Resurrection: Life After Life After Death

All Things Made New: Jesus Leads The Way

“There is a day coming when the old will pass away. Every wrong will be right, no more darkness, no night. The Son will light the way.”

The entire Christian faith rests on this foundation—first and foremost, the resurrection of Jesus himself, and then the promised resurrection of those who belong to him. Paul calls Jesus “the firstfruits of those who have fallen asleep” (1 Corinthians 15:20), meaning his resurrection is the beginning and guarantee of what is to come for all who follow him. He goes before us so that we might share in his risen life.

It’s no overstatement to say that if the resurrection didn’t really happen, Christianity unravels.

No matter how profound Jesus’ teachings or how compassionate his miracles, without the resurrection, there is no victory over death, no assurance that sin has been dealt with, and ultimately, no enduring hope. Without it, Christianity becomes merely a philosophy or moral framework—interesting, perhaps even inspiring—but ultimately powerless to transform or save.

Christians may speak passionately about better ways to live, the wisdom found in Scripture, or the hope the gospel offers—but if there’s nothing beyond the grave, all of it rings hollow. If Christ did not rise, and we will not rise, the story ends in the grave.

Yet, as the Apostle Paul declares, Jesus truly did rise — and those who trust in Him will rise too. Death, then, is not the end.

But it does raise some honest questions: What happens in the meantime? What takes place in the space between death and resurrection? Is there life after death—and if so, where is it? What is it like? How long does it last?

Life After Life After Death

As it turns out, the Bible doesn’t spend much time describing what we often call life after death—that is, the temporary state of existence between death and the final resurrection.

Instead, Scripture places far more emphasis on what might be called life after life after death: a renewed, embodied life that begins with resurrection.

Paul offers a hint in 2 Corinthians 5:8 when he writes, “To be away from the body is to be at home with the Lord.

Yet while some interpret this verse to mean that, upon death, a believer is welcomed into Christ’s presence while awaiting the resurrection, Paul’s words are first and foremost pastoral—offering assurance in the face of death—and, ultimately, affirm the broader biblical hope of being fully and completely united with Christ in the life to come.

Paul does not speak with uncertainty or fear, but with confident longing. He would “prefer to be away from the body and at home with the Lord,” not because he rejects life in the present, but because he knows that being with Christ is the ultimate goal—the full and final union for which all creation longs. For Paul, this is not an escape from life, but its fulfillment: the culmination of redemption and the heart of Christian hope.

He expands on this just a few verses earlier in 2 Corinthians 5:1–4, describing our earthly bodies as “tents”—temporary, vulnerable, and wearing out. In contrast, he speaks of a “building from God, an eternal house in heaven, not built by human hands.

His imagery suggests that death is not the end of our story, nor is it merely a spiritual continuation. Instead, death is the passageway through which we are prepared to be clothed with something far more permanent—immortality wrapped in glory.

And this is key: Paul makes it clear that our ultimate destiny is not to be unclothed (disembodied), but to be reclothed with resurrection bodies—“so that what is mortal may be swallowed up by life” (v.4). In this way, resurrection is not a reversal of death, but its complete undoing.

The ultimate hope—not just of Paul, but of all the apostolic writers, and indeed the entire sweep of the biblical narrative—is the renewal and restoration of all creation, including humanity, culminating in God dwelling fully and finally with his people.

The New Testament authors look through death and beyond it, with a kind of prophetic immediacy. They anticipate this glorious fulfilment with what feels like an Einstein-Rosen bridge-like perspective—seeing resurrection and new creation as the next great moment after death.

There is remarkably little concern for mapping out the timeline or explaining what happens in the interim; their eyes are fixed firmly on the end of the story, where all things are made new.

“I Tell You Today, You Will Be With Me In Paradise”

Another passage that seems to speak to the temporary middle space—life after death—is Jesus’ words to the thief on the cross in Luke 23:43, who implored him to “remember me when you come into your Kingdom“. Jesus replied (as is translated in many English translations), “today, you will be with me in paradise“.

However, when we take the Bible’s broader narrative seriously—one that places resurrection, not disembodied heaven, at the centre, I think a better reading of Luke 23 is “Truly I tell you today, you will be with me in paradise.

With no punctuation in the original Greek, the phrase could be read either as: ‘Truly I tell you, today you will be with me in paradise,’ or, ‘Truly I tell you today, you will be with me in paradise.’” I think the second reading seems a logical rendering of this verse, shifting the emphasis away from “today” being the moment of arrival, instead placing it on the assurance of what’s to come.

Jesus’ words in Luke 23:43 are a beautiful declaration of salvation, not necessarily a detailed explanation of what happens after death. Further, they are words of assurance to a man facing impending death that this will not be the end. Jesus offers the promise of belonging, presence, and hope in the new creation—paradise (Revelation 2:7), where the tree of life is found—the final, eternal dwelling place of God with his people. Paradise becomes a resurrection reality, not an interim destination.

Yet whether we understand “paradise” as a temporary rest in God’s presence or a pointer to the resurrection to come, the heart of the promise is the same: you will be with me.

What, Biblically Speaking Is  Resurrection?

