Head Covering & Gender Roles

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Introduction:

vv. 2–3) The headship principle:

[2] The church in Corinth faced a situation similar to the one we face today, and it seems these believers wrote to Paul (1 Cor 7:1) asking for his help on the submission of women. The apostle was pleased they sought God’s revelation in this matter and others. Here it seems to imply this church loved and respected him, and wanted to or held some sound doctrine.
Despite their immaturity and their plethora of problems, they respected Paul’s apostolic authority and godly wisdom, and in some areas of doctrine were seeking to know and follow the Lord’s will.
“Traditions:” this can be a rather scary phrase for many believers. It brings forth the idea Christians are bound by ancient, outdated traditions in their conduct and worship.
Traditions means “that which is passed along by teaching” and is used in a negative way throughout the NT when referring to man-made ideas or practices: Matt 15:2–6; Gal 1:14; Col 2:8. But the term is also applies to divinely revealed teaching, as here and in 2 Thess. 2:15.
2 Thessalonians 2:15 NKJV
15 Therefore, brethren, stand fast and hold the traditions which you were taught, whether by word or our epistle.
Keep this in mind, this church did not struggle with doctrine—”What the whole Bible teaches us today about some particular topic”–Grudem—what they struggled with was morals, it wasn’t theology but life-style. They had the right ideas but they were not living it out. They remembered the important truths about God’s nature and work, but they did not live godly lives.
Paul being an excellent teacher, praises them for their strengths before he beings to correct their weaknesses—in the case set before us this church’s misunderstanding of male-female roles and relationships.
[3] Here in verse 3 Paul beings his corrective by sharing the basic divine principle he is going to divulge, “I want you to understand.” Women in this particular culture lived in the background and were often only to be used for prostitution and thought of as property. The gospel of Christ gave them dignity and honor, which was apparently abused in some cases.
Paul responded to the situation by showing men and women were not on the same level of function in God’s design. In studying this passage the terms superior and inferior are used not in terms of value but rank, or the order of hierarchy.
This would be a good place to pause and define terms:
Egalitarian: The view that all functions and roles in the church are open to men and women alike.
Complementarian: The view that men and women are equal in value before God but that some governing and teaching roles in the church are reserved for men.
(my personal view) Biblical Patriarchy: Emphasizing God’s design for fathers to rule and endorsing the divine mandate for men to lead families, churches, and communities.
Ultimately complementarianism focuses on differentiating men and women by their roles, while biblical patriarchy emphasizes differences in their very being.
[3] This headship principle of subordination and authority permeates throughout the whole universe.
Three ways this is manifested:
Christ is the head of every man. Meaning He is uniquely the head of the church as its Savior and Lord (Eph 1:22–23; 4:15; Col 1:18 to list a few). Christ has also redeemed and bought it with HIs blood (1 Cor 6:20; 1 Pet 1:18–19; Rev 5:9). Jesus is also the head of every human being, believer and unbeliever. For any willing to submit to HIs authority make up the church, and those who rebel against His authority make up the world.
Man is the head of woman. This principle applies to all men and all women, not just to husbands and wives. It extends beyond the family to all aspects of society. This is the basic order of creation, as Paul will explain later on in verses 8 and 9. This is the way God planned and created mankind; it is the way He simple made us.
Most of the junk and misconceptions of the world eventually find their way into the church. Worldly Christians continually try and find ways to justify their worldliness. Christians feminists appeal to passage as Galatians 3:28 and 1 Peter 3:7 to disprove the idea husbands are to have authority over their wives and wives should be submissive to their husbands—not to mention the idea women in general are to be submissive to men in general.
Galatians 3:28 NKJV
28 There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither slave nor free, there is neither male nor female; for you are all one in Christ Jesus.
1 Peter 3:7 NKJV
7 Husbands, likewise, dwell with them with understanding, giving honor to the wife, as to the weaker vessel, and as being heirs together of the grace of life, that your prayers may not be hindered.
It is impossible to reconcile feminism as we know it, to what Paul is saying,
Paul makes no distinction between men and women as far as personal worth, abilities, intellect, or spirituality are concerned. Both as human beings and as Christians, women in general are completely equal to men spiritually. It is obvious there are some women who are superior to men in abilities, intellect, maturity, and spirituality. God still saw fit to establish this principle of male authority and female subordination for the purpose of order and complementation, not on the basis of any innate superiority of males.
Example:
An employee may be more intelligent and more skilled than his boss, but a company cannot be run without submission to proper authority, even if some of those in authority are not as capable as they ought to be.
Elders and deacons are to be chosen from among the most spiritual men of the congregation, but there may be other men in the church who are even more spiritual. Yet, for the very reason they are spiritual, those who are not in positions of leadership will submit to those who are.
A church may have some women who are better Bible students, better theologians, and better public speakers than any of the men, including the pastor. But if those women are obedient to God’s order they will submit to male leadership and will not try to usurp it—because this is God’s design.
A wife may be better educated, better taught in the Scriptures, and more spiritually mature than her husband. But because she is spiritual, she will willingly submit to him as head of the family. The proper relationship is specifically described in Ephesians 5:22–23.
Isaiah spoke judgement on his generation because they had allowed women to rule over them.
Isaiah 3:12 NKJV
12 As for My people, children are their oppressors, And women rule over them. O My people! Those who lead you cause you to err, And destroy the way of your paths.”
God is the head of Christ. Jesus made this fact perfectly clear, He submitted Himself to His Father’s will (John 4:34; 5:30; 6:38; 1 Cor 3:23; 15:24–28). Christ has never been—before, during, or after His incarnation—in any way inferior in essence to the Father. But in His incarnation He willingly subordinated Himself to the Father in HIs role as Savior and Redeemer. He lovingly subjected Himself completely to His Father’s will as an act of humble obedience in fulfilling the divine purpose.
Paul ties the three aspects together. As Christ is submissive to the Father and Christians are to be submissive to Christ, women are to be submissive to men. You cannot reject one part without rejecting the others. You are not able to pick and choose which parts of this principle to follow and not follow.
Head is an important word in this chapter. Some consider head to mean nothing more than source, in the sense the head of a river is its source. Though this word can mean this to a degree, Paul is not simply saying, “Man came from Jesus, women came from man, and Jesus came from God.” Though perhaps that is a simple understanding of it, it actually goes much deeper, because in Biblical thinking a source has inherent authority. If something comes from me, there is some appropriate authority I have over it.
In its full sense, head has the idea of headship and authority. It means to have the appropriate responsibility to lead, and the matching accountability. It is right and appropriate to submit to someone who is our head.
[Application]
The authority and submission in each of these cases is based on love, not tyranny. The Father sent Christ out of love, not under compulsion, to redeem the world; and the Son submitted to the Father out of love, not compulsion. Christ loves the church, so much He died for it; and He rules the church in love, not in tyranny. In response, the church submits to Him in love.
Likewise, men in general and husbands in particular should exercise their authority in love, not tyranny. They don’t have authority because of greater worth or greater ability, but simply because of God’s wise design and living will. Women respond in loving submission as they were designed to do:
1 Timothy 2:11–15 NKJV
11 Let a woman learn in silence with all submission. 12 And I do not permit a woman to teach or to have authority over a man, but to be in silence. 13 For Adam was formed first, then Eve. 14 And Adam was not deceived, but the woman being deceived, fell into transgression. 15 Nevertheless she will be saved in childbearing if they continue in faith, love, and holiness, with self-control.
This is not a matter or relative dignity or worth but of task and responsibility.

