• Skip to main content
  • Skip to after header navigation
  • Skip to site footer

Sallie Schaaf Borrink

  • About
  • Subscribe
  • Premium Content
    • Purchase Premium Access
    • Premium Member Log-in
  • Categories
        • Free Printables
        • Gifted & 2e
        • Gracious Christian Parenting
        • Homemaking
        • Homeschooling
        • Our Family Stories
        • Questioning the Narrative
        • Rebuilding America
        • Simple Living
        • Unit Studies & Learning Themes
        • Tags
  • My Printables Shop
    • The Lifetime Pass
    • Explore The Shop
    • Your Cart
    • Your Account Details
      • View Your Orders
      • Go To Your Downloads
      • My Account
    • Lost Password Help
    • Digital Products Terms of Use
  • Comments
  • Forum
    • Login
    • Sign Up
  • Search

Welcome & Miscellaneous

See the sidebar for all categories

Start Here

Subscribe

Donate

Tags

Sallie’s Rebuilding America – My News Analysis Website

My Recommendations

The Shop

Explore The Shop

The Lifetime Shopping Pass

Your Cart

Digital Products Terms of Use

Your Account

View Your Orders

Go To Your Downloads

Lost Password Help

Cozy & Simple Living

Simple Living

Homemaking

Our Cozy Family Life

The Prudent & Prepared Homemaker

Free Homemaking Printables

Holidays & Traditions

Comfort Food Recipes

Health

Home Education & Parenting

Home Education

Discipleship Homeschooling

Gracious Christian Parenting

Gifted/2e Parenting for Christians

Homeschooling a Creative Child

Homeschool Mom Encouragement

Homeschool Planning

Gifted/2e Homeschooling

Unit Studies & Themes

Unit Studies & Resources

Unit Studies

Unit Study Activities

Poetry

Christian Faith

Christian Faith

Prayer

Marriage

Bible Readings & Christian Devotionals

Morning Hope

Eventide Blessing

Streams in the Desert

You are here: Home / Christian Issues / Church Life / Should Women and Children/Youth Read the Scriptures in Church?




Archives

Should Women and Children/Youth Read the Scriptures in Church?

Wednesday, December 14, 2011 (Updated: Monday, December 1, 2025)
6 Comments

Post may contain affiliate links. Read my disclosure statement.

Long time readers will already know that I’m pretty conservative in my theology and traditional when it comes to my worship style preference. We attend a church with a pipe organ and a fairly formal (but not rigid) service.  I love hymns and expository preaching. But I have to say that I found something this week that surprised even this raised-Baptist-ended-up-in-the-CRC-for-now gal.

Rachel Held Evans in her post “…your daughters will prophesy…” linked to post on challies.com entitled The Public Reading of Scripture. In this post, Tim Challies laid out in precise detail how his church handles the reading of Scripture in a service. It is considered a ministry for which one must be trained and he listed a whole slew of requirements that must be adhered to in order for men to read the Scriptures in the worship service. Yes, the first requirement above all else is that only men can read the Scriptures in a worship service. (So you can probably already guess how I feel about that one. Heh.)



Among the requirements:

  • holding your Bible at a certain level and angle
  • making eye contact with the congregation
  • walking at a certain pace to and from the front of the church
  • reading with just the right amount of feeling and emphasis (not too much and not too little).

There were many comments on Rachel’s post and this one especially stood out to me:

I went to Tim Challies’ website and was pretty shocked at the micro-managing rules for reading scripture!!  So you have to be male, dress a certain way, prepare (not a bad idea, that one), and not hurry up to the pulpit, along with guidelines for how to read!  When I was 12, and in a conservative church, mind you, I was asked to read a passage at Christmas.  I was given no guidelines of what to wear and how to read.  I was nervous and stumbled over my words.  Yet despite (or because of) my imperfections, parishioners told me they were blessed by my reading.  I was just a part of the body ministering to others, and doing it perfectly was not necessary for God to use me.

One of the things I absolutely love about our church is that the entire spectrum of the congregation participates in the service. It was interesting to find these two posts now because this past Sunday I sat in church with my heart literally overflowing with thankfulness for the great variety of people who participated.

An elderly man participated in the small group leading some of the singing along with a young mom, a middle-aged woman, and a high school aged young man.

  • A middle-aged mom offered the congregational prayer.
  • A middle school aged boy served as a seating usher before the service.
  • A young single woman gave the children’s sermon.
  • A family with two teenage girls read the Advent reading and it was the girls who did the reading. (Their reading greatly blessed me although I guess Tim would consider it an epic fail since they were teenage girls, put the Bible on the lectern, didn’t make regular eye contact, and maybe didn’t read with enough practiced emphasis of the correct words.)

I agree with Rachel. The world is going to hell in a handbasket while people are agonizing over how men should precisely read the Scriptures in the service. I’m all for doing things with excellence that honors God and literally despair at some of the ridiculous stuff going on in the name of Christianity, but let’s get a grip, people. I cannot see how God is more pleased and His word more honored by a man dressed just so reading the Scriptures a certain way than a young woman who loves the Lord and is eager to be an active part of the church reading the Bible with joy.

Every time I go to church and see the entire spectrum of the church participating, I THANK GOD that I am able to be in such a place and that Caroline can see this happening. I THANK GOD for a place where women are involved in the service without anyone acting like the end of the world is nigh. I THANK GOD that youth are encouraged to participate and they are comfortable doing it because no one has ever told them they don’t belong.

If Jesus walked into our worship service, would he really rebuke a young woman for reading the Advent reading? Really?

Category: Church Life

About Sallie Borrink

Sallie Schaaf Borrink is a wife, mother, homebody, and autodidact. She’s a published author, former teacher, and former campus ministry staff member. Sallie owns a home-based graphic design and web design business with her husband (DavidandSallie.com).

