The authority to ordain rests with the Unions.
Whether or not to ordain females should have been decided at the Union level. It should never have gone to a GC session.
I suppose a teenager might ask Dad for permission for something, get turned down, and then regret that he had ever asked Dad instead of Mom, or that he had asked anyone at all if his request seemed fairly innocent. But once Dad says no, if the kid does it anyway, the label "rebellious teenager" just might fit if he balks at restrictions, doesn't want to be told what to do, and wants to have his own way.
Yet the fact of the matter is that doctrinal matters are not decided at the union level, and this is a doctrinal matter. It therefore ought to be decided by a GC Session.
You refer to unions being in charge of deciding who gets ordained. This is true. It is also true that local churches, not GC Sessions, are in charge of deciding what is served at potluck. (Some potlucks out there are coordinated.) Nevertheless, a local church should not start serving pork chops and champagne at potlucks simply because the local church is in charge of potlucks. Thus, the choices made by the entity in charge of potlucks/ordinations are expected to be within the parameters established by GC Sessions.
If unions are in charge of deciding who gets ordained, which they are, does that mean they can ordain someone without examining them at all? Or must they ordain only within the parameters laid down higher up, which includes the requirement that the candidate be examined?
Just because there are rebellious teenagers in the world is no evidence this is a rebellion. It is rather a disagreement on who is qualified for ordination, just like Paul and Barnabas disagreed on if John Mark was qualified. Silas accepted him while Paul did not. Against the arguments of Paul, Silas "rebelled" and accepted John Mark and made him his companion in evangelism. Later on Paul repented and accepted what, according to your arguments, could be defined as a rebellion.
Here is another illustration: Yesterday our conference arranged a trip for senior members where we, among other tings, saw the only antique cream diary in our country where the machinery is still in running condition. For our sake the guide opened the watergate starting the mill whereby the gears and belts turned. What was missing was the old generator run by the system where people could bring their radio batteries and have them recharged. We saw an empty barrel ready to be filled with butter to be sold in England. On the barrel it said "Danish Butter". Why? Because British housewives know that Danish butter tastes good, and the name could be used because Danish farmers did not have a copyright on the trade name, so it was perfectly legal.
There was also a bedroom with a kerosene lamp where the two young ladies running the place for the owners the final years, took turns sleeping. One of them actually went back to school to learn how a modern diary works when the place closed down 1952, while things seemed to run smoothly.
Our guide gave us a picture of certain "rebellions" against the owners taking place that were needed to make certain improvements. The owners were eight local farmers. The final rebellion took place when the place was shut down against the wish of some of the owners. It seems like the rebellious ones were the new generation of farmers who were no longer just teenagers.
I see a comparison in this with how our church functions, and I wonder if any of you do too? Were the "rebellions" justified?
On that trip I was told something that really alarms me. In certain areas in the world we have people who have been truly God-fearing, loyal believers who are still convinced that rejecting female pastors is a true sign of sanctification. But as these people have been searching eagerly for support in the writings of Ellen G White for their conviction they discover there is no such support to be found.
What these "honest" people are doing now is studying the writings of James White and other pioneers. Some of these people are now indicating there is more "truth" to be found among the male pastors of antiquity than in the writings of this young female, Ellen, who was really trying to play a role greater than the male pastors. Therefore she cannot be fully trusted, they say.
So what this "new" group is teaching us is how important it is for us to understand the inferior role of women to that of men in order to understand the writings of the Spirit of Prophecy. Only then, according to this doctrine, can we be true Christians. We must also learn that not everything Ellen White says is quite what it appears to be, according to this new theory.
Do you feel this is a development in the right direction for our church? I sincerely hope not.