Paul Never Prohibited Women Teaching and Preaching in Church–Part-14 of the Paul and Hebrew Roots Series

Paul Never Prohibited Women Teaching and Preaching in Church--Part-14 of the Paul and Hebrew Roots Series

by Rod Thomas | The Messianic Torah Observer

This just in to The Messianic Torah Observer—recent leaks to non-mainstream Christian and Messianic sources—affirm that the Apostle Paul—formerly Saul of Tarsus—affectionately known to many as Rav Shaul—never, ever wrote, nor did he ever give instructions to the Churches of God—the Assemblies of YHVH—that women were prohibited from teaching and preaching Torah and the Gospel. This bombshell revelation dramatically blows out of the water the centuries’-long teaching that women are restricted from teaching, preaching, prophesying, and leading church groups in the Body of Messiah. Could this be another case of the “Faith-based fake news” that seems to have been fed to the Body of Messiah? Possibly. I guess the only pertinent question that remains to be asked is: what will we do with this corrected information?

This is “Paul Never-Ever Prohibited Women From Teaching and Preaching in the Church—Part-14 of the Paul and Hebrew Roots Series.”

Given that we’ve spent so much time going over what I felt to be foundational elements to understanding our focus passage of 1 Timothy 2:9-15, I want to dive right into the 2nd half of our focus passage, beginning with verse 11.

I would encourage you, if you’ve not done so and you are interested, to first read or listen to Parts 12 and 13 of this series to bring you up to speed with our study for today (). Parts 12 and 13 establish the foundation upon which this installment is built. But if you’d prefer to just continue on with this installment, that’s fine as well. I’ve tried to include as much foundational content as I could to make this installment stand alone as a single part to this series.

Verse 11–Educating the Women (or THE WOMAN) of the Ephesian Assemblies

“Let the woman learn in silence, with all subjection” (vs. 11; KJV & DRA).

Here Paul seems to be providing instructions to his young apprentice Timothy on the education of “the woman” (as offered by Dr. Eddie L. Hyatt) or “any woman” as translated in the ESV, ASV, CJB, DBY, NAS, NET, NIV, NJB and YLT; “a wife” as translated in the CEB; and “women” in general in the NLT.

Regardless whether Paul was actually addressing a single, unnamed individual as alluded to be Dr. Hyatt, or all Ephesian women as the other English bible translations seem to suggest, Paul wanted them to learn. Learn what? Learn Torah—learn the teachings of Yahoshua Messiah and the Gospel of the Kingdom.

Shattering First-Century A.D. ANE Convention Regarding Female Learning

The first thing I want to point out regarding this critical verse is Paul’s insistence that the women of the Ephesian assemblies be afforded the opportunity to properly learn scripture. It is widely accepted by ANE experts that it was unheard of for women to undergo formal learning/education of any type in first-century ANE, apart from general teaching they received related to the management of their homes.

The first 4-words of this verse, from a historic perspective, are absolutely stunning: let the women (or woman) of the Ephesian Assemblies learn. This simple instruction not only commanded Timothy to see to the formal education of the Ephesian assembly women, but it implied that their learning should not be impeded or prohibited in any way.

Now, in all honesty, most every Christian and Messianic congregation I’m aware of today happily permits their women to receive formal bible instruction in their assemblies. However, the focus of most anti-women faith leaders in the past as well as today, as it relates to this verse, is Paul’s presumed use of the terms “silence” and “subjection/submission/submissiveness” to define all women’s participation in the so-called Churches of God. And the conventional wisdom that surrounds women being silent and in submission, in most cases, is that women are to be seen and not heard especially in the assemblies and Body of Messiah. And of course, the Church Triumphant loves to erroneously lay responsibility for this doctrine or mindset at the feet of the Apostle Paul. To the Church—in most cases–if Paul said it, it must have come directly from God or Jesus Christ Himself. Well, as we will discover in our study, Paul never instructed women be “silent” and “subject to men” in the so-called Church in the way millions throughout Christiandom and the Messianic communities have come to understand and practice.