The Bible contains several stories of people being brought back to life, but these moments—though extraordinary—are not to be mistaken for resurrection in its fullest, biblical sense. They are acts of divine power, but not the fulfilment of the Christian hope. 

Resurrection, in the biblical sense, is not simply about coming back to life. It is being raised into a new, eternal, and glorified existence—life; abundant, full, never-ending, transformed life. Life after life after death.

Let’s unpack the difference by comparing the resurrection of Lazarus and the resurrection of Jesus:

1. Lazarus: Still Mortal

When Jesus called Lazarus from the tomb, Lazarus came out still wrapped in his grave clothes—a sign that he had returned to the same kind of physical life he had before.

He would need to be unbound (John 11:44) and eventually, he would die again.


His body had not been transformed; it had been restored.

2. Jesus: Transformed, Glorified

After Jesus’ resurrection, the grave clothes were left behind, still lying in place (John 20:6–7). The cloth that had been around his head was folded up by itself—as though his body had passed through them.

Jesus wasn’t merely brought back to life; he was raised into a new kind of life.

His new body could be touched and could eat, but it also passed through locked doors (John 20:19) and was no longer bound by the limitations of mortality.

He would never die again (Romans 6:9).

This contrast helps us understand the Christian hope more clearly. Resurrection, as shown in Jesus, is not just about returning from death but stepping into a completely new, eternal kind of life. It’s a promise of transformation, not just restoration—a future where death no longer has the final say.

So Do We “Go To Heaven” When We Die?

Heaven is less of a specific location and more of a specific reality. It is God’s space and God’s reality, the place where God’s presence is fully manifest. Heaven is often described as the throne of God—the seat of His rule, glory, and holiness, a real and eternal realm distinct from Earth.

Jesus often spoke about the Kingdom of Heaven — it was one of the central themes of His teaching. The phrase appears 32 times in the Gospel of Matthew. In the other Gospels, the same idea is expressed as “the Kingdom of God.” These two terms are interchangeable, both describing God’s rule and reign.

Jesus taught that the Kingdom had already begun with His coming. He told His listeners, “The Kingdom of God is in your midst” (Luke 17:20–21). Yet, at the same time, He instructed His followers to pray, “Your kingdom come” (Matthew 6:10). This shows that the Kingdom is both present and future — already inaugurated, but not yet fully complete.

Jesus’ teachings revealed not only the reality of God’s authority and reign, but also included stories and parables that illustrated how people are called to live under the rule of the Kingdom of Heaven — a way of life He outlined most clearly in the Sermon on the Mount.

The Bible paints a beautiful picture of where this is heading. Heaven is God’s space. The Kingdom is God’s rule: heaven will one day come fully to earth (Revelation 21:1; Romans 8:21). The goal is not for us to go ‘up’ to heaven, but for heaven to come ‘down’ and fill the earth. It won’t be a vague, spiritual afterlife, but a renewed and restored creation — where God dwells with His people, and where those who belong to Him live in resurrected, glorified bodies, forever.

In the meantime, while we wait and if we die, what happens? If heaven is God’s space, and God’s Kingdom, arrived in part but not in full, and if we have entered into that Kingdom, in part but not in full, what happens at the moment of death?

Here are a few thoughts — shaped, I think, by the flow of the biblical story:

The Middle Space: Life After Death

We are estranged from God and in need of forgiveness. But we are also mortal and in need of rescue from the power of death. The gospel — the good news — doesn’t just tell us that we can be saved, but also what we’re saved from and what we’re saved to. 

Biblically speaking, humanity faces two ultimate destinies: eternal life in the Kingdom of God and eternal separation from God, often framed in Scripture as “the second death” or “hell,” the just end of a life lived apart from grace. By default, due to sin, all are on the path toward death and eternal separation from God.

The gospel is that Jesus came to rescue us from that default destination. He lived, died, and rose again so that we could enter the Kingdom of Heaven — not because we earned it, but because He offers it freely to those who trust in Him. 

The New Testament speaks powerfully—and often—about the dramatic change that takes place when we come to know and believe in Jesus. It’s more than a change in beliefs or behaviour. It’s a transfer of identity and belonging. Scripture describes it as moving from death to life, from the dominion of darkness into the kingdom of light, from being “children of wrath” (Ephesians 2:3) to becoming beloved children of God.

This isn’t symbolic. It’s spiritual reality.

Paul puts it plainly: “You were dead in your sins… but God made you alive with Christ” (Colossians 2:13). Once disconnected from God, we’re now fully alive, not by our own effort, but because of His mercy and love. The Spirit of God Himself comes to live in us (Romans 8:11), bringing new desires, new strength, and new life.

Jesus called it being born again—a spiritual rebirth that starts the moment we believe. And He gave us this promise: “The one who believes in Me, even though they die, yet will they live” (John 11:25).

This is the miracle of salvation: not just forgiveness, but resurrection. Not just turning over a new leaf, but becoming a new creation.

What does this mean for believers? Does some part of them, made fully alive in Christ, live on after death?

I believe the answer is yes.

The spirit that has been made alive in Christ will go to be with Christ “and then, when Christ, who is your life appears, then you also will appear with Him in glory” (Colossians 3:4).

