By Rev. William M. Brennan, Th.D.
Abstract
This essay examines the patriarchal architecture of creation and redemption as
revealed in the federal headship of Adam and Christ and in the first gospel
promise, the protoevangelium of Genesis 3:15–16. It argues that
patriarchy, far from being a cultural artifact, is the covenantal structure by
which divine Fatherhood is imaged within creation and fulfilled in Christ’s
mediatorial headship. Both Adam and Christ were uniquely begotten of the Father
through the Spirit—Adam by divine breath, Christ by divine conception—and each
stands as representative of the race proceeding from him. The fall introduced
disorder by reversing the ordained hierarchy; the woman’s desire for rule and
the man’s abdication distorted covenantal harmony. Yet the gospel promise
re-asserted headship, announcing that the Seed of the woman—begotten not of man
but of God—would crush the serpent and restore divine order. Thus, redemption
does not abolish patriarchy but consummates it in the Father’s Son, the Head of
the new creation.
I.
The Federal Principle in Creation
Scripture
begins with order. God the Father, source of all being, fashions the first man
“of the dust of the ground” and breathes into his nostrils the breath of life
(Gen 2:7). This act is both creative and generative: Adam becomes the son of
God (Luke 3:38). As image-bearer and ruler, he is constituted covenantal
head of humanity. Eve, formed from his side, is given as counterpart and
helper, not rival. Headship, therefore, is not post-fall tyranny but pre-fall
design. The relation between Father and Son in eternity grounds the relation
between man and woman in time: “The head (kephalē) of every man is Christ; and the head of the woman is the man; and the head of Christ is God.” (1 Cor
11:3).
In Adam, all mankind is federally represented. What he does, his posterity bears. When he falls, the race falls “in him” (Rom 5:12). By the same covenantal logic, Christ, the “last Adam” (1 Cor 15:45), becomes Head of a new humanity. Both were directly begotten of God through the Spirit; both stand at the fountainhead of an order—the one natural, the other spiritual. The patriarchal principle thus frames the whole drama of redemption: grace restores what fatherhood signifies.
II.
The Fall and the Protoevangelium
The
tragedy of the fall lies not only in disobedience but in inversion. The serpent
approached the woman first, not because she was intellectually weaker, but
because subversion of divine order is the essence of rebellion. In turning Eve
into the decision-maker and Adam into the follower, Satan struck at the
structure of creation itself. When Eve “saw that the tree was good for food,
and that it was a pleasant to the eyes, and a tree to be desired to make one wise” (Gen 3:6), she acted autonomously,
detached from her head. Adam, to whom she should have listened instead. Thus,
the dominion hierarchy collapsed: the serpent ruled the woman, the woman ruled
the man, and man ceased to rule creation under God.
God’s
response was not the abolition of headship but its reaffirmation through
judgment. “Your desire shall be to your husband, and he shall rule over you”
(Gen 3:16). The Hebrew tĕshûqâh (תְּשׁוּקָה) conveys more than longing;
it implies an urge to control or dominate, as in Genesis 4:7 where the same word is employed: sin’s desire
is “for” Cain—that is, to master him. The divine declaration therefore both
exposes the woman’s fallen impulse toward autonomy and reestablishes the man’s
headship as an enduring covenantal ordinance. What sin distorted, grace would
one day restore.
Immediately after, God pronounced judgement upon the serpent in the protoevangelium (the first proclamation of the gospel). “I will put enmity between thee and the woman, and between thy seed and her seed; it shall bruise thy head, and thou shalt bruise his heel” (Gen 3:15). In this first gospel declaration—the promise was made that through the woman’s offspring the serpent’s dominion would be destroyed. Yet even this promise retains patriarchal logic: the redeemer is “her seed,” but he is begotten of God, not of man. In the virgin birth the Father reclaims headship directly, bypassing fallen paternity. The seed of the woman is simultaneously the Son of God. The curse upon Eve thus becomes the conduit of salvation, and the patriarchal structure, rather than being nullified, is redeemed.
III.
The Feminine Desire for Autonomy
Throughout
redemptive history, Scripture portrays feminine insub-ordination as a symbol of
humanity’s collective rebellion. Israel, often depicted as God’s unfaithful
wife (Jer 3:20; Ezek 16), mirrors Eve’s defection. Her spiritual adultery is
not merely moral lapse but covenantal mutiny—a rejection of her divine
Husband’s headship. The prophets cry out not against womanhood itself but
against the archetypal revolt of the bride against her Lord.
Modern
feminist theology, though clothed in sociological language, springs from the
same spiritual root. Its essential premise—that equality demands
interchangeability—confuses ontology with economy. The Son is “equal with God”
(Phil 2:6) yet submits to the Father’s will; subordination does not imply
inferiority but ordered harmony. So too, woman’s subordination in covenant is
not oppression but typology—an image of the Church’s posture before Christ. When
this typology is overturned, theology collapses into autonomous anthropocentrism.