Historically speaking, there is substantial evidence that women were allowed formal education opportunities in some of the more progressive societies of the Roman Empire, such as Corinth and Ephesus. However, these cities and regions tended to be the exception to this norm. For if you weren’t a hetairai or oracle (referring to our discussion on pagan temple prostitutes in these Greek cities) in these Greek cities, as a woman you were for the most part marginalized and you were not permitted to receive any education apart from what would normally be received by woman related to homemaking duties. In particular for our purposes, orthodox Jewish women from an educational perspective were limited to being homemakers; they were subject to their husbands in every way. 

None of this is to say that women serving as homemakers back then and even today are to be viewed as marginalized members of society. Biblically speaking, there is no higher calling than for a woman to raise her children in the fear and admonition of YHVH our Elohim, and to lovingly care for her husband and the home. What we’re saying here, however, is that if you were a woman back in the day, you would not have the option of learning bible, nor of being heard by others discussing bible, outside the Body of Messiah.

The fact that Paul, a once extreme and esteemed orthodox Jew would even broach the idea of women receiving formal teachings outside the home was revolutionary to say the least. And this understanding is rarely if ever taught in our assemblies today. I agree with Donna Howell when she asserts in her book “The Handmaiden’s Conspiracy,” that the shock of this portion of Paul’s letter would not have been the “silence” aspect or part of the verse, but the “let the woman learn” (Howell; pg. 136). Thus Paul either wittingly or unwittingly—no doubt directed by the Holy Spirit–was asserting gender equality in the Body of Messiah.

The other thing regarding this verse that must be recognized is the word “let.” Some would attribute a “permissive” meaning to the term as used in this verse. But truth be told, the term “let” is nowhere to be found in the Greek text.

A very raw reading of the Greek is as follows:

“A woman/wife in stillness/silence learn in all subjection/obedience” (BNT).

The better rendering contextually is that of “the woman (singular) is to learn.” However, the term “let” seems to have been added to the verse by Greek to English translators for whatever reason best appealed to their sensibilities, personal and religious convictions. Consequently, a great many in nominal Christianity and not too few Messianics assert that Paul was appealing to the necessity of women in the Body of Messiah to learn about their Faith and that their learning was to be limited to each woman’s personal edification and teaching of other women and children in the assemblies. Contextually and from what we have already established about Paul’s view of women in ministry, this interpretation makes absolutely no sense. 

Women or the Woman Learning in Silence

The Greek term Paul is said to use for our English term “silence” is “hesuchia” {hay-soo-khee’-ah}, which the Strong’s Exhaustive Concordance translates as: “quietness” (which was common when describing the life of one who stays at home doing his or her own work and who does not meddle in the affairs of others) or “silence.”

Now, translating “hesuchia” as “silence” in our English texts can be misleading. Consider this: how can one effectively learn in any formal classroom setting silently? That is, the silent one would not be permitted to ask their teacher or their classmates questions nor discuss class content.

As was and continues to be the mainstay of rabbinic learning, all Jewish male students are required to interact with their teacher(s) throughout the course of their intense learning regimen. Students are required to ask and answer questions; expound upon various Torah and Tanakh passages; etc. Sadly, females have always been restricted from formal rabbinic training. Yet, the Jewish male student’s strict learning deportment was one of deep and utter respect for their instructors and their fellow students. A rabbinic student would never attempt or make a habit of trying to speak-over or disrespect his teacher. He would be described as learning in silence and subjection, believe it or not. Sound familiar?

We all know the pitfalls associated with learning the tenets of our Faith in isolation. When the student has no one in which to discuss their learning with, that which they’ve learned may be skewed, hindered, hampered, stalled, or just outright in error. 

As Bereans—as would-be bible scholars, we must resist the urge to be fully reliant upon the English translators’ renderings. For as we can clearly see from verse 11 of our focus passage, the term silence to the western mind denotes absolute quiet or the complete absence of sound. Thus, the use of the English term “silence” is antithetical to the formal learning process of any bible student. In other words, the English term “silence” cannot accurately define the type of learning that Paul had in mind for the Ephesian assembly women.

