinuates that Calvin made the comment somewhere that he would be in favor of ordaining a woman to ministerial office if she were especially intelligent, learned, etc.
Needless to say, that is very surprising to me. It would seem that every feminist would have come out of the woodwork with such a quote if it were true. I did not want to be combative with the prof and show him proper respect. I asked where this source was, and it seemed that he had not actually read it, but was told about it. He said it was a footnote in Calvin's commentaries (which he later admitted he did not own). He thought it was in 1 Timothy. Well, later today I spent a while reading through Calvin's comments in 1 Timothy 2 and 3 concerning women, church office, etc. Nothing. I also went to his comments on 1 Corinthians 14, but also drew a blank. In the 1 Corinthians commentary were words that would essentially disprove the statement by the prof, as Calvin roots the prohibition from teaching office in the roles of men and women (women being in submission to women, as this being a part of church office). The only thing I can find that even remotely matches what the prof says is a comment about Deborah in 1 Timothy 2 -- that this was an extraordinary situation and the extraordinary does not supplant the ordinary governance of God's church.
Does anyone have any ideas about what the prof meant? And how do you think I should handle this? I'm sure the comment was influential on the other student, who accepted it quite eagerly. I'm also afraid that the prof might repeat this in class, and I don't think I can let that go.
Needless to say, that is very surprising to me. It would seem that every feminist would have come out of the woodwork with such a quote if it were true. I did not want to be combative with the prof and show him proper respect. I asked where this source was, and it seemed that he had not actually read it, but was told about it. He said it was a footnote in Calvin's commentaries (which he later admitted he did not own). He thought it was in 1 Timothy. Well, later today I spent a while reading through Calvin's comments in 1 Timothy 2 and 3 concerning women, church office, etc. Nothing. I also went to his comments on 1 Corinthians 14, but also drew a blank. In the 1 Corinthians commentary were words that would essentially disprove the statement by the prof, as Calvin roots the prohibition from teaching office in the roles of men and women (women being in submission to women, as this being a part of church office). The only thing I can find that even remotely matches what the prof says is a comment about Deborah in 1 Timothy 2 -- that this was an extraordinary situation and the extraordinary does not supplant the ordinary governance of God's church.
Does anyone have any ideas about what the prof meant? And how do you think I should handle this? I'm sure the comment was influential on the other student, who accepted it quite eagerly. I'm also afraid that the prof might repeat this in class, and I don't think I can let that go.