NR #1996-026: Northern Michigan: No Ordination for Mary-Lee Bouma

 When Classis Northern Michigan met on March 5 in the tiny northern Michigan
hamlet of Highland, representatives from 17 churches in one of the CRC's most
rural classes voted against allowing the ordination of women within its
classis - an issue that might never have been on its agenda if it were not
for the specific case of Mary-Lee Bouma, the unordained full-time pastor of
Trinity CRC in Mt. Pleasant. Bouma has served since 1994 under a provision
adopted by Synod 1992 allowing women to "teach, expound the Word of God, and
provide pastoral care, under the supervision of the elders" of the local
church. While a number of Christian Reformed congregations have used the
"expounding" provision to have women seminarians lead services and a few have
hired female seminary interns, Mt. Pleasant was only the second of three
Christian Reformed congregations to hire a woman as an unordained pastor. 

NR #1996-026: For Immediate Release
Northern Michigan: No Ordination for Mary-Lee Bouma

by Darrell Todd Maurina, Press Officer
United Reformed News Service

HIGHLAND, Mich. (April 2, 1996) URNS - Three days after Classis Lake Erie
voted to ordain the first Christian Reformed clergywoman, Classis Northern
Michigan voted against following suit.

 When Classis Northern Michigan met on March 5 in the tiny northern Michigan
hamlet of Highland, representatives from 17 churches in one of the CRC's most
rural classes dealt with an issue that might never have been on its agenda if
it were not for the specific case of Mary-Lee Bouma, the unordained full-time
pastor of Trinity CRC in Mt. Pleasant.

 The contrast between the Lake Erie and Northern Michigan decisions was
largely due to differences in the makeup of the two classes. Classis Lake
Erie, a group of 24 mostly urban congregations in Ohio and eastern Michigan,
has been a leading advocate for years of opening all offices of the church to
women. The Highland setting of snow-covered gravel roads leading to a
picturesque wooden church could hardly have been more different from that of
Mt. Pleasant, where a modern church structure located near the Central
Michigan University campus primarily serves the university community.
Bouma has served since 1994 under a provision adopted by Synod 1992 allowing
women to "teach, expound the Word of God, and provide pastoral care, under
the supervision of the elders" of the local church. While a number of
Christian Reformed congregations have used the "expounding" provision to have
women seminarians lead services and a few have hired female seminary interns,
Mt. Pleasant was only the second of three Christian Reformed congregations to
hire a woman as an unordained pastor. The third, North Hills CRC of Troy,
Michigan, was subsequently able to ordain Lesli van Milligen as an evangelist
- not an option for the other two churches with only one ordained pastor,
since evangelists can only serve in emerging mission churches or as support
staff in churches with multiple pastors.

 Much of the classis debate centered on the unique position of the Mt.
Pleasant church within Classis Northern Michigan.

 Classical home missions committee chairman Rev. Ken Nydam said that allowing
Trinity CRC to ordain Bouma would not affect the rest of classis. "If we pass
this we are not saying that the role of women elders and ministers is to be
imposed upon us; that will always be something you will deal with as a
council," said Nydam. "If this is a secondary issue, just as we want to be
free to follow our conscience not to have women elders and pastors, we want
to let Trinity church be free to have women elders and pastors."

 "When Mary-Lee Bouma came there, acting in the role of a pastor, the
ministry there became viable again," said Nydam. "It appears that there is a
blessing in the church under her ministry and it behooves us to look at her
ministry on that basis."

 "Will we stick with church order and close down a church?" asked another
delegate. "That's what may happen if we say no and Mary-Lee gets discouraged
and goes somewhere else."

 The elders from Trinity CRC also urged classis to allow Bouma's ordination.
"What is happening in Mt. Pleasant is all because of the leading of the Holy
Spirit," said one elder. "I would hope that before we vote we would take some
time to clear our heart, let the Holy Spirit work, and accept his decision."

 Such sentiments might have silenced the opposition in other classes, but
that didn't happen in Northern Michigan. Rev. Merlin Buwalda responded to
Nydam with a vigorous defense of the church order's prohibition of women in
teaching and ruling office.