You Might Also Like

Should Women Say The Lord’s Prayer in Church?

The Conservative Christian Women Who Don’t Fit In

“The very core of the cultural war is the battle for the sufficiency of Scripture.”

Previous Post:Introverts, the Work Place, and Mission Trips
Next Post:More Terrible Quotes About Women From History

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Lindsey

    Thursday, December 15, 2011 at 4:11 pm

    I quit reading Challies years ago when he said he wasn’t sure if miscarried babies have souls and they probably don’t go to heaven. At that point my “weirdo” radar went off and I haven’t been back since.

    I’m like you – the world is falling to the wayside quicker than we can even comprehend – and we’re spending time teaching people the “correct” way to read scripture in church?

    Sigh. The mind does boggle at some things in ultra-conservative circles.

    Reply
  2. Laura

    Thursday, December 15, 2011 at 7:03 pm

    I’ll just say “Amen” to your comments!

    Best wishes,
    Laura (mother of a 16-year-old daughter who will read Scripture in church this Sunday, as well as on Christmas Eve)

    Reply
  3. Peggy

    Thursday, December 15, 2011 at 7:18 pm

    My church has some East African and Asian immigrants that I am very thankful for–their faith and sincere worship just glow. I don’t find their accents or slower English reading a problem when they do the Scripture reading.

    Reply
  4. Karen Jones

    Friday, December 16, 2011 at 3:30 pm

    My teen daughters and I read lit the advent candles and read week before last. I must admit I feel a uneasiness inside when I see women up front but it must be my Baptist /Catholic religious experiances at a young age. (I remain confused on many levels) LOL . I need a better way of describing to my daughters” strong women” as I point out to them feminism gone berserk ….my 15 year old said she thought I meant that women are supposed to be weak and silent. Wow, I was just trying to teach that truely strong women aren’t loud rude obnoxious men haters. I bet they have never questioned if they should read scripture aloud in church. Karen

    Reply
  5. Imajackson

    Saturday, December 17, 2011 at 4:41 pm

    I wan’t to say about 1o different things about this post, but Sallie, I am sure you thought of them all already! Goodness! Yet most disheartening.

    Reply
  6. Sallie

    Saturday, December 17, 2011 at 5:14 pm

    Imajackson – Ten things? I’m sure I haven’t thought of all of them. Tell us what is on your mind!

    Reply

Leave a Reply to Lindsey Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

 

Thank you for your comment. I read and appreciate each one even if I am unable to respond.

Sidebar

Sallie Schaaf Borrink

For 20+ years, I’ve been writing about following Jesus Christ and making choices based on what is true, beautiful, and eternal. Through purposeful living, self-employment, and homeschooling, our family has learned that freedom comes from a commitment to examine all of life and think for yourself. 

I hope you will join me here where we discuss all of life each day.

Categories

Search

Access all of my Premium Content for just $10/month

All of my printables for just $37!

Popular Today

  • A colorful image of sacred geometry related to MegatronExplaining Metatron from an Orthodox/Historical Christian Perspective
  • Free Great Lakes Map Printable POSTFree Great Lakes Map for Homeschoolers
  • Classical Conversations Negatives and Why We Didn’t Join SIMPLEClassical Conversations Negatives and Why We Didn’t Join
  • What Was In The Envelopes At President Bush’s Funeral SIMPLEWhat Was In The Envelopes At President Bush’s Funeral?
  • Free Printable 100 Field Trip Ideas for Homeschoolers100 Field Trip Ideas for Homeschoolers | Free Printable
  • Becoming Useful For the Kingdom is Inefficient SIMPLEBecoming Useful For the Kingdom Is Inefficient
  • Dyscalculia vs. Math Anxiety Assessment for Homeschooling ParentsDyscalculia vs. Math Anxiety Comparison for Homeschooling Parents
  • Fresh ingredients for Autoimmune Protocol comfort food recipesThe Ultimate List of AIP Comfort Food Recipes
  • Of Eosinophilic Esophagitis, a gifted child, and a husband trying to keep up SIMPLEOf Eosinophilic Esophagitis, a Gifted Daughter, and a Husband Trying To Keep Up
  • Disciplining Gifted and 2e Children in the Christian Faith SIMPLEDisciplining Gifted & 2e Children in the Christian Faith
  • What is Heresy – When Guidelines Become Guillotines SIMPLEWhat is Heresy? When Guardrails Become Guillotines
  • A Sample Kindergarten Homeschool Schedule for a Creative, Dreamer Child SIMPLEA Sample Kindergarten Homeschool Schedule for a Creative, Dreamer Child




A Christian Nation

"The real object of the first amendment was not to countenance, much less to advance, Mahometanism, or Judaism, or infidelity, by prostrating Christianity; but to exclude all rivalry among christian sects, and to prevent any national ecclesiastical establishment, which should give to a hierarchy the exclusive patronage of the national government."

Joseph Story (Associate Justice of the Supreme Court), Commentaries on the Constitution of the United States (1833), § 1871.

countenance: To favor; to encourage by opinion or words; To encourage; to appear in defense (Websters Dictionary 1828)




What Can I Help You Find Today?

Home

About Sallie

Contact

Privacy Policy

Disclaimers & Disclosures

Tags

Premium Content

Subscribe

Comments

Forum

Make a Donation

My Printables Shop

The Lifetime Pass

My Account

Cart

Lost Password Help

Digital Products Terms of Use

Rebuilding America

Free Printables

Unit Studies & Learning Themes

Homeschooling

Copyright © 2005–2026 · Sallie Schaaf Borrink · All Rights Reserved · Powered by Mai Theme

Scroll Up
We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.