Women Preaching & 1 Corinthians
What does Paul say about women
speaking in the church?
Paul
on Women Speaking in the Church
by Dr. Benjamin B.
Warfield
I
have recently received a letter from a valued friend asking me to send
him a "discussion of the Greek words laleo and lego
in such passages as I Cor. 14:33-39, with special reference to the
question: Does the thirty-fourth verse forbid all women everywhere to
speak or preach publicly in Christian churches?" The matter is of
universal interest, and I take the liberty of communicating my reply to
the readers of The Presbyterian.
It
requires to be said at once that there is no problem with reference to
the relations of laleo and lego. Apart from niceties of
merely philological interest, these words stand related to one another
just as the English words speak and say do; that is to say, laleo
expresses the act of talking, while lego refers to what is said.
Wherever then the fact of speaking, without reference to the content
of what is said, is to be indicated, laleo is used, and must be
used. There is nothing disparaging in the intimation of the word, any
more than there is in our word talk; although, of course, it can on
occasion be used disparagingly as our word talk can also-as when some of
the newspapers intimate that the Senate is given over to mere talk. This
disparaging application of laleo, however, never occurs in the New
Testament, although the word is used very frequently.
The
word is in its right place in I Cor. 14:33ff, therefore, and
necessarily bears there its simple and natural meaning. If we needed
anything to fix its meaning, however, it would be supplied by its
frequent use in the preceding part of the chapter, where it refers not
only to speaking with tongues (which was a divine manifestation and
unintelligible only because of the limitations of the hearers), but also
to the prophetic speech, which is directly declared to be to edification
and exhortation and comforting (verses 3—6). It would be supplied more
pungently, however, by its contrasting term here-"let them be
silent" (verse 34). Here we have laleo directly defined for
us: "Let the women keep silent, for it is not permitted to them to
speak." Keep silent-speak: these are the two opposites; and the one
defines the other.
It
is important to observe, now, that the pivot on which the injunction of
these verses turns, is not the prohibition of speaking so much as the
command of silence. That is the main injunction. The prohibition of
speech is introduced only to explain the meaning more fully. What Paul
says is in brief: "Let the women keep silent in the churches."
That surely is direct and specific enough for all needs. He then adds
explanatorily: "For it is not permitted to them to speak."
"It is not permitted" is an appeal to a general law, valid
apart from Paul's personal command, and looks back to the opening
phrase-"as in all the churches of the saints." He is only
requiring the Corinthian women to conform to the general law of the
churches. And that is the meaning of the almost bitter words which he
adds in verse 36, in which, reproaching them for the innovation of
permitting women to speak in the churches, he reminds them that they are
not the authors of the gospel, nor are they its sole possessors-let them
keep to the law that binds the whole body of churches and not be seeking
some new-fangled way of their own.
The
intermediate verses only make it plain that precisely what the apostle
is doing is forbidding women to speak at all in the church. His
injunction of silence he pushes so far that he forbids them even to ask
questions; and adds with special reference to that, but through that to
the general matter, the crisp declaration that "it is
indecent"-for that is the meaning of the word-"for a woman to
speak in church."
It
would be impossible for the apostle to speak more directly or more
emphatically than he has done here. He requires women to be silent at
the church-meetings. For that is what "in the churches" means;
there were no church buildings then. And he has not left us in doubt as
to the nature of these church-meetings. He had just described them in
verses 26ff. They were of the general character of our prayer-meetings.
Note the words, "let him be silent in the church," in verse
30, and compare them with "let them be silent in the
churches," in verse 34. The prohibition of women speaking covers
thus all public church-meetings-it is the publicity, not the formality
of it, which is the point. And he tells us repeatedly that this is the
universal law of the church. He does more than that. He tells us that it
is the commandment of the Lord, and emphasizes the word "Lord"
(verse 37).
The
passage in 1 Tim. 2:1ff is just as strong, although it is more
particularly directed to the specific case of public teaching or ruling
in the church. The apostle had already in this context (verse 8,
"the men," in contrast with "women" of verse 9)
pointedly confined public praying to men, and now continues: "Let a
woman learn in silence in all subjection; but I do not permit to the
woman to teach, neither to rule over the man, but to be in
silence." Neither the teaching nor the ruling function is permitted
to woman. The apostle says here, "I do not permit," instead of
as in 1 Cor. 14:33ff., "it is not permitted," because he is
here giving his personal instructions to Timothy, his subordinate, while
there he was announcing to the Corinthians the general law of the
church. What he instructs Timothy, however, is the general law of the
church. And so he goes on and grounds his prohibition in a universal
reason which affects the entire race equally.
In the face of these two absolutely plain and emphatic passages, what is
said in I Cor. 11:5 cannot be appealed to in mitigation or modification.
Precisely what is meant in 1 Cor. 11:5, nobody quite knows. What is said
there is that every woman praying or prophesying unveiled dishonors her
head. It seems fair to infer that if she prays or prophesies veiled she
does not dishonor her head. And it seems fair still further to infer
that she may properly pray or prophesy if only she does it veiled. We
are piling up a chain of inferences. And they have not carried us very
far. We cannot infer that it would be proper for her to pray or prophesy
in church if only she were veiled. There is nothing said about church in
the passage or in the context. The word "church" does not
occur until the 16th verse, and then not as ruling the reference of the
passage, but only as supplying support for the injunction of the
passage. There is no reason whatever for believing that "praying
and prophesying" in church is meant. Neither was an exercise
confined to the church. If, as in I Cor. 14:14, the "praying"
spoken of was an ecstatic exercise—as its place by
"prophesying" may suggest-then, there would be the divine
inspiration superceding all ordinary laws, to be reckoned with. And
there has already been occasion to observe that prayer in public is
forbidden to women in I Tim. 2:8, 9. Unless mere attendance at prayer is
meant, in which case this passage is a close parallel of I Tim. 2:9.
What
then must be noted, in conclusion, is: (1) That the prohibition of
speaking in the church to women is precise, absolute, and all-inclusive.
They are to keep silent in the churches—and that means in all the
public meetings for worship; they are not even to ask questions; (2)
that this prohibition is given especial point precisely for the two
matters of teaching and ruling covering specifically the functions of
preaching and ruling elders; (3) that the grounds on which the
prohibition is put are universal, and turn on the difference in sex, and
particularly on the relative places given to the sexes in creation and
in the fundamental history of the race (the fall).
Perhaps it ought to be added in elucidation of the last point just made,
that the difference in conclusions between Paul and the feminist
movement of today is rooted in a fundamental difference in their points
of view relatively to the constitution of the human race. To Paul, the
human race is made up of families, and every several organism, the
church included, is composed of families, united together by this or
that bond. The relation of the sexes in the family follows it therefore
into the church. To the feminist movement the human race is made up of
individuals; a woman is just another individual by the side of the man;
and it can see no reason for any differences in dealing with the two.
And, indeed, if we can ignore the great fundamental natural difference
of sex, and destroy the great fundamental social unit of the family, in
the interest of individualism, there does not seem any reason why we
should not wipe out the differences established by Paul between the
sexes in the church. Except, of course, the authority of Paul. It all,
in the end, comes back to the authority of the apostles, as founders of
the church. We may like what Paul says, or we may not like it. We may be
willing to do what he commands, or we may not be willing to do it. But
there is no room for doubt of what he says. And he certainly would say
to us, what he said to the Corinthians: "What? Was it from you that
the word of God went forth? or came it to you alone?" Is this
Christianity ours-to do with as we like? Or is it God's religion,
receiving its laws from him through the apostles?
Reprinted
from The Presbyterian, October 30, 1919.
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