vv. 4–6) The application of this principle:

The section of verses, is best understood here as Paul referring to activities of believers in ministry before the Lord and the public, where a clear testimony is essential.
In the most general senses praying is talking to God about people, including ourselves, and prophesying is talking to people about God. One is vertical (man to God) and the other is horizontal (man to man), and they represent the two primary dimensions of believers’ in minsitry.
Admittedly, the details of this passage relate to head coverings is difficult because of the scarcity of historical data. But the content helps to clarify the principle Paul has in mind. Whatever the special covering may have been. He wants the church to live according to divine standards.
What Paul states about a man disgracing his head if he has something on his head while praying or prophesying, he had to be referring to local Corinthian custom. The phrase has something on his head literally means “having down from head,” and is usually taken to refer to a veil. The context here implies in Corinth such a head covering would have been completely ridiculous for a man and completely proper for a woman.
For Jews, who came to wear head coverings, the practice seems to have come in the fourth Century AD, though some may have tried it in the time of the apostles. But generally it was regarded as a disgrace for a man to worship with his head covered.

It seems, therefore, that Paul is not stating a divine universal requirement but simply acknowledging a local custom. The local Christian custom, however, reflected the divine principle. In Corinthian society a man’s praying or prophesying without a head covering was a sign of his authority over women, who were expected to have their heads covered in these ministries. Consequently, for a man to cover his head would be a disgrace, because it suggested a reversal of the proper relationships. Disgraces her head could refer to her own head literally and to her husband’s metaphorically.

In Paul’s day numerous symbols were used to signify the woman’s subordinate relationship to men, particularly of wives to husbands. Usually the symbol was in the form of a head covering, and in the Greek-Roman world of Corinth the symbol apparently was a veil of some kind. In many Near East countries today a married woman’s veil still signifies that she will not expose herself to other men, that her beauty and charms are reserved entirely for her husband, that she does not care even to be noticed by other men. Similarly, in the culture of first-century Corinth wearing a head covering while ministering or worshiping was a woman’s way of stating her devotion and submission to her husband and of demonstrating her commitment to God.

