From a retired General Conference Officer on the ordination of females:
http://www.atoday.org/article/1297/news/analysis-of-what-is-happening-with-the-ordination-of-women-pastors
From a retired General Conference Officer on the ordination of females:
http://www.atoday.org/article/1297/news/analysis-of-what-is-happening-with-the-ordination-of-women-pastors
Here is what Dr. Gery Patterson has to say on who decides:
The Permission Issue
Ordination is, by General Conference policy, the purview of the union level of governance. This being the case, the General Conference has overstepped its bounds in seeking to tell the unions that they may or may not ordain women to the gospel ministry. It is not within the authority of the General Conference to take such action, just the same as if the taking of such action regarding individual membership, the election of personnel for church offices, or in the sisterhood of churches issues is not the purview of the General Conference Session. These actions belong to the constituent level to which they are assigned by policy and may not be determined or overruled by higher levels of the church structure.
An additional example of this overreach occurs in the General Conference action granting permission for churches to ordain women to the position of local church elder. There was no existing action prohibiting such election or ordination of elders or any other church office on the basis of gender. Therefore, there was no cause for granting such permission from the General Conference. Church officer election is under the authority of the local church constituency and by policy, higher organizations are not allowed to interfere in this process.
The General Conference, union or conference may not, for example, tell the local church whether it can elect women as treasurer or clerk of the church. Likewise they have no authority either to deny or give permission for women to be elected and ordained as elders. They may give advice on such matters, but it is not in their purview to dictate who may or may not be elected. With no action forbidding such gender choices, the church does not need permission to do as it sees fit.
It does no good to support the cause of women's ordination with misinformation, as Gary Patterson has done. Patterson states:
"Authority for ordination is assigned to the union level of church governance as indicated by General Conference Working Policy L 45 05. It states, “After favorable consideration the local conference committee will submit the name of the candidate with its findings and convictions to the union for counsel and approval.” There is no gender reference in this policy whatsoever."
Yet L 45 10 in the 2005-2006 GC Working Policy refers to "the examination of the candidate, with his wife." No reference to gender in the policy? And L 50 when discussing the examination of the candidate explicitly says "a man." No reference to gender?
And then there is the whole issue of incorporation. The Working Policy explicitly states that a GC Session is the highest authority on earth under God. Therefore, the votes of those sessions are pretty much incorporated into the Working Policy by reference. Both the 1990 and the 1995 GC Sessions voted down women's ordination.
One has to ask, if Patterson quoted from L 45 05, why did he not notice the obvious reference to gender in L 45 10? And why did he not notice the word "man" in L 50?
Why did he not notice these obvious references to gender?When I was a student at Southern in 1982/83, there was a student there who went around and collected recordings of conversations with various individuals about the sanctuary, 1844, etc., and turned them over to church leadership. My recollection is that Patterson as president of a conference was one of those who was recorded. Therefore I would like to ask whether Patterson believes that there is a sanctuary in heaven with furniture, and that Jesus began His high priestly ministry in 1844 when He moved from the Holy Place to the Most Holy Place at the end of the 2300 day prophecy of Dan. 8:14.
Johann, do you know the answer to this question?