Thus, one must be aware of the Greek when assigning meaning and context to any New Testament passage—especially in regards to the writings of Paul.

What’s in the Word Silence—More Than One Silence

Case in point: Matthew 22:34:

”But when the Pharisees had heard that He (ie., Y’shua) had put the Sadducees to silence (ie., “phimoo”) they were gathered together” (KJV).

The Greek word for silence in this verse, phimoo, denotes the “muzzling” of an individual or animal and or to “place someone in check.”

Acts 15:12:

”Then all the multitude kept silence, and gave audience to Barnabas and Paul, declaring what miracles and wonders God had wrought among the Gentiles by them” (KJV).

Here, the Greek word for silence, “sigao,” denotes the holding of one’s peace. Now recall, “sigao” was the same Greek term Paul used in 1 Corinthians 14:28 and 34 where Paul instructed men and women to stop chattering or talking during fellowship gatherings but to respect one another and respect the officiators.

And then there’s Acts 21:40:

”…And when there was made a great silence, he spake unto them in the Hebrew tongue, saying,…” (KJV).

The Greek word for silence here is “sigay,” denoting absolute silence. 

Stop Relying Solely on English Translations of the Bible to Provide the Truth of God’s Word—Be Bereans 

The point I’m trying to make here, of course, is that, just because an English translator at whatever time in history he was doing his translation work, chose to use the English term “silence” to define the Greek term “hesuchia” or “sigao,” or “sigay” doesn’t mean it was the best word choice to accurately convey what Paul was truly to get across in his readers. Word choice in Bible translations is vitally important. And the truth-seeker must have a mind to, at the very least, trust the English translations he or she has at their disposal, but verify. Verify if the English rendering he or she is seeing makes sense within the contextual, language, historical, cultural and geographical paradigm in which the text was originally written. Remember, we’re dealing with a 2,000+ year old, dead language, that requires one to employ proper hermeneutic principles (ie., the art of bible interpretation) in order to properly divide the Word of Truth.

So clearly, the use of the English term “silence” in verse 11 is a poor choice. As we just discussed, the proper instructing of the Ephesian assembly women could not take place in an environment that prohibited student questions, comments, discussions and answers to teacher questions. 

As it applies to our focus passage here, contextually, “hesuchia” is indicative of an ideal student, who is “enthusiastic and cooperative” and “who is willing to learn more in an area of life in order to please God” (Howell; pg. 136). Moreover, this content-rich Greek term is indicative of someone who sits on the edge of his or her seat at every word uttered by his/her teacher, giving over to that teacher the respect and adoration they rightly deserve as a teacher of the Gospel and Torah.

That being the case, the “hesuchia” female student doesn’t try to over talk or take over the class proceedings from the teacher. They sit and learn in utter subjection, or better, respect.

Dr. Eddie L. Hyatt beautifully expounds on the term “hesuchia” as follows:

“A life without upset and turmoil. Thus learning in hesuchia, ie., in calmness and quietness, was the Greek-Socratic method for all students to learn. Paul wants this woman (and all women) to be able to learn in this sort of quiet and peaceful environment, without upset and turmoil” (ibn; pg. 93).

Let Women Learn

If we invoke the concept of Internal Consistency to our study of this verse, it would seem evident that Paul’s learning policy, which for a while became the general practice of the Way Movement, was for any and all women of Faith to be educated in the things of the Faith. This, as mentioned in other places “was at variance with Jewish and Greek customs” (Dr. Eddie L. Hyatt; pg. 69).

As mentioned in previous installments of this series, ANE women were typically educated in matters of the home. Period (again, unless the woman was a member of the pagan-temple-cult prostitution systems of such Greek cities as Ephesus and Corinth).

Thus, it must be understood that Paul’s insistence that women be educated in the Faith was revolutionary for that time. Recall, if you will, last installment where I mentioned Paul’s writings were in response to an issue or cause (ie., cause and effect—something prompted Paul to write what he wrote). Thus, it can only be presumed that there may have been some misogynistic issues related to educating women in the Faith—specifically in Ephesus–that Paul and Timothy needed to deal with. This very issue, therefore, would be at the very heart of the push for women of Faith being accepted as equal partners in the Body of Messiah.

