The difficulty, as C. Raymond Holmes pointed out, is that the arguments against permitting homosexual practices in the church are based on Bible verses written by the apostle Paul (and others), and arguments against permitting women's ordination are based on Bible verses written by the apostle Paul (and others).
So why ignore what Paul wrote about the roles of men and women? Because what he wrote had to do with the culture of those times, or the culture of the cities he was writing to. Since we have a different culture, the logic goes, what Paul wrote does not apply.
So why ignore what Paul wrote about homosexual practices? Because what he wrote had to do with the culture of those times, or the culture of the cities he was writing to. Since we have a different culture in these perverse times, the logic goes, what Paul wrote does not apply.
Some get more specific. Some say that Paul's concern was not about homosexual practices, but about pagan worship practices. Since homosexual practices are not a part of pagan worship today, the logic goes, what he wrote does not apply to us today.
I think some have explained away Paul's concern about the roles of men and women on the basis of pagan worship practices too.
If the present push for WO has anything to do with societal and cultural pressures, then certainly as we have more and more agitation and pressure for gay so-called rights, we can expect more and more agitation and pressure for the same within the church.