GUEST ARTICLE (VOICE FROM THE PAST)
Should
Women Speak
in
Mixed Public Assemblies?

There
is at present a strong tendency in some parts of our
country to encourage women in the practice of public discourse
to mixed assemblies. This connects itself more or less,
with the movements for female suffrage, though some strongly
favor the one who are opposed to the other. Christian
civilization
has by degrees greatly elevated the female sex; and now
the demand is, in many quarters, that women shall be
encouraged to do, if they like, anything and everything
that men do. On
the other hand, many of both sexes are persuaded that the
Holy Scriptures, which have been the chief cause of the
elevation of women, place certain restrictions about their
public activities, and enjoin some kind of subordination
of wife to husband. The question arising in connection
with these movements of opinion and practice are many and
various, and some of them appeal to powerful human prejudices
and sentiments. It is by no means proposed that this tract
shal1 take the wide range thus indicated. It will be confined
to the question raised at the outset, and to the limitations
with which that question is stated; and will be chiefly
occupied with an attempt to explain the passages of scripture
which appear to forbid women speaking in mixed assemblies.
No
thoughtful person would like to profess that in our country
at the present moment he can make this investigation in
a completely impartial and dispassionate manner; but it
is obviously very desirable that writer and readers in
such a case should earnestly strive to deal fairly with
their own minds and with the truth of God.
In
1 Corinthians 14:34-35, the apostle Paul says: "Let
the women keep silence in the churches; for it is not permitted
unto them to speak; but let them be in subjection, as also
saith the law. And if they would learn anything, let them
ask their own husbands at home; for it is shameful for
a woman to speak in the church." In 1 Timothy 2:11-15
the apostle has been speaking of public worship, directing
that "the men (i. e., the men as distinguished
from the women, the Greek having a special term) pray in
every place, lifting up holy hands, without wrath and disputing." He
then directs that women "adorn themselves in modest
apparel," etc. The amount of this seems to be that
in public worship the men, who do the public praying, shall
see that the hands they solemnly lift are not stained with
sin, and that in their mutual instruction and exhortation
there shall be no angry disputation. These are two special
dangers with men.
And
the women are warned against one of their special dangers,
viz. that in attending on public worship they will have
too much of showy personal adornment. He then proceeds: "Let
a woman learn in quietness with all subjection. But I permit
not a woman to teach, nor to have dominion over a man,
but to be in quietness. For Adam was first formed, then
Eve; and Adam was not beguiled, but the woman being beguiled,
hath fallen into transgression; but she shall be saved
through the child-bearing, if they continue in faith and
love and sanctification with sobriety."
The
passages are here quoted from the Revised English Version,
according to the English form, from which the American
form makes only one not very important variation in each
passage. The Revised Version does not materially differ
in either of these passages from the Common Version, but
several expressions are plainer or more exact. For instance,
in I Corinthians the term "subjection" is used,
the Greek having the same word that is translated subjection
in the other passage, and in 1 Peter 3:1, which shows the
three passages to be exactly parallel in this respect.
It may be observed that many apparently slight variations
in the Revised Version arise from the desire to translate
the same Greek word by the same English word wherever possible.
Many alterations which superficial critics have denounced
as trifling, thus become important to the careful comparison
of similar passages.
Now
it does not need to be urged that these two passages from
the Apostle Paul do definitely and strongly forbid that
women shall speak in mixed public assemblies. No one can
afford to question that such is the most obvious meaning
of the apostle's commands. All that can be said in opposition
to the view that this is what he intended to teach, must
rest either upon a supposed unusual sense of some one of
the terms employed in the passages, or upon the connection,
or upon some other source of information about the persons
the apostle's aim.
Some
have suggested that the word rendered "speak," in
1 Cor. verse 34, "it s not permitted unto them to
speak," denotes idle chatter as opposed to thoughtful
and earnest speaking. It is enough to say that this proposed
distinction is quite a failure. The word, which commonly
means to talk, speak, etc., is sometimes used in classical
Greek for chattering, and is sometimes applied to animals.
But there are no clear examples of any such use in Biblical
Greek, and the word is applied to apostles, prophets, the
Saviour, God. See Thayer's
Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament.
