How Should Christians
Respond to Paul?
Christians have
diverse opinions regarding what Paul
wrote in 1 Corinthians 11: 1-15.
For example, Paul could have been
writing that is was a sin for a man
to wear long hair like a woman and
women to wear short hair like men.
Pauls counsel to the church at
Corinth was based on Old Testament
principles that superficial students
of the Bible do not understand or
appreciate. For this reason,
Christians frequently distort
Pauls writings and arrive at
conclusions that Paul did not intend.
The apostle Peter also noticed this
problem:
Bear in mind
that out Lords patience means
salvation, just as our brother Paul
also wrote you the wisdom that God
gave him. He writes the same
way in all his letters, speaking in
them of these matters. His letters
contain some things that are hard to
understand, which ignorant and
unstable people distort, as they do
the other Scriptures, to their own
destruction.
(2 Peter 3:15, 16)
To better understand
Pauls epistle to the church at
Corinth, we first have to understand
what Paul was thinking. Please
consider Pauls thoughts on the
imminent return of Jesus and how he
thought this would affect marriage:
Because of
the present crisis [the imminent
return of Jesus], I think that it
is good for you to remain as you are.
Are you married? Do not seek a
divorce. Are you unmarried? Do
not look for a wife. But if you
do marry, you have not sinned; and if
a virgin marries, she has not sinned.
But those who marry will face many
problems in this life, and I want to
spare you this [so stay as you
are]. What I mean, brothers,
is that the time is short.
From now on those who have wives
should [abstain from sex and]
live as if they had none; those
who mourn, as if they did not; those
who are happy, as if they were not;
those who buy something, as if it
were not theirs to keep; those who
use the things of the world, as if
not engrossed in them. For
this world in its present form is
passing away [anytime now].
(1 Corinthians 7: 28-31,
insertions and italics mine)
Even though Paul
recommended remain as you
are, Paul also understood human
nature. He also wrote:
I wish that
all men were [as unaffected by
sexual attraction] as I am. But
each man has his own gift from God;
one has this gift, another has that.
Now to the unmarried and the widows I
say: It is good for them to stay
unmarried, as I am. But if they
cannot control themselves, they
should marry, for it is
better to marry than to burn with
passion. (1Corinthians
7: 7-9, insertion and italics mine)
Paul had a view of
life that was affected by his belief
that the end of the world was
imminent-in fact, he clearly wrote,
time is short. From
now on those
who have wives should live as if they
had none. He
counseled that men and women should
abstain from sexual relations because
Jesus would soon appear soon. Paul
evidently reasoned the idea that
sexual relations should cease before
the appearing of the Lord from a
parallel of Moses command to
Israel at Mt. Sinai:
After Moses
had gone down the mountain to the
people, he consecrated them, and they
washed their clothes. Then he
said to the people, Prepare
yourselves for the third day. Abstain
from sexual relations. On
the morning of the third day there
was thunder and lightning, with a
thick dark cloud over the mountain,
and a very loud trumpet blast. Everyone
in the camp trembled. Then
Moses led the people out of the camp
to meet with God, and they stood at
the foot of the mountain.
(Exodus 19: 14-17, italics mine)
Pauls View on
Authority
Paul was a son of a
Pharisee. No doubt, he became a
Pharisee because he loved to study
law. He was fascinated by
the results that occur in people when
they heed divine law. After his
conversion, Paul spent three studious
years in isolation. (Galatians
1:18) He went to Desert
University to rethink and
restudy his understanding of God and
his world view. When Paul was
alone in the desert with portions of
the Old Testament, the Holy Spirit
enlightened Paul and he learned how
and why God legitimately
rejected the nation of Israel as
trustees of the gospel. Paul
also discovered that Gods next
step in the plan of redemption was
the Christian movement (Ephesians 3:
1-11) and Paul discovered that
everyone who believes in Christ is
considered (by God) to be an heir of
Abraham. (Galatians 3:28, 29)
Because very few of
the early Christians were well
educated, not many of them could
follow Pauls logic. Few
people understood why Paul said what
he said and this gulf of ignorance
led to enormous confusion (and it
still does). Various church
elders attempted to build arguments
using Pauls writings without
first understanding the basis for
Pauls argument and
consequently, more chaos ensued.
This is why Peter made the remark
that some Christians were distorting
Pauls writings to their
own destruction.
Some of Pauls
statements appear to be very strange
when viewed 2,000 years after he
wrote them. Pauls counsel
on hair length fits into this
category. Consider this passage
and notice the basis for his
argument:
Does not the
very nature of things
teach you that if a man has long
hair, it is a disgrace to him, but
that if a woman has long hair, it is
her glory? For long hair is
given to her as a covering.
(1 Corinthians 11:14, 15, italics
mine)
From Pauls
perspective, the very nature of
things referred to the fact
that a man with long hair looked like
a woman and a woman with short hair
looked like a man. What does
hair length have to do with the
very nature of things? Look
at this passage:
A woman must
not wear mens clothing, nor a
man wear womans clothing, for
the Lord your God detests anyone who
does this. (Deuteronomy
22:5)
God insists that woman
and men look different? The
simple answer is
authority. Why do
generals dress differently than
colonels who dress differently from
sergeants who dress differently from
privates? In a word,
authority. Our
dress speaks about our authority;
this is why privates do not look like
generals and presidents do not look
like homeless wanderers. Follow
Pauls words to understand the
role he believed authority has in
life:
Everyone must
submit himself to the governing
authorities, for there is no
authority except that which God has
established. The authorities
that exist have been established by
God. Consequently, he who
rebels against the authority is
rebelling against what God has
instituted, and those who do so will
bring judgment upon themselves.