 "I've been a pastor for 27 years, and we are nowhere close to where we were
27 years ago," said Buwalda. "I see this issue as one of several other
related issues, homosexuality, using female pronouns for God, that are
troubling the church today. I have been a big supporter and advocate of women
serving in the church, and will be until I die, but I believe women are not
allowed to serve in ruling office in the church."

 Buwalda also noted the pain that the women in office issue had brought to
two of his former congregations which had split over the issue of women in
office. "Already since 1991, our denomination has lost 26,691 members," said
Buwalda. "If you've calculated that number out, you'll find that seventy
percent of those people have left because they do not believe the Bible
allows women to hold these offices. Thirty percent have left for all other
reasons, including support for women in office."

 Others in classis echoed Buwalda's concerns in stronger language. "I get
very emotional about this, I can hardly talk about it without my voice
quivering," said Rev. James Evenhouse of Atwood CRC. "When I hear this called
a secondary issue, I cannot agree because it affects our view of the
authority of Scripture."

 Rev. Gordon Miller of New Hope Community CRC in Kincheloe noted that the
classis decision on ordaining Bouma would affect not only one church. "The
issue that we're dealing with here is much bigger than one exception; our
vote here will affect our whole classis and denomination," said Miller. "The
roots of this aren't coming from Scripture, they're coming from culture. The
Reformed Churches of South Africa bought into apartheid because that's what
the culture said. Do we want to be doing that?"

 When the proposal came to a vote, Classis Northern Michigan voted by a 17 to
15 margin against declaring the word male in the denominational church order
to be inoperative.

 That wasn't the end of the matter, however. Later in the day, Trinity CRC
presented a proposal to allow the church to ordain Bouma without having
classis first declare the word male inoperative.

 The proposal created a fair amount of confusion among the delegates. "We've
just decided this matter; the process is that classis has to first declare
the word male inoperative," said Buwalda.

 The Trinity CRC delegates argued that local churches ordain ministers in the
same method as elders except that they seek the assistance of classis in
doing so - an argument opposed by both Nydam and Buwalda. After the chair
ruled the Trinity CRC proposal out of order, classis defeated a challenge to
the chair, ending debate on ordaining Bouma for the time being.

 What will happen next is not at all clear. Bouma, a 1994 graduate of Calvin
Theological Seminary, has applied to the Calvin board of trustees for
ministerial candidacy and is expected to be declared a candidate by Synod
1996 - unless synod adopts one of a number of overtures opposed to women in
office. That would make her eligible for call in any of the 313 churches in
13 classes which have allowed women in office, but not for call to any church
in the classis where she now serves.

 "If you do not declare male to be inoperative, you cannot have women
ministers, and that's simply all there is to it," said Calvin Seminary
professor of church polity Dr. Henry De Moor.

 "If Mary-Lee wishes to continue in Trinity Mt. Pleasant, her options are
precisely.those that were open to her prior to 1995: she could expound the
Word of God on a regular basis; she could not do the sacraments or any
official acts of ministry," said De Moor. "The other option would be for
Mary-Lee to consider a change of position, to consider a call in a classis
which has declared the word male inoperative."

 De Moor noted that even if Bouma were ordained in another classis, the Mt.
Pleasant church would still not be allowed to call her. "The act of extending
a call has to be approved by a classical counsellor, and no classical
counsellor in a classis which has not declared the word male to be
inoperative is going to approve a call to a woman minister," said De Moor.
"If they did, classis would overturn that call."

 One possible option would be for the Mount Pleasant church to join a classis
which has declared the word male to be inoperative - an option which has been
explored by Mt. Pleasant.

 "As far as I know there is no law prohibiting any church from being asked to
be redistricted from one classis to another," said De Moor. "To cite a purely
hypothetical situation, I would be leery if a church in Colorado that does
not have the approval to ordain women ministers would ask to be a part of
Classis Lake Erie; that would seem to be a silly sort of thing. I could see
where a church could ask to be moved from Northern Michigan to Lake Erie. I
don't know what sort of validity that might have and what reasons might be
adduced for it, but if synod were persuaded it would be possible."

