by jimwalton » Mon Jan 29, 2018 6:55 pm
It's not sexist. I'll be glad to discuss it with you.
v. 3: "Head" is defined differently in just about every context, so we have to determine what Paul means by it here. "Head" as a person in authority as unknown in their culture. The head was the source, but in this case it would seem silly to say Christ was the source of every man. That's not a point that takes us anywhere or makes Paul's argument cogent. Christ is the one who provides for men, takes care of them, who enables them to grow into the fullness he designed for them. The issue is not control but responsibility. Paul makes the same point in Ephesians 5.25-29, which see.
"The head of woman is man." Nothing sexist about this. The role of the man is to compassionately care for the woman. The issue of headship is not control, but responsibility.
"The head of Christ is God." Theologically the Son is equal in deity to the Father. They are of the same essence. The Son is not a lesser being. This is the comparison, but with a tremendous difference. Paul's point is not hierarchy, status, or value, but only one of role and function. In Ephesians 5, headship is described in terms of nurture and care, not of power, superiority and authority.
v. 4: The Corinthians probably had questioned Paul as to how they should worship as Christians. Covering one's head was often a sign of humility (why Jews wear yarmulkes in synagogue). Why is this "dishonoring" in the church? Because Christ has redeemed us and raised us up with him, so covering the head fails to recognize His work.
v. 5: Paul is saying that despite the improved status Christ gives to all humankind through his death and resurrection, it doesn't shatter cultural ways. In those days a married woman would never go into public with her head uncovered. Uncovered hair was considered seductive, and only the hookers would do that. Paul wanted to protect the women in the church, despite their equality with men in Christ.
So when women prayed or prophesied in church (which, by the way, proves that 1 Tim. 2.12 is cultural and local, not universal), they were to cover their heads as all respectable women did. It prevented a lot of confusion and problems. Notice that the women were allowed to participate just like the men—an unheard of equality in their culture.
In Greek towns (Corinth was in Greece) women rarely appeared in public, but instead lived in strict seclusion. Unmarried women never left their homes except on occasion of festal processions, either as spectators or participants. Even after marriage they were largely confined to the women's areas. In the churches women were allowed to stop following these misogynist customs, but Paul asked them to cover their heads when the prophesied or prayed.
v. 6: A woman's hair was considered to be sexually enticing. There was to be no part of worship that was sexual (like the other temples in Corinth). The Christian church didn't want the reputation of being filled with lewd women.
v. 7: Men didn't have the same cultural limitations.
But what does it mean "man was the image and glory of God, but woman was the glory of man"? He seems to be referring to Genesis 1, where both man and woman are in the image of God as equals. But he's making a separation. Men don't cover their heads in worship because that's what honors God (as previously explained). Now, certainly Genesis 1 or 2 don't say that women were made in the image of man. This text affirms that she stands in such a relation to the man as does nothing else, and thus she is called the glory of man. And it is precisely the glory of man that should be veiled in the presence of God. In worship God alone must be glorified. Contrary to being misogynist, the text is actually saying how worthy and exalted woman is, possibly referred to as the crown and climax of all creation (God ended on the high note).
v. 8: Creation affirms gender and role distinctions between men and women. One way to uphold that distinction in worship (culturally and locally) is through head coverings. Obviously head coverings is not an issue in our time or locations, though gender distinctions still are.
v. 9: The Genesis record (both 1.26-31 and Genesis 2.19-25) is strong that male and female are equal partners, equal co-regents of earth, and equal in the image of God. But it is also true that the Genesis record mentions the man first (Gn. 2.20b) and the woman second (Gn. 2.22-23). The preposition of 1 Cor. 11.9 is διὰ, meaning "through," not "for." In Genesis 2.18, the word used for the woman is "helper," a word that is often used of God in the OT, so we know it's not a mark of inferiority or sexism. In Gn. 2.22 it says the woman was made "from" the man, and that's all Paul is referring to here. The issue in Genesis 2 is the equal kinship between the man and woman, not a hierarchy between them.
v. 10: "because of the angels." Very difficult to understand. Maybe he means that what counts is not culture or status, but what glorifies God.
"A sign of authority on her head": He is pleading with the women to maintain cultural decorum and not make the church look bad to the outside world. Christianity had a new view of women. They were not to be regarded as inferior. All the distinctions of culture were erased, and in the church they no longer counted. Paul will insist on equality in verse 11.
Sarah Ruden writes, "Paul’s rule aimed toward an outrageous equality. All Christian women were to cover their heads in church, without distinction of beauty, wealth, respectability—or of privilege so great as to allow toying with traditional appearances. The most hurtful thing about bareheaded, gorgeously coiffed wives might not have been their frivolity but rather their thoughtless flaunting of styles that meant degradation to some of their sisters—as if a suburban matron attended an inner-city mission church in hip boots, a miniskirt, and a blond wig. Perhaps the new decree made independent women of uncertain status, or even slave women, honorary wives in this setting. If the women complied—and later church tradition suggests they did—you could have looked at a congregation and not necessarily been able to tell who was an honored wife and mother and who had been forced, or maybe was still being forced, to service 20-30 men a day. This had never happened in any public gathering before. This was Paul's ingenious combination of common sense and radical defiance for dealing with a very touchy set of issues. Polytheistic literature gives us a context of how disturbing, how distracting to men and stigmatizing to women, the lack of a veil could be. This context supports the idea that Paul was being protective rather than chauvinistic. The context also helps explain why the passage doesn't flow, why it sputters with emotion, gets incoherent, changes tactics, and ends almost with a snarl. There was an awful lot at stake."