Others
lay stress on the word "church" or "churches," and
hold that the apostle means a formal public meeting, as
distinguished from what we call a social meeting, such
as a prayer-meeting, or the like. Applying a purely modern
distinction, they say that a woman is forbidden to speak
in "church,” but that does not forbid her speaking
in prayer-meeting. The answer is that the New Testament
knows no such distinction. In fact, the very abuses in
public worship which the apostle seeks in 1 Cor. chap.
12 and chap. 14 to correct, are such as could only have
arisen in an informal meeting, where everyone thought himself
at liberty to rise and speak. Moreover, the same word "church" (the
Greek meaning an
assembly) is applied to meetings in private houses,
as that of Aquila and Priscilla, or that of Philemon and
Apphia. So this distinction also fails.
Some
remind us that in 1 Cor. 11:5ff, the apostle has spoken
of women as "praying or prophesying" in the public
assemblies. That is true, and our first business is to
reconcile the apostle with himself. The word "prophesy" in
the New Testament means to speak by divine inspiration.
This the apostle repeatedly distinguishes on the one hand
from utterances in an unknown tongue, and on the other
hand from ordinary uninspired teaching. Some persons in
the apostolic age were inspired to speak in unknown tongues,
others in the language of those addressed. Among these
last were some women, just as there are several cases of
prophetesses in the Old Testament. In chap. 11 the apostle
speaks of such inspired women, and urges upon them that
in their high excitement they must not disregard propriety
of appearance and behavior; in particular, that they must
keep the head covered in the customary manner. Now, unless,
the apostle has contradicted himself, we seem shut up to
understand that the passage in chap. 14 is a general direction,
leaving out the case of women who prophesied, i. e., spoke
by special inspiration. There is no such inspired speaking
possible for us.
True,
it has been argued that when the apostle says (I Cor. 14:3), "He
that prophesieth speaketh unto men to edification," we
may infer that anyone who speaks in an edifying way is
prophesying, and that if a woman can speak so as to edify,
she is exempt from the apostle's prohibition. The author
of this argument had forgotten the first elements of his
logic, which certainly taught him that he must beware of
assuming a proposition to be convertible. All prophesying
was edifying speech; but how in the world can it be inferred
that all edifying speech is prophesy? Yellow fever is a
malarial disease; shall we infer that all malarial diseases
are yellow fever?
A
more plausible method of explaining away Paul's prohibition
consists in maintaining that it applied only to the peculiar
ideas and manners of that time. Thus some say it applied
only to women at Corinth, a place famous for licentiousness,
where it was necessary that Christian women should observe
peculiar strictness of decorum in public places. But the
apostle makes the same prohibition through Timothy for
the churches in the region about Ephesus. And observe,
he grounds his prohibition (in the passage from Timothy)
upon facts connected with the Creation and the fall of
Adam and Eve. Does not this absolutely forbid restricting
his prohibition to Corinth and Ephesus, or to that particular
age?
The
same consideration applies when the prohibition is likened
to his direction in chap. 11 that a woman must not appear
in the public meeting without a covering on her head. We
are told that this applied simply to the ideas and customs
then prevailing. Let us not be so sure that such is the
case. In point of fact, almost all Christian women seem
to have a feeling that the apostle's direction applies
to them, for they very rarely fail to wear in religious
assemblies some form of head covering, which in the mutations
of fashion has sometimes been vastly more diminutive than
at present, but is never discarded. And whatever may be
thought as to that point, we must remember that in the
epistle to Timothy the apostle especially grounds his injunction
upon primal facts in human history, and thereby cuts it
off from being fairly regarded as temporary.
Two
other attempts to explain away the apostle's prohibition
are worth mention as indicating desperate straits. When
he says, "And if they would learn anything, let them
ask their own husbands at home," some actually infer
that women who have no husbands are left at liberty "to
speak in the church." So then an unmarried woman may
put herself publicly forward in a way which for married
women would be "shameful”! A recent writer thinks
it probable that the two passages in question have "suffered
modification from transcribers." When a hard-pressed
controversialist urges that some passage may be corrupt, without
a particle of documentary evidence to that effect,
he inevitably suggests that his own interpretations of
the passage as it stands are not really satisfactory to
his own mind.
So
the apostle's clear and consistent prohibitions stand unshaken,
in their obvious sense. But consider just what he prohibits.
Is it not this? He says a woman must not speak in mixed
assemblies—those in which men are present; because she
is thus undertaking to "teach" men, to "have
dominion" over them; and this is inconsistent with
that "subjection" of the woman to the man which
both passages enjoin, and which the Bible so often asserts.
