Thursday, September 27, 2018

Adonai and Adoni (Psalm 110:1)

(The link above is the same as the article below under the same title. The article appears in the website of Restoration Fellowship founded by Sir Anthony Buzzard in 1981. I first came across the work of Restoration Fellowship about fifteen years ago and have addressed some of their material. I encourage you to read it before your read my own comments. gt)

those who struggle
The discussion and question concerning deity is old. I am mindful that those who differ between one another concerning their understanding of deity love God. As such the struggle which each one experiences is a true characteristic of those who seek and love God. They follow in the footsteps of Jacob who was renamed Israel meaning one who struggles with God.

Thursday, September 13, 2018

I Corinthians 14:34, the Law

Related articles:
Men and women: prophets and prophetesses
Serving tables: the involvement of the daughters of God in the assembly
Ken Wright on I Corinthians 14
Randy Elliot on I Corinthians 14:34-38

What did Paul mean with his reference to “the law” or “the Law” in I Corinthians 14:34? Numerous and various explanations have emerged in recent years.

explanations
Some have suggested the law in question in I Corinthians 14:34 was a law in the city of Corinth which prohibited women from speaking in an assembly. This explanation seems to run counter to and to be seriously lacking in apostolic authority with the apostle Paul in that it places Paul in a position of resorting to secure law to impose it in the holy assembly of the saints in Christ?

Another explanation is to breakdown the passage between those things which Paul said and those things which the Corinthians said with Paul responding to the latter. The problem with this explanation, as I far as I can tell, is that even as it is embraced this explanation about who said what circumvents and averts the unanswered question of the saints in Christ:

what are we to do with respect to Paul’s instruction for women to keep silent?

In other words it seems to be another academic exercise with the characteristic shortfall in that it neglects the edification the saints in Christ leaving them with nothing more than an amusing and very interesting explanation, no less, from the Greek language. Perhaps a few basic and indisputable points might serve as a starting point for our understanding of the problem. The resolution of the problem in Corinth requires more than merely identifying what Paul said and the Corinthians said.

facts
First, there were women who were speaking out in the assembly.
Second, the women in question had husbands.
Third, the women were to ask their questions to their own husbands.

contradiction or inconsistency
These are straightforward facts. In this respect these facts are similar to the short list which enumerates what Paul said and another short list of what the Corinthians said. These facts present the problem and the resolution to the problem in Corinth, but this does not equate to our understanding of either the problem or the resolution. Even more, there is a reason why it is important to understand what was behind the problem and the resolution in Corinth. There is a need to account for what otherwise remains embedded in the minds of some who see a contradiction or an inconsistency, essentially an error in the scriptures, in Paul’s writings. I allude to the seeming contradiction between the reality in the assembly to which Paul refers to women prophesying, that is, speaking, in the assembly in I Corinthians 11:5 and his instruction concerning the reality in Corinth for women to keep silent in I Corinthians 14:34. So given this fact and keeping in mind that women spoke in the assembly and that the women were not doing anything monumental or catastrophic. The text of I Corinthians 14:34 demands a response on the basis of these facts.

I have stated that there is characteristic about the explanations about what Paul said and what the Corinthians said. It is that they fall short and do not present an explanation which edifies the saints as to what they are to do with the content of the passage in I Corinthians 14 and the silence of women.

It seems that as long as the discussion remains deeply fixated and limited to the overarching issue on the silence of women the focus is kept away from the prophesying in accordance with the fulfillment of the prophecy of Joel on the day of Pentecost that, 'God says, 'THAT I WILL POUR FORTH OF MY SPIRIT ON ALL MANKIND; AND YOUR SONS AND YOUR DAUGHTERS SHALL PROPHESY (Acts 2:17). God did not pour out his Spirit on his sons for them to be silent or to be silenced anymore than He poured out His Spirit on His daughters for them to be silent or to be silenced. They are both to prophesy.

some exceptional works
There are some telltale and significant indicators of what these explanations perpetuate about the ministry of our sisters in the royal priesthood of believers, albeit without malice and unwittingly. Nonetheless this is the result of avoiding any conclusions for the saints in Christ. Indeed Ken Wright, [1] who has done an exceptionally great work in spirit and attitude with the text, briskly notes that "women can't prophesy" "you can't prophesy" in the summary of his message. Really? Does the prophecy of Joel have nothing to say on this matter? Randy Elliot [2] has also done an exceptional work in spirit and attitude on the text of I Corinthians 14. The work of these two brothers is praiseworthy and commendable. However, as with Wright's so, too, Elliot's work does not offer a conclusion for the saints in Christ as to what and how, and very importantly, why their response is fully in accord with respect to Paul’s instruction for women to keep silent as well as with the apostle's acknowledgement and encouragement for the saints, including women, to prophesy.

a similarity
There is a similarity in the instruction which Paul gave for women with the instruction which he gave to those with a tongue (verse 27) and those with a prophecy (verse 30). He instructed them all to keep silent and to wait their turn. Paul does not state that the women in question possessed a gift. It appears they were just merely speaking out, but there was no excuse for that and it was not acceptable. They, too, like those with a tongue or a prophecy, were to wait their turn and ask their husbands whatever questions were on their mind.

Whom were the women directing their questions to so that it constituted it a problem in the assembly? There was a problem in Corinth and one which I do not believe has been properly addressed merely by delineating what were the words spoken by Paul and what were the words spoken by the Corinthians. There are two other instances in which Paul was misunderstood, but he never dismisses those misunderstandings by saying he had been misunderstood and leaving it at that. Paul seizes the teachable moment in those instances.

some misunderstandings of Paul
One of those two instances was when the Corinthians misunderstood (I Corinthians 5:9-12) Paul concerning his admonition for them to avoid associating with immoral people. Paul then explains for their edification what he meant.

