Teaching was quoting and commenting on the OT, while the other was direct utterance form the Holy Spirit thru someone.
Either way the Word of God is communicated. Why would one be gender sensitive?
Welcome to Baptist Board, a friendly forum to discuss the Baptist Faith in a friendly surrounding.
Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to all the features that our community has to offer.
We hope to see you as a part of our community soon and God Bless!
Teaching was quoting and commenting on the OT, while the other was direct utterance form the Holy Spirit thru someone.
Due to one being in just that time period, and other for all history forward!Either way the Word of God is communicated. Why would one be gender sensitive?
Due to one being in just that time period, and other for all history forward!
Do you think Scripture supports female pastors then?You are going round in circles defining prophecy and teaching using different words or basically repeating yourself.
I already know what they are.
I'm asking WHY women are banned from one and not the other yet they are all communicating the word of God. If this is too hard for you try explaining why women are banned from teaching men.
Anyway, let's have others as well.
Cheers
Do you think Scripture supports female pastors then?
Yes I do, but that's a different topic altogether. For purposes of this thread let's assume I don't believe they should.
your faultThat makes absolutely no sense.
Notice women are allowed to pray and prophesy(more or less a defunct function for now) in a congregation
Thus women are not to teach men in public assembly or to hold authority over them. A public assembly would of course be the gathered Ekklesia, it is a congregation or assembly in literal definition after all.
Question then is,
How is teaching 'holding authority over men' while prophecy is not yet in all it is the word of God being communicated?
Please try articulating your position without justification from scriptures at first. If that is needed I will request for it.
In light of what I said. The real question is not why women can't teach or lead, but why women can speak at all. Why two exceptions?
Not really, it's why prophesy (not just speak) and not teach?
In other words,what is it in communicating the Word of God in teaching that is gender sensitive that is lacking in prophecy?
A hypothetical situation.
A woman in first century moved by the Holy Spirit stands in a congregation of men and proceeds to speak in tongues. She then pauses to interpret. "Thus saith the LORD, who knew there before you were formed in your mother's womb. I know the plans I have for you...."
The same woman is estopped from reading from Jeremiah 1:5, 29:11 and comforting the congregation.
There must be a logical explanation and that's what I seek
Remember pastor and teacher are combined in the new testament. A pastor shepherds as a servant leader while teaching the Word as an authority on it. In prophesy God is the authority, since the prophet or prophetess is a vessel. No more.
I'm also puzzled by Steven Yeadon's contrived contrast between prophesying (in which God is the authority) and teaching (in which the pastor, not God, is the authority). Huh?
Weird stuff, and all to try to bolster these gender notions.
_____
Acts 13:1
Now there were in the church at Antioch prophets and teachers, Barnabas, Simeon who was called Niger, Lucius of Cyrene, Manaen a lifelong friend of Herod the tetrarch, and Saul.
Question: Which of these five were prophets, and which were teachers?
You mean God is not an authority when teachers are teaching?
Whether teaching or prophesying God remains the authority. Anyone rightly dividing the Word of God ends up speaking the mind of God just as any true prophet.
Besides, your comment seems to lean towards a theory you alluded to where women were forbidden to teach men in congregations but not elsewhere.
Jerome, you may be right, I may be contrived in regards to the philosophy I used to justify women prophets but not teachers.
In light of the fact I may be contrived, I will have to just fall back on a very simple defense. The Law commands women to be in submission, and the reason women can still be a prophetess is beyond me. That is the counsel of God. I will stop trying to understand His mind and go with the commands of scripture.
Acts 13:1
Now there were in the church at Antioch prophets and teachers, Barnabas, Simeon who was called Niger, Lucius of Cyrene, Manaen a lifelong friend of Herod the tetrarch, and Saul.
Question: Which of these five were prophets, and which were teachers?
We have NO scriptures that support women as either pastors or elders in a local church!Appeal to mystery.
Thank you for your thorough comments. IIwon't be needing scriptures to support your views. Let's see if we can get a different take.