When someone puts their faith in Jesus, their spirit is made alive—born again by the Holy Spirit—and that new, living spirit continues on after death. Paul writes, as we looked at earlier “To be absent from the body is to be present with the Lord” (2 Corinthians 5:8), and Jesus promised, “The one who believes in Me, though they may die, yet shall they live” (John 11:25).

This doesn’t mean we enter a vague, floating existence. Our truest self—the spirit made alive in Christ—is kept safe in His presence. Scripture doesn’t explain exactly what this experience* is like, or how “conscious” it may be, but it assures us that we are fully known, fully loved, and fully held by Christ. And from the perspective of the person who dies, the next moment they experience is resurrection life.

So no, we don’t go to “heaven” in the way we often imagine—floating in clouds, harps in hand, for all eternity. But yes, if we are in Christ, we go to be with Him. And we wait, with hope, for the day when heaven fully comes to earth, when we receive our heavenly resurrection bodies, and everything broken is made new.

This is the unshakable hope of every believer: not only life after death, but life after life after death with Jesus, and the restoration of all things.

A Final Note

If you are reading this article (and thank you for being here!), and aren’t yet a believer and follower of Jesus, this raises something important. Something we all feel, whether we talk about it or not.

Mortality is our clue and our warning.

We were never meant to die. Deep down, we know this — which is why death feels so wrong, even when it’s expected. Our bodies aging, our loved ones passing — they all point to a world that’s not as it should be. Death is a signpost, reminding us that things are not yet made right.

But it’s also a warning. Life doesn’t go on forever, and the choices we make now matter. The gospel is not just about comfort after death — it’s a call to turn, to trust Jesus, and to step into the Kingdom life now. Because one day, the waiting will be over. The King will return. And heaven will come crashing in.

“What I am saying, dear brothers and sisters, is that our physical bodies cannot inherit the Kingdom of God. These dying bodies cannot inherit what will last forever. But let me reveal to you a wonderful secret. We will not all die, but we will all be transformed! It will happen in a moment, in the blink of an eye, when the last trumpet is blown. For when the trumpet sounds, those who have died will be raised to live forever. And we who are living will also be transformed. For our dying bodies must be transformed into bodies that will never die; our mortal bodies must be transformed into immortal bodies. Then, when our dying bodies have been transformed into bodies that will never die, this Scripture will be fulfilled:
“Death is swallowed up in victory. O death, where is your victory? O death, where is your sting?” | 1 Corinthians 15:50-55, NLT

*The Bible speaks about mind, body, and soul, but not always in the neat, Western categories we often use. Rather than dividing people into “parts,” Scripture tends to speak of humans as integrated beings.
Embodied: We don’t have bodies—we are bodies.
Relational: We’re made to love God with all our heart, soul, mind, and strength (Mark 12:30).
Integrated: Our thoughts, actions, desires, and spiritual life are all connected.
Still, the Bible does use these words—mind, body, and soul—and each has a role in describing different aspects of who we are. In the Bible, spirit (Hebrew ruach, Greek pneuma) is most often described as:
– The breath of life from God (Genesis 2:7),
– The life force or animating presence that makes someone a living being,
– And, in believers, the part of them that responds to God, especially once they’ve received the Holy Spirit.
So, when a person dies, the spirit returns to God (Ecclesiastes 12:7), but Scripture doesn’t say much about it being conscious or active on its own. Personally, I think the best understanding of life after death for a believer is this: a person no longer exists in full personal consciousness. Their spirit, not just their life force but also the part of them that has been united to Christ, returns to God, their body to the dust, with their full personhood preserved in God’s keeping—awaiting resurrection (Colossians 3:3–4). This isn’t nothingness or oblivion—it’s rest. And from the perspective of the person who dies, the next moment they experience is resurrection life—life after life after death.
Bible Passages To Explore: 1 Corinthians 15:20–22, Romans 6:5, Philippians 3:20–21, 2 Corinthians 5:1–4, 8, John 11:25–26, Colossians 3:3–4, Revelation 21:1–4, Romans 8:18–21, Ephesians 2:4–5, Colossians 2:13–14, John 5:24



Stop Promoting Gendered Hierarchy!

(Not a reader? Take a listen instead ⇓)

This article is dedicated to two good men in my life, my father, Ken, and my husband, Luke. My father has always supported me, encouraged me, believed in me, loved me, and has never made me feel lesser. I wish there were more fathers like him. My husband’s love and support mean the world to me. He has always treated me as an equal, affirmed my value in our marriage, and rejoiced in my worth as a fellow-worker in the ministry of Christ. I am thankful for them both. “A good man leaves an inheritance to his children’s children.” (Proverbs 13:22)

One of the more detrimental teachings that I believe has defined the church throughout her history and which continues to exert influence today is the idea that God established some kind of hierarchy of men over women at creation. Hierarchy, it’s claimed, was, one; either part of God’s original plan for humanity, established from the beginning or, two; God’s prescriptive punishment (primarily upon the woman), because of sin.