As much as this was a new concept—women learning—to the men of the assemblies, it was equally new to the women, who would not be “used to listening to lectures or thinking about theological concepts, or studying at all” (John Temple Bristow; What Paul Really Said About Women; pg. 70). These were as mentioned “normally bound to the solitude of home or limited in social contact to their own husbands and children” (ibn; pg. 70). Now, under this new paradigm of both men and women learning together the things of the Faith, women were given “an opportunity to visit with one another in classroom settings” (ibn; pg. 70). But what may sound fantastic conceptually doesn’t always work out as easily when put in practice.

Fortunately, Paul would not be hindered in his quest for gender equality in the Faith, and it would be, through Timothy, that Torah and the Gospel would be accessible to any who would desire to be a true member of the Body of Messiah. 

Women Under Subjection

There were obvious problems associated with the newly found freedoms women were experiencing in the realm of biblical education. Thus Paul purposed to establish ground rules for their learning. The first part of the rules was they they were to learn “in silence with all subjection” (1 Tim. 2:11).

Now, we’ve already expounded in depth on the issue of the Ephesian woman or women learning in silence, focusing on the Greek term ”hesuchia.” Thus, we must now turn our attention to the English term “subjection” as it relates to women’s learning.

Hupotassomai

The English term “subjection” in the ancient Greek is “hupotassomai.” Hupotassomai denotes “the voluntary willingness to be responsive to the needs of others. Thus, in the case of the Ephesian female student’s learning, hupotassomai is directly connected with the needs of others (ie., other students) to listen; to the needs of themselves, to hear; and of the needs of their teachers, to communicate without noisy competition” (Bristow; pg. 70). Please recall, if you will, that this same term in its root form was used—presumably by Paul—in his letter to the Corinthian assembly, where he also addressed women interactions in the assemblies (1 Corinthians 14:34). Paul wrote:

“Let your women keep silence (Greek—”sigao”) in the churches: for it is not permitted unto them to speak; but they are commanded to be under obedience (ie., Greek—hupotasso), as also saith the law” (KJV).

We concluded, after a rather detailed examination of this verse, that Paul was essentially instructing the women of the Corinthian assemblies to stop chattering or talking in the middle of worship services and to respect and allow the service leader(s) to lead the services/proceedings/teachings unhindered by their rude chattering.

In both cases, Paul in a sense instructs the men to afford the same learning and teaching opportunities as they themselves enjoyed and embraced. However, he turns to the woman or the women, in a sense, and instructs them to enter into their learning with total respect and love that defines a true student of the Faith.

And let us not overlook the fact that this form of learning—be it male or female learning–was essentially the same type/same form of learning that Paul experienced attending Pharisee college in Jerusalem while in his late teens, in and through his twenties. Those same principles, minus the prohibition against women rabbinic education, Paul seemed intent on applying to the Corinthian, Ephesian and Cretan assemblies. 

Verse 12—I Suffer a Woman Not to Teach

“I do not allow a woman to teach or to have authority over a man; instead, she is to be silent” (vs. 12; HCSB).

Here Paul places teaching restrictions on either women (either across all assemblies or specific to Ephesus) or on a specific woman as Dr. Eddie Hyatt contends. The usurping authority over men is a most perplexing phrase that causes a ton of confusion both within and without the Body of Messiah. We will get much deeper into this as we move further along in our study.

Paul’s Prohibition Against Women Teaching—A True Prohibition?

Let us not forget that prior to Timothy’s oversight of the Ephesian assemblies, it was Priscilla and Aquila—”equal partnered husband and wife team”—that, through Paul’s assistance and guidance, were responsible for “establishing, growing and maintaining the “church” there” (Donna Howell; pg. 130).

It stands to reason that most, if not all, the veteran Ephesian Assembly members would have recalled Priscilla as “their pastoral figure in the beginning” (Howell.; pg. 131)! This was and remains established historical fact in the annals of the Ephesian Assembly.

So to think that Paul was against women teachers, especially in Ephesus, is problematic to say the least.