Then
he does not forbid a woman to "speak" or to "teach" where
women only are present. There is no prohibition of feminine
discourse in female prayer-meetings. . . . Only keep the
men out. And beware of some "entering-wedge" in
the shape of an editor or masculine reporter. As to crying
out against the Bible for teaching "the subjection
of woman," leave that to Ingersoll. The precise nature
and proper limits of this subjection may not be generally
understood, and would be an appropriate subject for earnest
inquiry. But that the Bible does teach subjection, and
that the apostle makes that his special reason for the
prohibition before us, would seem to be quite beyond question.
A
Baptist lady in Kansas wrote that she read the foregoing
as published in the Western Recorder. She stated
that she is a clerk, and one of the trustees of a Baptist
church, and words of hers spoken in a public meeting have
been the means of spiritual good to other women.
The
Letter:
".
. . . I cannot reconcile Christ's treatment and mention
of women with Paul's. I think Paul must have written there
his biased opinion, instead of the direction of the Spirit.
Women were last at the Cross and first at the sepulcher
of Christ. He spoke to one first after his resurrection.
John gives a whole chapter, nearly, Christ's conversation
with Mary and Martha, and not one word of what Lazarus
said. Why are so many things that women said and did recorded
if they were to be so silent on religious matters?"
Some
persons will think it passing strange that this should
be presented as an argument in favor of women's speaking
to mixed assemblies, notwithstanding the express and repeated
prohibition of the Apostle Paul. Yet substantially the
same argument has been vehemently urged by writers of both
sexes, and even in a book, by a minister. As to there being
no record in John 11 of conversation with Lazarus, it will
occur to some readers that Lazarus, during the Master's
conversation with his sisters, was in his tomb. The real
importance of this extract lies in the cool assumption
that Paul was not inspired in his prohibitions! That cuts
at the root of Christianity.
The
writer of the letter is here quite logical, and shows the
real tendency of the whole movement she is defending. I
have scarcely ever conversed with any advocate of women's
speaking in mixed assemblies who did not, sooner or later,
deny the Apostle Paul's inspired authority in this matter.
That is the very reason why the question is of so great
importance; and it must be my excuse for making extracts
from a private letter.
From
the best information accessible, it may be stated that
the present active movement in favor of the practice we
are discussing originated among the Methodists, especially
in the Northwest. Mr. Wesley's "class-meetings" consisted
of a small number of persons of both sexes, under a "class-leader," and
in these meetings, which were strictly private, the female
members were expected to speak of their recent experiences,
as well as the men. This is probably the historical origin
of the claim now made in some Baptist churches that women
may properly "testify."
The
practice of women's speaking in mixed assemblies was greatly
strengthened by the zealous efforts of the "Women
Crusaders" for temperance in Ohio and elsewhere, so
twenty years ago, and afterward by the Women's Christian
Temperance Union. It is well known that Quakers have always
encouraged women to speak in the public meetings when they
felt moved thereto; also that Universalists and Unitarians
have sometimes encouraged women thus to speak—those bodies
not acknowledging that they owe strict and minute obedience
to the requirements of the New Testament.
A
good many Congregationalists now hold loose views of inspiration,
and some of them have been ready to set aside the apostle's
prohibition. In the zealous and honored temperance work
above mentioned some Baptist ladies have united, through
fervent sympathy with the objects, and usually without
consideration as to the exact requirement of Scripture.
More recently, some of the women's missionary societies
have allowed the presence of men at their meetings, but
other societies have strictly excluded men, the latter
class still showing a desire to obey the Scripture prohibitions.
It can not be questioned that the great majority of Baptist
ladies who have been gradually drawn into this movement
for women's speaking in mixed assemblies, have been influenced
by unreflecting sympathy, or by mere considerations of
supposed expediency. .
. . .
One
other point. Some will say, "If we undertake to carry
out such strict views, they will be found to conflict with
the work which some women are almost everywhere doing as
teachers of male Bible classes, as professors in co-educating
colleges, and sometimes as missionary workers in foreign
fields." I shall not now inquire how far these practices
conflict with the apostle's prohibition. But if any of
them do thus conflict, then instead of being relied on
as precedent to set aside the apostle's authority, they
ought themselves to be curtailed and corrected.
--John
A. Broadus, 1880
Baptist Book Concern, Louisville, KY
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