This hierarchy, if it was part of God’s original plan, also then flows through into a church or spiritual context; God’s arrangement for not just the first creation, but also the second (new) creation. While this ‘divine order’ or hierarchical structure might (seemingly) have been largely abandoned, particularly in our 21st-century, secular, western culture (it hasn’t really), it should nevertheless continue to be taught and implemented (and in many places, still is) in the life and function of the church, and should inform our basic understanding of the relationship that exists between men and women.

Off To A Bad Start

Most people would perhaps claim that they don’t believe women are lesser than men in their basic humanness (although the history of female infanticide, particularly in countries such as China, India, and Pakistan would argue otherwise). Many people, particularly from a Judeo-Christian worldview, might affirm that men and women are equal in worth and dignity as fellow humans (all of us, individually, are still more important (if we’re grading) than animals.

Nevertheless, in Christian circles, many would still point to the reality that God made Adam first.

Eve was created second, as a helper for Adam, and this fact – the order of creation, together with the purpose for which each was created proves some kind of divinely established hierarchy.

The bottom line: men were made first, to image God, and women were created second to help men.

It’s somewhat painful to hear it explained, in vaguely apologetic tones, that Eve was perhaps not much more than an afterthought, created to assist with the collecting of firewood, the gathering of berries, and other mundane pre-history tasks that would prove to be all too much for Adam on his own. (God had hoped one of the animals might do the trick but, alas, no joy there…).

It’s even more disappointing to see this perspective outworked in the church, resulting, in practical terms, in women being prevented in many places from contributing in any kind of meaningful ways, as they are gifted. Some hesitate at limiting a woman’s contribution entirely (soft complementarian; we’ll get to that term in a moment) and agree that women can bring their gifts and abilities in a limited capacity and as long as it’s under the leadership of men. However, hard complementarians are, in reality, hardly complementary in practice, allowing little to no contribution from women in the church.

Firstly, What Is Meant By ‘Hierarchy’?

hierarchy

/ˈhʌɪərɑːki/
noun

1. a system in which people or things are arranged according to their importance:
2. the people in the upper levels of an organisation who control it
3. a system in which the people within a company or organisation are organised into levels according to the authority they have:

“Hierarchy describes a system that organises or ranks things, often according to power or importance. At school, the principal is at the top of the staff hierarchy, while the seniors rule the student hierarchy. Also known as a pecking order or power structure, a hierarchy is a formalised or simply implied understanding of who’s on top or what’s most important. All that sorting and ranking can be helpful if you’re a business administrator, but if you find yourself arranging all the produce in your fridge according to a hierarchy of color, size, and expiration date, you might want to consider visiting a therapist.” | Vocabulary.com (emphasis mine)

Implicit in hierarchy are elements of power, importance, or authority (watch for these words later), none of which are necessarily wrong, in and of themselves, of course. For example, in a company or organisation, it may be appropriate and wise to confer more power or authority on someone with greater experience or a higher level of qualification.

Items that are rare, antique, or highly sought after (gold!) are deemed to be more valuable or important than more common or mass-produced items.

And, interestingly, our basic human needs are often laid out by way of a hierarchial pyramid classification system, with our psychological needs at the bottom and our social and relational needs sitting nearer the top.

However, two historical systems of hierarchy that we would perhaps be familiar with whose negative influences can still be felt today are patriarchy and colonialism. It can be argued that the conferral of power and authority to certain persons or classes of persons within these systems was often disproportionate and unjustified.

While hierarchy, in some instances, makes sense as a means of classification, does scripture teach that such a hierarchy exists between the genders? Does a disproportionate ranking of power and importance really exist between men and women? Is this God-ordained and God-sanctioned?

Does scripture teach that men are more important, more powerful, or have more authority simply because they are men? Is this really what God designed for humanity from the beginning?

Hierarchy + Complementarian || Egalitarian

There are two Christian views put forward that endeavour to describe the nature of the relationship between men and women. These views are described as being either Complementarian or Egalitarian. 

Christian Complementarianism is the view that men and women have different but complementary roles and responsibilities in marriage, family life, and religious life, particularly in areas deemed as ‘leadership’

Christian Egalitarians “believe that the Bible mandates gender equality, which implies equal authority and responsibility for the family and the ability for women to exercise spiritual authority as clergy.”

Both these views clearly offer biblical truths.

Men and women are different in many ways. These differences include both biological phenotypes and psychological traits. Some of these differences are influenced by environmental factors, yet there are also fundamental differences between the sexes that are rooted in biology.

The differences between the genders are unique and distinctive, designed to be this way by God. (Titus 2:1-51 Peter 3:7) (1 Timothy 3:1 – 4:16). Both genders are intrinsically valuable and precious to God, and we see His characteristics displayed by the perfect merging of both masculine and feminine traits. These distinct genders are the fundamental building blocks of God’s creation and are part of God’s plan and purpose for His family. His definition of marriage (Genesis 2:24) and the procreation of the species (Genesis 1:28) is the natural outcome of the union of male and female and clearly supports the biological truth embedded in our DNA.

Yet men and women are also the same. Equal in value, dignity, responsibility, and relationship to one another (as we’ll see later in this article).