The
apostle Paul grounds his argument for male headship not in culture but in
creation: “For Adam was formed first, then Eve; and Adam was not deceived, but
the woman being deceived was in transgression” (1 Tim 2:13–14). The sequence of
creation signifies order, not worth. To reject this order is to relive the
primal deception. Consequently, the Church, as the new Eve, must display the
obedience her foremother forsook—yielding not in servility but in redeemed
submission to her Head, Christ. This, incidentally, is why a woman should not be in the position of church leadership.
IV.
Christ the Restorer of Patriarchal Order
In the incarnation, the divine pattern is renewed. The eternal Son, though coequal with the Father, “took the form of a servant” (Phil 2:7) and entered the fallen world as man. Conceived by the Holy Spirit and born of a virgin, He came without earthly father yet not without divine paternity. This miracle preserves both the promise to the woman and the supremacy of the Father. Christ stands as the Second Adam—the new federal head—through whom the shattered order of creation is reconstituted. "And so it is written, The First man Adam was made a living soul: the last Adam was made a quickening spirit." (1 Cor.15:45)
His
ministry demonstrates headship perfected: authority exercised in sacrificial
love. As the Bridegroom, He gives Himself for the Bride (Eph 5:25), redeeming
her from her own rebellion. In His obedience unto death, He reverses the
failures of both Adam and Eve—the man’s abdication and the woman’s usurpation.
At the cross, the Son submits to the Father; in the resurrection, the Father
vindicates the Son; and in the ascension, the Son receives dominion over the
new creation. Patriarchal order thus attains its consummation: God the Father
over Christ, Christ over the Church, and the Church over creation.
V.
The Theological Significance of Patriarchy
Patriarchy
is not merely sociological but theological—it reflects the very nature of
divine revelation. Every covenant is mediated through a male head: Adam, Noah,
Abraham, Moses, David, and finally Christ. The promise, “to you and your seed,”
signifies transmission through headship, not exclusion of women but inclusion
through representation. Feminism’s protest against patriarchy is, at its core,
a protest against divine Fatherhood. To reject the Father’s authority is to
sever the analogy by which we know Him.
As
Augustine wrote, “The order of nature is the peace of God” (De Civitate Dei,
XIX.13). Disorder, then, is not liberation but bondage to chaos. Calvin echoed
this in his Institutes, observing that God has “so tempered the
subjection of women that it should be no servitude but a necessary bond of
peace.” Patriarchal headship, rightly exercised, secures rather than suppresses
dignity; it is the framework of love.
In
Reformed theology, the covenant of grace itself is patriarchal: God the Father
elects, the Son redeems, and the Spirit applies. Headship is the grammar of
salvation. To erase it is to dismantle the covenantal structure of the gospel.
VI.
Eschatological Fulfillment
The
protoevangelium finds its final fulfillment in Revelation: the seed of
the woman triumphs over the serpent, and the cosmic rebellion ends. The imagery
of Revelation 12—the woman clothed with the sun, the dragon poised to devour
her child—culminates in the enthronement of the male Child who rules the
nations with a rod of iron. The battle between the serpent and the woman’s seed
resolves in the marriage supper of the Lamb (Rev 19:7).
At
the end, divine order is restored in glory: the Father reigning through the
Son, the Bride in joyful submission, and creation harmonized beneath them. What
began in a garden ends in a city. Patriarchal headship, redeemed and glorified,
becomes eternal communion—authority and love in perfect union.
VII.
Conclusion
The
patriarchal covenant is not a relic of ancient culture but the scaffolding of
creation and redemption. Both Adam and Christ stand as fathers of their
respective humanities—the one natural, the other spiritual. The fall was a
rebellion against fatherhood; the gospel is its restoration. In Christ,
headship is neither domination nor concession but divine reflection: the
Father’s image restored in the Son and reproduced in His people.
To
reject patriarchy, therefore, is to repeat Eden’s error—to seek equality by
erasing distinction. True equality lies in ordered harmony. When man rules in
righteousness and woman delights in that rule, the peace of God reigns. The
Church, the Bride, awaits her consum-mation when the voice from the throne
declares, “Behold, the dwelling of God is with men” (Rev 21:3). In that moment,
the Fatherhood of God will be all in all, and the patriarchal order will shine
not as oppression but as glory—the eternal household of the redeemed.
Excerpted
from the forthcoming, Covenant Universalist Systematic Theology, Vol. II:
Man in His Fivefold State: A Biblical Anthropology for the Covenant Universalist,
by Rev. William M. Brennan, Th.D.
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