 "If Trinity Mt. Pleasant wished to change its classical affiliation it would
have to make geographic sense," said De Moor. "There would have to be reasons
that go beyond the simple matter of one classis declaring the word male
inoperative. Whether there might be other factors besides the geography that
would come into play, that would have to be decided by synod."

 According to Pastor George Vander Weit, stated clerk of Classis Lake Erie,
Bouma had sought his advice on the matter.

 "She respects me as a person who knows church polity," said Vander Weit.
"She talked about various possibilities and this was one possibility, is it
possible for Mt. Pleasant to transfer into Lake Erie. This is a possibility
but there has been no official request, there's no committee of classis that
has even considered this."

 However, a Mt. Pleasant transfer to Lake Erie - which would also have
implications for conservative churches in classes which have voted to allow
the ordination of women - may not provide an easy solution for the church or
the classis. Vander Weit said he had urged Bouma to return to the classis and
encourage it to revise its decision.

 "I think that this classis would say that a classis ought to wrestle with
its own theological issues and come to whatever resolution is best for that
classis," said Vander Weit. "It seems to me that Classis Northern Michigan,
if it is really interested in the integrity of the Mt. Pleasant ministry,
should have no problem ordaining Mary-Lee to that ministry, and any delegate
who is opposed to women serving in that capacity can just abstain from
voting. It would be very unfair of them to vote 'no' if it is only the issue,
not the person, they oppose."


Cross-References to Related Articles:

#1994-043: Second Woman Pastor to Serve Christian Reformed Church; Mary-Lee
Bouma to "teach, expound the Word of God, and provide pastoral care" as an
unordained solo pastor of Trinity CRC, Mt. Pleasant, Michigan

#1995-070: Christian Reformed Classes Permitted to Declare Church Order Ban
on Women's Ordination "Inoperative"; Synod Decision Given Immediate Effect
without Two-Year Ratification Process

#1995-087: Most Christian Reformed Classes Decline Synodical Option to End
Prohibition on Women in Office

#1995-088: List of Classis Decisions on Women in Office

#1996-025: Lake Erie Ordains First Christian Reformed Clergywoman

#1996-027: Total of Christian Reformed Classes Allowing Women's Ordination
Reaches Thirteen

#1996-028: List of Classis Decisions on Women in Office


Contact List:

Miss Mary-Lee Bouma, Expounder, Trinity Christian Reformed Church
 211 W. Broomfield, Mt. Pleasant, MI  48858 * O: (517) 772-0664

Rev. Merlin Buwalda, Pastor, Lake City Christian Reformed Church
 403 John St., Box 659, Lake City, MI  49651 * O: (616) 839-4978 * H: (616)
839-4424 * FAX: (616) 839-3099

Dr. Henry De Moor, Professor of Church Polity, Calvin Theological Seminary
 3233 Burton St. SE, Grand Rapids, MI  49546-4387
 O: (616) 957-7194 * H: (616) 940-0513 * FAX: (616) 957-8621 * E-Mail:
DEMH@Calvin.edu

Rev. James Evenhouse, Pastor, Atwood Christian Reformed Church
 10037 N US 31, Ellsworth, MI  49729 * H/O: (616) 599-2581

Rev. Gordon Miller, Pastor, New Hope Community Christian Reformed Church
 3 Osborn Pl., Kincheloe, MI  49788-1022 * O: (906) 495-5283

Rev. Kenneth Nydam, Jr., Pastor, Cadillac Christian Reformed Church
 509 E. Garfield, Cadillac, MI  49601 * O: (616) 775-5291 * H: (616) 775-5914

Pastor George Vander Weit, Stated Clerk, Classis Lake Erie
 2901 Waterloo Dr., Troy, MI  48084 * O: (810) 645-1990 * H: (810) 649-5388 *
E-Mail: NoHillsCRC@aol.com

Rev. Paul Veenstra, Stated Clerk, Classis Northern Michigan
 11520 Atwood Rd., Ellsworth, MI  49729 * H: (616) 599-2765




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