We are the same. And we are different. We are both equal and complementary. It was God’s intention that these differences exist, complementing one another, and the human race is better for the diversity between the two genders.

Both these factors are incredibly important in our relationship with one another, within marriage, and within our wider communities, and are critical to embrace in a church context. 

Complementarian Is Not Complimentary

The problem with complementarianism is that it’s not truly complementary in practice. Rather, true complementarianism functions as a (sometimes softly packaged but) essentially male-dominated hierarchy. I say true complementarianism because many married Christian couples who identify as  ‘complementarian’ actually function as equal partners – egalitarian in practice. Many churches that identify as complementarian actually function as mostly egalitarian in practice, often restricting only the role of elder or senior pastor to men.

And the reality is that many true complementarian leaders teach that male authority and female submission extend beyond marriage and the church into the rest of society. They believe that God really did instigate a male-dominated hierarchy at creation, that it was His original design for humanity, and that it extends into all spheres of life, including and not limited to the church.

For some, “the theology of complementarianism has become so deeply entrenched in evangelical belief that they have come to see it as an essential doctrine of the faith. That is to say, that it is a primary issue of salvation. For some evangelicals, complementarianism has become the benchmark of theological faithfulness, right alongside belief in God and acceptance of Jesus. As [John] Piper said in 2012, if people accept egalitarianism, sooner or later, they’re going to get the Gospel wrong.” (The Conversation)

Why Is Any Of This Important?

Well, I agree with John Piper in one respect: whichever framework we believe exists in Genesis will impact the way we read the rest of scripture and, by implication, the kind of gospel we teach.

I personally believe this issue directly impacts the way in which we teach this gospel narrative and that it shapes the way we then see church life, our own identity in Christ, relationships between men and women, relationships in marriage, who we raise our sons and daughters to be, and how these different relationships function in healthy and holistic ways.

The framework of Genesis is deeply connected to the gospel story we tell, to our theology and reading of scripture, and our view of what God intends for all humanity, in the end.

Before we even reach the New Testament (and encounter the few verses that seem to support gendered hierarchy), the way we have read and interpreted Genesis will have already determined through which lens we then view other (NT) passages.

In that sense, it’s of primary importance that we start from the correct foundations when building our theological house.

Setting Some Framework: Why Genesis 1-3 Is Foundational Theology

To try to prove that hierarchy is taught and embedded in the record of the creation of humanity and therefore also flows through into the church or a spiritual context, it’s actually necessary to jump pretty quickly away from the record of Genesis and proponents of complementarism will often start in 1 Corinthians 11:3. This verse “the head of the woman is the man” (1 Corinthians 11:3) is often referenced as inarguable proof that hierarchy (authority over women by men) exists, and indeed, was part of the original order of creation.

One of the epistles to Timothy is also referenced (1 Timothy 2:11-15), together with a few verses about husbands and wives from Ephesians (Ephesians 5:22-24) and it’s case closed. No qualifiers, no context, just a few proof-texts strung together and read back into the creation narrative.

1 Corinthians is an epistle written to challenge believers to examine every area of life through the lens of the Gospel. Paul specifically addresses issues such as divisions, food requirements, sexual integrity, worship gatherings, and the resurrection. 1 Timothy is another letter written by Paul, to encourage and guide the new believers in the development of good leadership within the church, not ego-driven or self-centered but governed by mutual submission to Christ (Ephesians 5:21-22). (Chapter 11 of Corinthians is actually considered to be one of the most obscure and difficult passages of scripture, and I talk more about this and the other ‘tricky verses’ here.)

Certainly, the New Testament has some thoughts to offer in relation to the creation narrative, the relationship between men and women, and the relationship that exists between spouses.

But before heading to the New Testament, I believe it’s important to set some framework around our interpretation of the early chapters of Genesis. We must read the New Testament through the lens of Genesis, not the other way around. And I think it’s safe to say that what existed before the fall was how God always intended things to be.

As Genesis points out, everything that goes wrong occurs after the fall. Sin enters the world (not good news), death hard on the heels of sin (even worse news), and a disrupted relationship between God and humanity from that point onwards.

Additionally, the purpose of the book of Genesis is to illustrate God’s relationship to creation and His intention of dwelling with us. “The whole purpose of Genesis 1 is to set the ideal human community  – a place in which the image of God, or the imitation of God, is actually going to be realised.  That, of course, gets distorted in Genesis 3 when humans disobey God. But the first chapter is outlining the ideal. The  book of Genesis is therefore a means to a theological end.” (Professor C. John Collins) (emphasis mine).

So it seems logical to assert that whatever was instituted before the fall was God’s original design for humanity, was intended to be normative and lifegiving for the flourishing of humanity, and (because of the effects of the fall) is restored and reinstituted through the redeeming work of Jesus (and we’d therefore expect to see this reflected in the life and activity of the new creation (the church)).

Genesis 1-3 clearly constitute foundational theology regarding God’s redemptive and restorative work in our world.

What Genesis Says

1. No Hierarchy In Our Humanity: The crowning glory of God’s creation was humanity, and Eve, the final masterstroke, the finishing touch of the Creator’s hand (Genesis 2:22-241 Corinthians 11:7). Created from Adam’s side, her status was, like him, one made in the image of God, with all the promise and capability of reflecting God’s glory (Genesis 1:27).