A second instance also involved the saints at Corinth. They misunderstood what Paul had not done when he first came to them. He did not ask for or receive any assistance from them. This strategy of Paul (II Corinthians 11) to rely on the churches in Macedonia for his support was then seized on by some of his adversaries. They were troubling the minds of the saints in Corinth. They cast Paul in the minds of the saints as meek and weak with a gospel message which was as inferior as Paul himself was inferior to the other apostles. They portrayed Paul as being so ashamed of his gospel message that he could not even bring himself to ask for and receive the customary pittance accorded itinerant messengers.

It is then that Paul enlightened the Corinthians. What was free and without cost to them was made possible through the churches which Paul, as he states, robbed, that is, the gracious support of the Macedonian churches. Interestingly enough and with respect to explanations about who said what see Paul's words in verse 17 as to what he is saying and not saying. Even more notice that Paul does not back down from what had resulted in a misunderstanding. In fact, he asserts that what he has been doing he will do again (II Corinthians 11:12). Paul seized the opportune moment and expounded at length to counter the misunderstanding of the Corinthians of Paul's actions.

The problem concerning women speaking in the assembly in Corinth was not a catastrophic one. It stemmed from the Corinthians' (males likely?) own ignorance, not necessarily their misunderstanding of Paul's words, and as people are given to doing, it appears they conjured up "the Law" as a good measure of authority for their justification to silence women in the assembly. The problem was hardly anything more than those with a tongue and those with a prophesy clamoring to speak without any regard for the spectacle they were creating in the assembly. It hardly required anything more than to admonish the Corinthians to exercise a modicum of propriety and order as is familiar and customary in civil society. Although the issue concerning the women in question does not seem to involve the use of a gift by the women the solution to the problem of their disorder, like those  with the gifts of tongues and prophesy, was that they direct their questions to their own husbands. Paul's instruction for the women to keep silent was no more a perpetual and in-any-and-all-circumstances-especially-in-the-assembly gag order anymore than those with a tongue or a prophesy were to keep silent and not utter a word in perpetuity.

I anticipate this charge: haven't you (I) done what you say Paul would not do? Haven't you (I) interjected the secular law of propriety and decency on a problem in the holy assembly of the saints in Christ? It is a fair question. I do not believe this charge is true or accurate. The call, as I understand is Paul's solution to the problem, for propriety and order is not a hard, top-down authoritative law for people to adhere in secular society anymore than is the simple civility of exchanging a greeting when meeting someone new. I reiterate that this same response from Paul concerning the silence of the women, as I understand, was the same as his response to those with a tongue or a prophesy. Paul is aware of the ignorance of the Corinthians in their response concerning the women. He does not merely dismiss the elements of their arguments concerning the women. Paul turns those elements of their argument around to enlighten them to a real resolution that is as familiar and customary, as Paul himself concludes verse 40, as propriety and order in civil society as well as in the holy assembly of the saints in Christ.

conclusion
It seems, I believe, plausible and reasonable to at least consider that the one to whom the women were directing their questions was to the one who was addressing the assembly who happened to be _ their husbands. The women, it appears, were taking advantage of their intimate relationship with the speaker and were disrupting the assembly with their questions to the speaker. The fact is there was no question which could not wait for its appropriate time and manner to be asked. Just as Paul points to what could easily be taken by an unbeliever as total madness of the saints in the assembly so, too, it was just  as shameful or improper for the women to be speaking out of order in the assembly. Just as Paul points out to those with the gift of prophecy that the spirit of the prophets is subject to the prophets so, too, he points out to the women that they were to subject themselves. I realize it is a favorite point concerning women being in subjection, but the subjection of women to their husbands is not the point or matter in discussion here. It is, much as with the prophets, a matter where women were to subject themselves _ to themselves. There was no room or excuse for anyone to claim, either one with a tongue or one with a prophecy or a woman with questions to blurt out without control of themselves.

The apostle Paul had all the authority in himself as given him by the Lord Jesus. Paul did not resort to Moses or the prophets for his authority when he instructed those with a tongue or prophecy, or women, to keep silent. Since the Corinthians had ignorantly and carnally seized on their notion of "the law" as their authority to impose silence on the women, Paul seizes on their mistaken notion, not to impose, but to cite nothing more than "the law" of propriety and order in civil society.

It was not an earth-shaking issue. The women were simply out of order with their questions. It was a matter of a lack of propriety and order. An elder interrupting a preacher in the middle of his message concerning some falsehood in his message would be just as much out of line and lacking propriety and order. There is a time and a way for which the elder can wait to take his turn and address the congregation concerning the falsehood without grandstanding or making a spectacle. If there is a law to cite with respect to our sisters speaking in the assembly it is the written word of the LORD God through his servant the prophet Joel. Then, the apostle Peter cited and quoted the prophet Joel for the authority concerning the outpouring of his Spirit on the sons AND daughters of God and the command and expectation that both are to prophesy. It rare and perhaps unknown to hear those who lead, teach and preach draw the connection between the prophecy of Joel and its fulfillment on Pentecost with the longing desire of Moses as he said to a flabbergasted Joshua, would that all the LORD's people were prophets, that the LORD would put his Spirit upon them! (Numbers 11:29)

God did not pour out his Spirit on his sons for them to be silent or to be silenced anymore than He poured out His Spirit on His daughters for them to be silent or to be silenced. They are both to prophesy. I expect even the words of the prophet Joel will be stirred up and made subject to similar scrutiny as the apostle Paul's words ostensibly concerning the silence of women, but more likely to perpetuate or let stand the mistaken notion of the silence of the daughters of God.