D. Owsley

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In another example, Clarke suggests some parts of Paul’s ministry might be better understood as “non-hierarchical” rather than “egalitarian.” Major examples would be Paul’s use of “brother” language, which would not have been understood as egalitarian in Paul’s Greco-Roman context but rather would convey “mutual dependence, support and love” with the possibility of status differences among brothers (e.g., the inheritance rights of the firstborn).
Neither Complementarian nor Egalitarian: A Kingdom Corrective to the Evangelical Gender Debate
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