“Then God said, “Let us make mankind (Hebrew word Adam) in our image, in our likeness, so that they may rule over the fish in the sea and the birds in the sky, over the livestock and all the wild animals, and over all the creatures that move along the ground. So God created mankind in His own image, in the image of God He created them; male and female He created them.” | Genesis 1:26-27 (NIV)

The words used of Eve at her creation are the Hebrew words ezer kanegdo, translated rather unhappily as ‘helper’ and ‘meet for‘ in English. Our understanding of helper falls far short of the original sense of the word, which is used elsewhere in the Bible to describe God as a helper to His people or of a king to his subjects. The primary idea of the word lies in ‘girding’, ‘surrounding, hence defending‘, to ‘protect or aid’.

A better translation of the word kanegdo is the word ‘worthy’ or ‘suitable for’. The counterpart to the man, therefore, is “a woman of valour, equal to the man in capacity and ability whose worth is incalculable” (Proverbs 31:10). She is neither above man, nor beneath him, but stands confidently at his side, in protection and aid, as he does for her.

(The created order of man first, woman second, or the difference between the way each was created (man from the ground, woman from the side or part of the man), is often brought up in discussions about a supposed gendered hierarchy. Apart from the creation story in Genesis 2, however, the created order is not mentioned in the Hebrew Bible and Jesus does not mention it, but it is mentioned in two passages in Paul’s letters, as referred to above.

In this article, author Marg Mowczko takes a brief look at these two passages and at the significance that Paul places on man being created first and woman second, which she contends does not support a gendered hierarchy.)

2. No Hierarchy In Our Responsibility: God blessed the man and woman and gave them the commission to ‘be fruitful and multiply’, both having rule and dominion over the earth and the animal kingdom (Genesis 1:28). Clearly, neither could undertake such a commission of fruitfulness or multiplying without the other.

They also share responsibility for the care of the inhabitants of this world and the stewardship of the earth and its resources. In fact, this is the first place that we see God’s sovereignty enacted by His image-bearers and we later see this commission echoed in the new creation, where both men and women disciples are entrusted with the responsibility and privilege of ‘going into all the world and making disciples’ (Matthew 28:192 Corinthians 5:19-202 Corinthians 3:6).

This stewardship and responsibility were given to humanity, men and women equally, without distinction. Men and women are both created as equals in their purpose and capacity to fill the earth and rule wisely over it on God’s behalf and were both given the authority to do so from God Himself.

3. No Hierarchy In Our Conjugality: It’s stating the obvious here, but not only were Adam and Eve the first man and woman of the human race, they were also the first married couple. Their status as equals is shown in not just their relationship to one another as fellow humans (as discussed above), but also in their relationship with each other as spouses.

The early chapters of Genesis (prior to the fall) initially seem to offer very little by way of commentary on the nature of marriage apart from this comment in Genesis 2:23-24 (added long after the events of Genesis 2 actually took place):

“The man said, “This is now bone of my bones and flesh of my flesh; she shall be called ‘woman,’ for she was taken out of man.”That is why a man leaves his father and mother and is united to his wife, and they become one flesh.” Genesis 2:23-24 (NIV)

However, in taking a closer look, Genesis 2 actually offers quite a lot.

The divine view of marriage (and the Bible’s definition is that marriage is between a man and a woman), although only touched on very briefly in Genesis 2, is quite clear. It’s a relationship defined by a commitment of two individuals (already demonstrated to be of equal worth and capability) to one another, which becomes preeminent to all other familial relationships. Two individuals choose to leave their family of origin and form a new family with one another, united together as one in a full and cooperative partnership.

Taken from Adam’s side, Eve is made of the same stuff as Adam. She shares a unique connection with Adam that the rest of the animal kingdom does not, having been created from his own body, bone of his bone and flesh of his flesh. There is a unique kinship that exists between them.

Why did God create Eve in this particular way, when He could have just created her from the ground, as He did Adam? Why did God create Adam first and Eve second? And why does Adam name Eve rather than God naming her?

These are really good questions to ask and it’s important to understand what we are being told by this narrative (keeping in mind the foundational truth that the purpose of the book of Genesis is to illustrate God’s relationship to creation and His intention of dwelling with us.)

Jesus + The Church

There are beautiful theological overtones hidden within this creation story in relation to marriage, which point to the redeeming work of Jesus and the creation of the church, styled ‘his bride’ (John 19:34Ephesians 5:25-271 Corinthians 12:27). Paul the Apostle actually tells us in Ephesians that the church wasn’t modeled on the institution of marriage but rather, it was the other way around. “The church came first, marriage second”, he comments.

This seems odd initially, given the church didn’t exist until many thousands of years after the creation narrative, but it makes complete sense when we realise the Genesis narrative serves as a description of the blueprint for all that God has intended for humanity; God, in complete partnership with His people, to reflect His glory and purpose throughout the earth. The redemption and restoration of humanity, through the sending of Jesus, was never the backup plan, it was always the plan.

