HisWitness
New Member
all this talk about women---what about what is says when Paul says it is a SHAME for a MAN to have LONG hair ? lol
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Well, I guess I have not said anything controversial yet..because no one has attacked me yet!:saint:
Must Women Have Long Hair or Cover Their Heads?
In 1 Corinthians 11:4-18 This passage needs to be understood in the context of the culture in which Paul lived. Here are some things that various Bible scholars say about this passage:
"11:4 ... In the culture of Paul's day, men uncovered their heads in worship to signify their respect for and submission to deity. When a man prayed or prophesied with his head covered, he failed to show the proper attitude toward Christ.
11:5-6 For a woman, taking off her head covering in public and exposing her hair was a sign of loose morals and sexual promiscuity. Paul says she might as well have her hair cut or shaved off. The shaved head indicated that the woman either had been publicly disgraced because of some shameful act or was openly flaunting her independence and her refusal to be in submission to her husband. Paul's message to her was: Show your respect for and submission to your husband by covering your head during public worship." (NIV Study Bible, p.2218, emphasis added)
"it was a custom, both among the Greeks and Romans, and among the Jews an express law, that no woman should be seen abroad without a veil. This was, and is, a common custom through all the east, and none but public prostitutes go without veils. ... As a woman who dresses loosely or fantastically, even in the present day, is considered a disgrace to her husband, because suspected to be not very sound in her morals; so in those ancient times, a woman appearing without a veil would be considered in the same light." (Clarke, from http://www.e-sword.net/commentaries.html , 1 Corinthians 11:5, emphasis added)
When I come across passages that I don't understand (or I don't like), it would be very convenient to say that those passages were only valid in the first century and they don't apply to us today. But I need to be careful because that approach can easily lead me into error. Still, there's no doubt that some New Testament passages don't literally apply to Christians today. For example, in Romans 15:30-31 the apostle Paul urged people to pray that he would be rescued from the unbelievers in Judea, but there's no point in praying for Paul today because he has been dead for almost two thousand years. Therefore, certain New Testament passages don't apply today as they did in the first century.
There's some agreement among Bible scholars that in Paul's culture it was appropriate for a woman to physically have a covering over her head during public worship. There are different opinions about whether a woman's long hair was sufficient as a covering, or whether all women (or just married women) had to wear cloth over their heads, but there's general agreement that this was based on the social customs of Paul's time.
Paul said that a woman should cover her head if it's a disgrace for her to have her hair cut or shaved off. It was a disgrace in Paul's culture for a woman to have her hair cut in this way (see the Bible commentary quotes above), but this is not a disgrace in modern Western culture. Therefore, many Bible commentaries agree that Christian women today don't need to obey first-century social customs concerning hair length or a physical "covering."
In 1 Corinthians 11:5 Paul said that women should be "covered" when they pray or prophesy, which refers to public prayer or public prophesying in church (according to many Bible commentaries). In 1 Corinthians 11:16-18, Paul specifically placed his instructions in the context of church meetings, which demonstrates that women are allowed to pray and prophesy out loud in church. This helps shed some light on another difficult passage concerning women's roles and actions in the church....
Sounds like this has been discussed before on this forum:smilewinkgrin:
1 Timothy 2:15 ("women will be saved through childbearing") is a difficult verse to understand. The important thing to recognize here is that Paul was not teaching that women will receive salvation (be allowed into heaven) based on whether or not they have given birth to children, because that would contradict the clear teaching of Scripture which says that salvation is based on having faith in Jesus as our Savior.
It is important not to simply take a verse at face value, but instead we should try to look at the greatest weight of evidence in the Bible to see what God is trying to tell us. I saw looking at this scripture that translations of the Bible can sometimes be misleading, which is why it's often helpful to look at the meanings of the Greek words to get a better idea of what the author was saying.
I think it is actually more simple than that...I believe this passage makes the most sense in reference to the Curse on the serpent and subsequent prophecy of a coming "seed" (Jesus Christ) recorded in Genesis 3:15....It is also well illustrated in Revelation 12..study those passages, and you will find, that yes, it is, in fact the case that the woman (and by extension all men too actually) are to be saved in her child-bearing.