It seems, however, that some women in the Corinthian church were not covering their heads while praying or prophesying. We know from secular history that various movements of women’s liberation and feminism appeared in the Roman empire during New Testament times. Women would often take off their veils or other head coverings and cut their hair in order to look like men. Much as in our own day, some women were demanding to be treated exactly like men and they attacked marriage and the raising of children as unjust restrictions of their rights. They asserted their independence by leaving their husbands and homes, refusing to care for their children, living with other men, demanding jobs traditionally held by men, wearing men’s clothing and hairdos, and by discarding all signs of femininity. It is likely that some of the believers at Corinth were influenced by those movements and, as a sign of protest and independence, refused to cover their heads at appropriate times.

As with meat that had been offered to idols, there was nothing in the wearing or not wearing of the head covering itself that was right or wrong. It is the rebellion against God-ordained roles that is wrong, and in Corinth that rebellion was demonstrated by women praying and prophesying with their heads uncovered.

Dress is largely cultural and, unless what a person wears is immodest or sexually suggestive, it has no moral or spiritual significance. Throughout biblical times, as in many parts of the world today, both men and women wore some type of robe. But there always were some clear distinctions of dress between men and women, most often indicated by hair length and head coverings.

It is the principle of women’s subordination to men, not the particular mark or symbol of that subordination, that Paul is teaching in this passage. The apostle is not laying down a universal principle that Christian women should always worship with their heads covered.

The mention here of women’s praying or prophesying is sometimes used to prove that Paul acknowledged the right of their teaching, preaching, and leading in church worship. But he makes no mention here of the church at worship or in the time of formal teaching. Perhaps he has in view praying or prophesying in public places, rather than in the worship of the congregation. This would certainly fit with the very clear directives in 1 Corinthians (14:34) and in his first letter to Timothy (2:12). The New Testament has no restrictions on a woman’s witnessing in public to others, even to a man. Nor does it prohibit women from taking non-leadership roles of praying with believers or for unbelievers; and there is no restriction from teaching children and other women (cf.

Acts 21:9 NKJV
9 Now this man had four virgin daughters who prophesied.
Titus 2:3–4 NKJV
3 the older women likewise, that they be reverent in behavior, not slanderers, not given to much wine, teachers of good things—4 that they admonish the young women to love their husbands, to love their children,
1 Timothy 5:16 NKJV
16 If any believing man or woman has widows, let them relieve them, and do not let the church be burdened, that it may relieve those who are really widows.

Every woman praying or prophesying. Here we have the second proposition—that women ought to have their heads covered when they pray or prophesy; otherwise they dishonour their head. For as the man honours his head by showing his liberty, so the woman, by showing her subjection. Hence, on the other hand, if the woman uncovers her head, she shakes off subjection—involving contempt of her husband. It may seem, however, to be superfluous for Paul to forbid the woman to prophesy with her head uncovered, while elsewhere he wholly prohibits women from speaking in the Church. (

1 Timothy 2:8–12 NKJV
8 I desire therefore that the men pray everywhere, lifting up holy hands, without wrath and doubting; 9 in like manner also, that the women adorn themselves in modest apparel, with propriety and moderation, not with braided hair or gold or pearls or costly clothing, 10 but, which is proper for women professing godliness, with good works. 11 Let a woman learn in silence with all submission. 12 And I do not permit a woman to teach or to have authority over a man, but to be in silence.

Paul’s point in verses 4–5 is that, whenever and wherever it is appropriate for men and women to pray or prophesy, they should do so with proper distinction between male and female. Every man should speak to or for the Lord clearly as a man, and every woman should speak to or for the Lord clearly as a woman. God does not want the distinction to be blurred.

For a Corinthian woman to pray or prophesy with her head uncovered disgraced or shamed her and made her the same with her whose head is shaved. If a woman took off her head covering she might as well make the symbol of her role rejection complete by taking off all of her hair, the God-given identifier of her special role as a woman. For if a woman does not cover her head, let her also have her hair cut off. In that day only a prostitute or an extreme feminist would shave her head.

The Talmud indicates that a Jew considered a woman with a shaved head extremely ugly, and Chrysostom records that women guilty of adultery had their hair shaved off and were marked as prostitutes. Aristophanes even taught that the mother of unworthy children should have her hair shorn.

Paul therefore is saying, “If you are not willing to look like a prostitute or a rebellious feminist by cutting off your hair, don’t pray or prophesy with your head uncovered either.”

It is remarkable that any Christian woman would seek such an identification, until we think of how some appear today so worldly as to make the same comparison possible.

vv. 7–10) Why this principle is important to respect:

vv. 11–12) Headship in light of interdependence:

vv. 13–16) Experience, nature, common sense, and apostolic authority:

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