Granted, as we’ve previously discussed, some in churchianity and in various sects of the Messianic community will assert that Priscilla’s, along with other noted female leaders of the first-century Way Movement, were aberrational instances of female leadership in the Faith. But we can never abandon context and scriptural consistency when studying Scripture; especially when studying many of Paul’s difficult to decipher passages. To say that Paul did an “about-face” on the issue of women teachers and preachers, smack in the midst of his oversight of the assemblies of YHVH, is problematic to say the least. Because, if it turns out that Paul actually flip-flopped on his position regarding women leaders-teachers-preachers-prophets-worship leaders-apostles, then it begs the question: what else did he flip-flop on. And if he is indeed a flip-flopper on this crucial element of our Faith, what other crucial elements of our Faith did he flip-flop on. Which would then bring into question his legitimacy as a true apostle of the Faith.

Needless to say, I in no way believe Paul “flip-flopped” or did an “about-face” on women being teachers and preachers in the Body of Messiah. The problem we have here, again, is one of understanding Paul’s difficult to understand writing style which included Paul’s habit of leaving important bits of information out of some of his writings; lousy English renderings of the Greek texts; and the challenge of overcoming various religious, cultural and historic worldviews that often obscure the true meaning of biblical texts. And I contend even further, when one opens themselves to the leading and teaching of the Holy Spirit, all of these impediments to understanding Paul’s challenging writings are greatly reduced. Thus, with the right tools and resources, the truth of scripture is available to anyone who dares seek the Truth.

Men Versus Women Teachers and Preachers

John Bristow, in his book “What Paul Really Said About Women,” contends that Paul was essentially asserting that teachers at first had to be men of the assemblies as the men were the only ones educated in the Faith at the time. I don’t necessarily buy into that thinking at all. The tenets of the Faith were Torah and Messiah based, and most of the Gentiles coming into Faith in Ephesus were not all that familiar with Judaism or the Hebraic Roots of Faith. Bristow is assuming that the Ephesians were former Jews, thus they would be used to the Jewish paradigm of women being excluded from learning the things of Judaism. And in previous installments we spent a great amount of time discussing the misogyny that was part and parcel of Judaism. So I can see why Bristow may think this to be the case, but to me that would presume that the men of the Ephesian Assembly were already trained in Judaism. Let us not forget that Priscilla and Aquila headed the first assemblies in Ephesus, and certainly Priscilla was no man.

The Prohibition Against Women Teachers and Preachers—1 Timothy 2:12

When we examine the Greek text directly in the order in which it was written, we end up with roughly the following:

“To teach (didaskein), on the contrary, to a woman I do not grant permission, and not authentein—take authority over men–but to be in silence” (Richard and Catherine Kroeger; I Suffer a Women Not to Teach; pg.79).

The authors look at the term “to teach” and question whether the term is suggestive of the content of the woman’s or women’s teaching. We know that in Thyatira, for instance, it was reported that a woman (aka Jezebel, a so-called prophetess) was teaching the deep things of hasatan; teaching the members of the assemblies to fornicate and eat things sacrificed to idols (Rev. 2:20). Thus, it is proposed that this one Greek term—didaskein–may be defining that which “the woman (gune)” must not teach here in 1 Timothy 2:12.

Now, at first I disagreed with the Kroeger’s assertion that Paul was referring to “didaskein” from the perspective of delivering doctrine—in this case delivering false doctrine–as opposed to the perspective of the general act of teaching or instructing. But after continuing to dig and explore further the the term “didaskein,” I believe the Kroegers may be correct. 

To Teach–didaskein

The function of teaching is here emphasized in the Greek term “didaskein.” The teaching itself is defined in the Greek as “didaskalia” and “didache.” And the actual teacher is defined in the Greek as “didaskalos.” “Didache” defines the “terms of the Truth which the teaching bears” (ibn; 80; 2 Tim. 4:2; Tit. 1:9).

The nuance that is applied here in 1 Timothy 2:12 as it applies to teaching Truth is that “those who are “didaktikos,” that is those who are capable of teaching, must be well prepared to instruct those who oppose Truth (1 Tim. 3:2; 2 Tim. 2:24).