(Romans 13: 1, 2)
Children,
obey your parents in the Lord, for
this is right. Slaves, obey
your earthly masters with respect and
fear
.(Ephesians 6: 1,
5)
Wives, submit
to your husbands as to the Lord.
For the husband is the head
of the wife as Christ is the head of
the church, his body, of
which he is the Savior. Now as
the church submits [obeys] to
Christ, so also wives should [obey]
to their husbands in
everything. (Ephesians
5: 22-24, insertions and italics
mine)
Paul viewed life as a
hierarchy of authority and Paul
clearly put woman below men in terms
of authority.
To the woman
he [God] said, I will
greatly increase your pains in
childbearing; with pain you will give
birth to children. Your desire
will be for your husband, and he will
rule over you. (Genesis
3:16)
It is Gods plan
that each husband should wear
the pants and be the spiritual
leader of his household. It is
Gods plan that a man should
love his wife (as Christ loved His
church and gave His life for it) and
that each wife should obey her
husbands as she obeys the Lord.
It was Gods plan that husbands
train up their children properly.
In fact, the Lord chose Abraham so
that he would train up his children
to do right and refuse wrong:
For I have
chosen him [Abraham], so that
he will direct his children and his
household after him to keep the way
of the Lord by doing what is right
and just, so that the Lord will bring
about for Abraham what he has
promised him. (Genesis
18:19, insertion mine)
Paul saw the happiness
and beneficial order which divine law
and love could achieve in the home,
the church, and the nation if divine
order was implemented, and many of
Pauls arguments are
consistently based on this world
view. Look at his counsel
regarding the choice of church
leaders:
An elder must
be blameless, the husband of but one
wife, a man whose children believe
and are not open to the charge of
being wild and disobedient.
Since an overseer is entrusted with
Gods work, he must be
blameless-not overbearing, not
quick-tempered, not given to
drunkenness, not violent, not
pursuing dishonest gain. Rather
he must be hospitable, one who loves
what is good, who is self-controlled,
upright, holy and disciplined.
(Titus 1: 6-8)
Now that we have
reviewed a few concepts about
Pauls interest and devotion to
law and order (the very nature of
things), consider these words from
Paul:
Every man who
prays or prophesies with his head
covered dishonors his head. And
every woman who prays or prophesies
with her head uncovered dishonors her
head-it is just as though her head
were shaved. If a woman does
not cover her head, she should have
her hair cut off; and if it is a
disgrace for a woman to have her hair
cut of shaved off, she should cover
her head. A man ought not to
cover his head, since he is the image
and glory of God; but the woman is
the glory of man. For man did
not come from the woman, but woman
from man; neither was man created for
woman, but woman for man. For
this reason, and because of the
angels, the woman ought to have a
sign of authority on her head.
(1 Corinthians 11: 4-10)
Three elements stand
out in this passage. First, if
a man prays with his head covered, he
dishonors his head because man was
created in the image and glory of
God. However, if a woman prays
with her head uncovered, she
dishonors her head because she is
under the authority of her husband or
father. Woman should not mimic
men for they were created for men.
Second, men did not come from women
and men were not created for women.
Paul says this puts women in a lower
position. Therefore, the
woman ought to have a sign of
authority upon her head. Third,
if this passage was everything that
Paul said about the hierarchy of
authority between men and women,
every woman would have two good
reasons to be angry with Paul. Please
keep reading!
In the Lord,
however, woman is not independent of
man, nor is man independent of woman.
For as woman came from man, so also
man is born of woman. But
everything comes from God. Judge
for yourselves: Is
is proper for a woman to pray to God
with her head uncovered? Does
not the very nature of things [the
natural order established by God] teach
you that if a man has long hair [so
that he looks like a woman], it is
a disgrace to him, but that if a
woman has long hair, it is her glory?
For long hair is given her as a
covering. If anyone wants to be
contentious about this, we have no
other practice [I have nothing
further to say than an appeal for
natural order] nor do the [other]
churches of God [located
around the region]. (1
Corinthians 11: 11-16, insertions and
italics mine)
Summary
The hierarchy
advocated by Paul is biblical,
reasonable, and understandable, but
limited to Pauls application.
God has made two timeless
declarations: Husbands have
higher authority (Genesis 3:16) and
there should be no confusion between
the sexes (Deuteronomy 22:5).
Contrary to what some people say,
Paul does not define the will of God
on hair length and head covering.
Instead, Paul borrows two
declarations from God to support a
position on hair length and head
covering.
Cross dressing is
unacceptable in Gods sight
because it causes sexual confusion.
Sexual confusion is wrong because it
dilutes or redirects authority.
High priests did not dress like other
priests because they had higher
authority, and woman should not look
like men because men have also been
given higher authority. Paul
was an advocate of hierarchy because
divine order (happiness) stems from
divine authority (love). A
Christian shows respect for divine
authority by obeying Jesus statement,
If you love me, you will
obey what I command. (John
14:15) Obedience that springs
from love is joyful, enabling, and
ennobling. Coerced obedience
always produces rebellion and
apostasy.
God has not declared
that a woman should cover her head
when praying. Paul argued for
the idea because he viewed I a s a
sign of submission (womans
lower standing). God has not
declared that a man should wear short
hair or a woman must wear long hair.
Paul argued for the idea because
he viewed it as the natural
order of things. Of
course, views about natural order can
change over time. Cultures come
and go. However, there is
nothing wrong with a woman wearing
short hair or a man wearing long hair
as long as a clear distinction
remains between men and women.
Larry Wilson