The story of Adam and Eve’s creation serves as a representation of the real story that would play out throughout humanity’s history; the good news that in Jesus, who is both saviour and king, God is saving, rescuing, atoning, justifying, ruling, and reconciling people for the glory of His name and in pursuit of His purpose.

The church only exists because of the sacrificial death of Jesus, prefigured by the deep sleep that came upon Adam. Her entire identity is shaped by her source, in Eve’s case, Adam, and in the church’s case, Jesus. She, the church, is made of the same stuff as him.

We are to think of the church – this community of believers – as a woman, a woman whose very life and existence were framed by the death and resurrection of a man. Through this man’s death and sacrifice, she is created and at his resurrection, she becomes a living creature.

Jesus says of the church (responding to Peter’s affirmation in Matthew 16:18 that he is the Christ, the Son of the Living God), “upon this rock, I will build my church; and the gates of hell will not prevail against it.” Jesus identifies and names his bride, the ekklesia, who will be called out from among the nations, brought into existence from his own death and sacrifice, and part of his very essence as the temple of the living God.

Additionally, we know of Jesus that “he is the image of the invisible God, the God did it this way (in the order and way He chose to create Adam and Eve) precisely to shape our understanding of the more significant reality at work. The Genesis narrative teaches foundational theology about the church and her relationship to Jesus (and God’s ultimate redemption of humanity), long before she ever exists. (I talk more about the organic reality of the church as a woman of valour here).

Marriage, as depicted in Genesis 2, is a relationship defined by sacrifice, support, defence, commitment, and faithfulness; exactly the qualities we see at work in the relationship between Christ and his church.

Hierarchy: Things Go South

The purpose of the first few chapters of Genesis is to set the ideal human community; how things should have been before everything goes wrong. In essence, it describes perfect kingdom living and perfect human existence; what we hope to see completely restored at the end of all things (Revelation 21:1-4).

But things do go wrong. The first humans disobey God, sin enters the world, and punishment and consequences are set out.

Adam is told by God, “because of what you have done, I will curse the ground (punishment) and through painful toil, you will eat food from it all the days of your life. It will produce thorns and thistles for you, and you will eat the plants of the field. By the sweat of your brow, you will eat your food until you return to the ground, since from it you were taken; for dust you are and to dust you will return (consequence) (Genesis 3:17-19). The consequence of Adam’s disobedience, ultimately, is connected to the ground from which he was taken, death, and how that relates to all humanity.

Eve is told by God “I will make your pains in childbearing very severe; with painful labor you will give birth to children (punishment), your desire will be for (towards) your husband, and he will rule over you” (consequence) (Genesis 3:16). The consequence of Eve’s disobedience, ultimately, is connected to the man from which she was taken, life, and how that relates to all humanity.

And this – the punishment and consequence – is where a final argument for the existence of a gendered hierarchy is made, but unfortunately, I believe, holds little weight.

It’s important to recognise the context in which the statements of Genesis 3:16 exists: they occur after the fall. As such, they cannot be considered God’s original intention for humanity, at the very least.

So is it merely descriptive or prescriptive? Is God simply confirming the dynamic of the relationship between men and women that will now exist, because of sin? Or has God had a change of heart regarding women’s previous status and position (demonstrated to be equal) and is now prescribing a hierarchy of all men, over all women, for all time?

I think, reading scripture as a whole, that we’re given a picture of redemption, renewal, and restoration. The new heavens and the new earth spoken of in Revelation show that God intends to restore all things, in short, to return creation to the state of very good as it first was in EdenIf this is biblical teaching, then we will see this reflected in the new creation, in the life of the early church.

And this is exactly what we do see. When looking through the lens of Genesis, we see the radical readjustment required and the challenges faced by the early Christians; where issues of race, class, social status, financial status, and gendered hierarchy are realigned and brought under the scope of what God had designed all along in Genesis. I explore this in more detail in my article Women In Ministry, which you can read here.

When considering the life and function of the early church, which included women fully participating in ministry, there is a marked reversal or divergence from the culturally and historically established norms and that this new reality is God-endorsed. I would contend that if a gendered hierarchy exists, it is a terrible consequence of the fall and not as a God-given prescriptive for what is healthy and good for humanity, or, specifically in light of this article, for the church.

Where Have All The Good Men Gone?

Some may think that, in any event, this is not a primary issue, as relates to the gospel. I agree…and I disagree.

I agree, firstly, that it’s a secondary issue in that I would still affirm those who hold to either view (complementarian or egalitarian) as Christians, fellow believers of the gospel of Christ. I don’t think that believing either one perspective or the other determines whether you are Christian or not.

But I disagree it’s not a primary issue. Where you land on this subject directly impacts the gospel narrative and shapes the way you will see church life, your own identity in Christ, your interpersonal relationships, marriage, and how these different relationships function in healthy and holistic ways.

As we move into the next generation of men and women, the story we tell our sons and daughters matters.

