The explanation given below differs drastically from those of earlier issues, in my opinion. Rather than showing that Paul was not against women taking part in public worship services, the author below, an editor for the
Review, says quite the opposite.
In the older arguments, the explanation used other Bible verses to show what Paul meant. The editorial below instead relies on a cultural argument, asserting how women were treated back then, without citing any Bible verses to support that assertion.
This is a problem. How can we go outside of the Bible to some unspecified authority and use that to interpret the Bible, and still have the Bible be the final authority? Advocates of Sunday sacredness do this all the time. Ignatius and others, they say, used "Lord's day" to refer to Sunday, and thus when we read "Lord's day" in Rev. 1, it must be referring to Sunday. But if we take the Bible alone, the only possible conclusion is that the Sabbath is the Lord's day.
A PLEA FOR REVERENCE
Fed up with the continual gossiping of women in the church, Cyril J. Starling, Anglican rector of Holy Trinity church in Newport, England, aired his irritability in the weekly parish newsletter.
Referring to the babble that greeted him whenever he entered the church to conduct a service, he quoted the words of Paul: "As in all the churches of the saints the women should keep silence . . . for they are not permitted to speak . . . for it is shameful for a woman to speak in church. . . . Let all things be done decently and in order [sic]" (1 Cor. 14:33-40).
He reported later that the next time he entered church he found everything "very quiet."
Admitting that he did not agree with Paul, he said that what he was pleading for was less conversation before a service and a devout concentration on eternal things.
We suppose that what Mr. Starling meant when he said that he did not agree with Paul was that he did not believe that Paul's message applied to the churches today.
In this he was right. The restriction on women was based on both Greek and Jewish custom that dictated that women should be kept in the background in public affairs. Current custom does not require this. Hence, today women function publicly in our churches.
Clearly, in the scripture cited, Paul was not trying to quiet a babble such as confronted Mr. Starling when he entered his church. What apparently he meant is clarified in 1 Timothy 2:11, 12: "Let the woman learn in silence with all subjection. But I suffer not a woman to teach, nor to usurp authority over the man, but to be in silence."
But Mr. Starling's church is not the only one that has been plagued by babble. We decry the babble that ascends from some Seventh-day Adventist congregations before services begin on Sabbath morning. Not that we recommend a stony silence devoid of friendliness and greeting, for this, too, would belie the character of our God; but we are suggesting that on the part of worshipers there be a recognition of the presence of God, a realization of His greatness and majesty, a humble opinion of self, and an awareness of utter dependence on God.
We believe that often this attitude can be best experienced in silence, that it is, in fact, impossible in the midst of babble. While there may be occasions where song services are appropriate, we believe that even such activities can detract from the devotional attitude of those who desire quietly to commune with their God while waiting for services to begin.
"Humility and reverence should characterize the deportment of all who come into the presence of God." —Patriarchs and Prophets, p. 252.
D. F. N.