Grace Seeker
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It is direct and specific, but was it given as a universal instruction to all women in all times and places? Or was it particularlized for a certain given time and place? I submit to you that it is the latter, and not intended to be used as a polemic on how men and women in other settings are supposed to relate to one other.It's my assertion that the bigoted sexist suppressive attitudes of Man-kind are responsible for such gems as Pauls commands to cover the head and not to speak in church. We can wash these instructions endlessly till they conform kicking and screaming into modernity and civility.
"Let the women keep silent in the churches." That surely is direct and specific enough for all needs. He then adds explanatorily: "For it is not permitted to them to speak."
But you are right that it is the bigoted sexist suppresive attiduces of Man-kind that are responsible for these gems. Whether or not Paul was himself bigotted and sexists, or if he just thought that this was the best advice to a given situation, I don't think you can say from a single verse of scripture.
When I look at the larger picture, I see evidence of both in Paul's life. The arguments that he is a bigotted sexists have been well put forth, so let me share the other side. Paul included women in his own ministry, repeatedly wrote to them personally and thanked them for what they did to assist him and even applauded one one (Phoebe) for her role as a deaconess (i.e. female deacon) of the church. That's a far cry from the way some see Paul as excluding women from any role of leadership in the life of the church.
If we leave Paul, we find that Jesus is even more inclusive of women. His acceptance of the ministries of Mary and Martha, his response to Mary Magdaline, opennes to the Samaritan woman by the well all indicate that he did not himself practice the bigoted, sexist, suppressive standards that were common in his day. Indeed, many women have found in the life and ministry of Jesus a cause celeb for a liberation theology of radical feminization (see Rosemary Reuther for one).
So while you will certainly find in the Bible a way of looking at women that is not as equitable as one encounters in present day western culture, I believe it is inaccurate to try to paint a monolithic portrait of the Bible view of women as one that denigrates them. That simply isn't supported by the totallity of the evidence. Those who say otherwise do so based on isolated texts (and often misconstrued ideas as to what even those texts are about) and not the whole picture.