The teachings (ie., the didaskalia) of the Ephesian opponents is one of demons (1 Tim. 4:1), which of course was in variance with the Truth (1 Tim. 6:2,3; 2 Tim. 4:3). Nevertheless, Paul counseled that all who would stick with the Truth—that is those that taught Truth—they would be saved (1 Tim. 4:16).

We find that women were actively involved in the false teachings (1 Tim. 4:7; 5:11-13; 2 Tim. 3:6-7; Tit. 1:11). Thus, Paul condemned their “didaskein” which was heretical. The Kroegers propose that the verb “didaskein” as used in this context is a strict prohibition against the women of the Ephesian Assembly engaging in false teachings (cf. 1 Tim. 1:3,4; Tit. 1:9-14; ibn; pg. 81).

Thus, it seems reasonable to conclude that given the context and taking into account all that we’ve uncovered in this study, that this focus passage is not an indictment against women teaching in the Body of Messiah. For, as I will discuss more fully later on in this post, Paul in Titus 2:3-5 fully supports—dare I say fully endorses–women teachers and preachers operating in the Body of Messiah.

Paul writes in 2 Timothy 2:2:

“Take the things you heard me say in front of many other witnesses and pass them on to faithful people (”anthropos—men and women”) who are capable of teaching others” (CEB).

We know through the ministry of Paul that women played a crucial role in teaching the Faith (2 Tim. 1:5; 3:14). And of course there are numerous other passages of the New Testament that certified women to preach, teach and prophesy (cf. Col. 3:16; 1 Cor. 14:26, 31; 11:5; etc.).

Therefore, from a contextual standpoint, to teach or to didaskein—here in 1 Timothy 2:12 actually referring to the act of a woman or women “delivering false doctrine” in and to the Ephesian assemblies makes a lot of sense; more so than the convention whereby Paul is outright prohibiting women from being teachers and or preachers in the assemblies altogether.

Epitrepo—”But I Suffer”

Stepping back to the very beginning of verse 12, we find recorded “…I suffer not…” The two Greek words supposedly used by Paul here is “ouk epitrepo,” which means “I do not allow” or “I do not permit,” which as used here in our focus passage, addresses, according to the Kroegers, a “particular circumstance rather than laying down a widespread interdiction against the leadership activities of women” (ibn; 82).

Unlike the other Greek aspects of this verse, “ouk epitrepo” is very cut and dry. Paul is simply saying: “I will/I do not allow”…someone to do something (Louw Nida Lexicon). And that something which Paul is not allowing to take place seems to be the false teachings that either the woman or women were spreading in the Ephesian assembly. As well as it could mean that Paul was putting a stop to the false teachings that this woman or these women were formerly teaching in the various home fellowships on weekly Sabbaths. 

Putting It Together Thus Far

So when we put the first part of 1 Timothy 2:12 together, as we’ve come to understand each component part thus far, we arrive at the following:

“But I absolutely will not permit the false teachings of the woman in question or the women in question to persist in the Ephesian assemblies.”

Folks, do you see the ramifications of this? Do you recognize that such an interpretation of 1 Timothy 2:12 completely blows out of the water the centuries’ old doctrine that women cannot teach nor preach in the assemblies of Messiah? This is absolutely ground breaking.

But as I mentioned in my rather sad attempt at drama at the outset of this post, now that we have this information, what are we going to do with it? What should we do with it?

Look, I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it again: this is content you will not read nor hear on other Messianic-based ministry platforms. We do not have a denomination nor a religion we answer to. Our only concern is getting to the Truth of biblical matters, and I hope that this, and all the other installments to this series on Paul and Hebrew Roots, if anything, will motivate you to conduct your own indepth studies on Paul’s writings. Don’t take as gospel truth the content I’m putting forth to you here. I appreciate you accepting these teachings in the spirit that it’s given. But as President Ronald Reagan said of the Russians regarding their keeping of SALT: trust but verify.

