What he actually said?
Really?
In I Tim. 2, Paul didn't say "in a "church situation"", "unless "with her husband"", "in a "private session"", "outside the "general gathering"", "unless "in civil government"", etc., etc., etc.
"Standing on the Word"?
Standing on a mountain of caveats is more like it.
Women pastors you like
Discussion in 'General Baptist Discussions' started by Bro. Curtis, Jun 9, 2009.
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During the time of this writing, men and women sat separately. Men sat in what we would refer to as congregation seating, and women sat separated from their husbands in an outer section. The officiant addressed the husbands in the congregation, but not the women outside. (btw, children did not attend either; it was strictly a man-only culture). It was typical for the women to call out to their husbands in the congregation to find out what was being said from the pulpit. This back-and-forth chatter was extremely disruptive to the service. Paul called for wthe women inthe sidelines to remain silent, and called for men to give women the instruction given to them once they got home.
Today, women are no longer segregated from the congregation. They sit next to their husbands. Also, today, single women are allowed to attend church (also forbidden back then). Children, too, attend with their parents, which was then forbidden. We no longer have the conditions that existed in the context of this verse. Coed congregations and electronic sound systems, plus the fact that most people today are educated enough to take notes, have made the original context of this verse a non-issue. If we are to apply anything from this verse to today's application, it would be that the congregation should remain silent, and not interrupt the preacher, while he is speaking. This applies to anyone in the congregation, be they men, women, or children.
This verse is NOT a call for women to be banned from the pulpit. Anyone of any church that uses the aforementioned verses to ban women preachers is guilty of seriously perverting scripture. I don't say that lightly. There is no room for doctrinal interpretation there. Unfortunately, many churches and denominations have done exactly that. -
Cultural setting is an integral part of understanding the context of scripture, and a principle aspect of hermeneutics.
Showing slide shows and movies in a modern church is a part of cultural changes adopted in modernity and certainly not approved by Paul.
Cheers,
Jim -
Oh - and I don't see anything in Scripture saying that single women couldn't be in church. As a matter of fact, we see instruction to older men and younger men, older women and younger women. We see instruction to singles and marrieds. I don't see anything that would say that singles are not allowed in church. -
Thinkingstuff Active Member
The fact is many women in the Early Church played significant roles and edified the church by different means. However, that does not imply they were pastors or took the role of an episcopate.
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Annsi, I don't need to tell you that verse-lifting usually results in misapplication. Once can't simply take a verse like "all the churches of the saints" and make a whole doctrine out of it. The entire passage and its context must be considered.
As far as Scripture not saying that single women couldn't be in church, Paul wasn't addressing the morality of the custom whereby women sat where they did.
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Thinkingstuff Active Member
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What else are we to base it on besides what he said? It's interesting that you quote that when the context of 2 Timothy 2 Paul is talking about studying the Scripture not the fables of this world. -
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Revmitchell Well-Known MemberSite Supporter
While I do not support women Pastors John is correct on this passage even the historical setting behind it. -
Nice try, Tom Bryant, but that argument is a straw man argument. Are you truly saying that context, content, and audience should not be a consideration when interpreting or applying scripture?
Again, I'm not saying these passages support women as pastors. I'm simply saying that the context of these specific passages does not address the topic of women in a pastorate role. -
Not at all JohnV. I am saying that those issues should not change what is written in Scriptures in several areas and based not on a cultural stand but on Genesis 1-3.
It's not a straw man at all. I am asking how far you are willing to go with your argument that we must interpret Scripture from historical and cultural context. You set the standard, I am just asking how far you are willing to go in applying what I think it is a wrong standard of interpretation. I am not saying that's what you believe because I don't think it is. I am saying that the logical outgrowth of that position is a very slippery surface. -
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I would say that using culture to over ride the whole impact of Scripture is an open door to changing what the Scripture says.
We're going to differ on this, so it's really fruitless to continue discussing it.
Again, I want to make it clear that I don't think you're doubting the exclusivity of Jesus. That was never my intent. -
Hmmm...I Timothy 2...context is "in the church"?
Is it really?
I am looking and looking, I don't see "in church" anywhere in the chapter.
I will therefore that men pray every where...[oops he meant to say in the church]
...that women adorn themselves in modest apparel...[modest just when they are at church, yeah:thumbs:]
Or the following verses...
...then must be blameless [while at church!]
...Not given to wine [while at church:thumbs:]
...he must have a good report of them which are without [huh? I thought it was in-church behavior that counted] -
Revmitchell Well-Known MemberSite Supporter
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Thinkingstuff Active Member
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Revmitchell Well-Known MemberSite Supporter
Go read the past posts again. -
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