There are many good men who would possibly describe themselves as complementarian (essentially, proponents of a gendered hierarchy) but who also treat women with dignity and respect. While they may *believe* (or say they believe) that leadership and authority are restricted to men in marriage and within the church, they arrive at this perspective with a genuine belief that this is what scripture teaches and they endeavor to outwork this with humility and gentleness. However, in reality, particularly in marriage, and often in the church, these kinds of good men rarely function as true complementarians. They are far more egalitarian in thought and practice.

And then there are other men, those who would also describe themselves as complementarian, who are not good men. They are abusive, controlling, authoritative, demeaning, violent, and entitled.

Sometimes this behaviour is only seen and experienced behind closed doors while a pristine public image is presented to others.

Other times, this behaviour is the same whether at home or in public, with the perpetrators using scriptural teachings on the sanctity of marriage, forgiveness, the submission of women, and male headship to justify their behaviour. Complementarian men are compared, and often compare themselves, to Christ, while women play the role of the church who obeys and serves Christ.

However, as author Rachel Held Evans comments, “complementarianism doesn’t work—in marriages and in church leadership— because it’s not actually complementarianism; it’s patriarchy.  And patriarchy doesn’t work because God created both men and women to reflect God’s character and God’s sovereignty over creation, as equal partners with equal value.” 

One of the most significant challenges Christian women face today is recognising and dealing with the abuse they experience, which is often carefully cloaked and ‘legitimised’ in biblical language – obedience, submission, responsibility, leadership, authority, roles.

However, recognising abuse is one thing. Preventing it is another.

A horrifying statistic is that women inside the church are significantly more likely to have experienced abuse than those in the broader population. A report from the Anglican church found that despite some recent efforts and the fact that evidence of this has been reported on for years, many clergy remain in denial about it.

Many women do, in fact, recognise that they are the victims of abuse, that scripture is being weaponised and used against them to control and manipulate them, and yet are powerless to prevent it, change it, or speak out about it.

Scot McKnight, New Testament scholar, historian of early Christianity, theologian, and author has this to say:

“Complementarians teach biblical hierarchicalism and patriarchy and that men and women are equal, not in a substantive but spiritual sense. Their “role” language quickly morphs into power language. Hence, this hierarchy leads to entitlement and power and the requisite submission of the woman. There is a correlation between hierarchy and patriarchy and abuse by men of women. All abusive males are entitled, lash out in anger, seek control and demand submission. All abusive males think women are inferior.” | Complementarianism And The Abusive Male

There is no possible way that violence or abusive, controlling behaviours are justifiable from the text of the Bible. Perhaps this is most especially true of the few passages that so many abusers craftily and deceitfully employ.

Males feeling entitled is a cultural product and complementarianism is such a culture that leads to such a product. Males who seize that culture’s control are more likely to abuse.

Two action steps: change the culture, change the males.” (Scot McKnight)

In Conclusion

The gospel is the story in all the Bible. It’s not just a message about our own personal salvation from sin but the story of what God has intended for all His creation. Its massive scope stretches from the first pages of Genesis through to the last book of the Bible, Revelation, and includes lofty themes such as the glory and sovereignty of God, the creation and capacity of humanity to image God’s glory, the fall and redemption of humanity, the purpose and kingship of Jesus, the new creation of a resurrected community of image-bearers and, finally, the arrival of ‘the new heavens and new earth’, when God will be all-in-all and the gospel story will have reached its resolution. 

God’s original design for humanity was not built on a gendered hierarchy. Instead, it was built on equality, cooperation, respect, commitment, and support, with each gender bringing unique and valued differences to the partnership. This mutuality, this joint responsibility, warped and damaged because of the fall, is restored and championed in the new creation; by those who call themselves Christians and who belong to the organic reality called the Church.

We need to keep God’s original intention for humanity (seen clearly in the first two chapters of Genesis) squarely in our sights when traversing the rest of scripture, particularly in light of which gospel narrative we tell.

Not only do I believe that gendered hierarchy doesn’t fit the biblical gospel narrative, I believe it to be theologically unsound. I don’t believe it’s what Scripture teaches at all in relation to the relationship between men and women, either naturally or spiritually.

Further, I believe that communities that engage in and promote the unequal distribution of power and authority between men and women – hallmarks of the complementarianism seen in many churches and Christian relationships – often result in cultures where abuses –  emotional, spiritual, physical, sexual, psychological, and financial – can thrive and flourish beneath the surface. Not only is this obviously harmful to individuals, but it’s also deeply damaging to the organic, corporate reality of the church and far from the abundant, flourishing life that God intended for all of humanity.

Stop promoting gendered hierarchy.


There is so much to read, watch, or listen to on this subject (including all the arguments presented for either a complementarian or egalitarian view). If you would like to read more on this subject by other authors, I’d recommend the following: Rediscovering Scripture’s Vision For Women (Lucy Peppiatt), Gender Roles And The People Of God (Alice Matthews), The Blue Parakeet (Scot McKnight), Man And Woman: One In Christ (Philip B Payne), Pagan Christianity (Frank Viola), Reimagining Church (Frank Viola), and this article by Marg Mowckzo (mainly egalitarian writers).
I’d also recommend listening to the Kingdom Roots Podcast by Scot McKnight (there are over 200 episodes and he covers many topics, including the question of gender equality, so I’ve linked one specifically here to get you started.)