However, we’re not quite done with this verse. We still have to deal with the remaining portion of verse 12 that speaks to women or the woman “usurping authority over the man” and those women once again being told to “be silent” in the assemblies. 

Nor to Usurp Authority Over the Man…

Editor and Creator of the Aramaic English New Testament.

The AENT in this verse suggests that the learning woman not “be assuming over the man (presumably her male instructor); but that she remain in stillness.”

However, when we cross-reference this passage with its companion verses in Titus, we learn that women were indeed privy to publicly teach (or even preach) under Paul’s general oversight of the assemblies of Messiah:

“And so also the elder women that they be in behavior as is becoming to the Fear of Elohim; and not to be slanderers; and not to be addicted to much wine; and to be teachers of beautiful things, making the younger women to be modest, to love their husbands and their children, to be chaste and Set Apart and to take good care of their households and to be obedient to their husbands, so that no one may reproach the Word of Elohim” (Tit. 2:3-6; AENT).

Here in Titus, Paul focuses on the teaching ministry of the elder women of the assembly who, as Paul suggests, should set Godly examples for the younger women.

I want to point out that the inserted punctuation the English translators imposed upon the text has the potential of leading most to conclude that Paul was restricting the elder Cretan women’s teachings, exclusively to the younger women of the assemblies. But I, along with a great many others, assert that such a contention is not contextually consistent with what we know of Paul and his view and treatment of women leaders in the Faith. Let us never forget: the Greek texts CONTAIN NO PUNCTUATION MARKS. So for English translators to insert punctuation into their translations, as we see demonstrated here in Titus 2:3-6, is rather presumptive on their part. So we must guard against such things as we study these challenging passages, and not be given over to misled understandings that are based upon improperly imposed English punctuation.

Thus, a more contextually accurate way to understand what Paul is saying regarding the elder Cretan women teachers is that they TEACH THE TRUTH! And in their rightly dividing the Word of Truth, the teaching—preaching women would be compelled to be Godly examples to the young Cretan women who were loving, supportive and biblically submissive to their husbands and responsible caretakers of their homes. This would of course stand to reason that these elder preaching-teaching women would themselves perfectly typify these same traits in their respective lives.

And oh by the way, there was no command from Paul that woman could teach only other women (maybe of similar age), younger women and children. This line of thinking obviously comes from a forced reading of passages like Titus 2 where inserted punctuation and a failure to employ context—and let’s also throw in a refusal to establish scriptural integrity into Paul’s writings—that have led to such contrived and error-ridden doctrinal thinking in many of the assemblies of Messiah. Again, the church took the bait that was dangled before them by the Jewish synagogal and ancient Greek social mindset that marginalized women and ostracized them to strictly domestic endeavors. This thinking and practice in the Body of Messiah is contrary to the instructions and teachings of our Master Yahoshua Messiah who did not, in any, restrict women in Faith. In fact, He set women free to not only live their life in material and spiritual abundance, but also to serve the Kingdom as they are so led by the Holy Spirit. 

Usurp Authority Over The Man—Mysterious Case of the Greek Term “Authentein”

The Greek word supposedly used by Paul here for our English phrase “usurp authority” is “authentein.” Interestingly, “authentein” is not found anywhere else in the whole of the Bible. Thus, when we apply the essential concept of “internal consistency” to our studies here, understanding exactly what Paul means in verse 12 gets really challenging.

“By the New Testament period, “authentes” also at times implied one who took his own life” (Richard and Catherine Kroeger; pg. 86).

The KJV rendering of “authentein” is that of some form of a “usurpation of power.” According to the writers, the most interesting usage along these lines occurs in legal documents from Egypt (ibn; 88) and the legal right to property and to the disposal thereof” (ibn; 88). The thinking in this document was that one individual wrongly “usurped that in which they (the pair) rightfully had a share” (ibn; 88).

In such uses of “authentein” in ancient legal documents, one party is laying claim to property to which others feel they are entitled; while other parties believe the other party wrongly took possession of something that belonged to them (that being a wrongful usurpation) (ibn; 89).

Still in the first century C.E., the term was used to denote criminal behavior that included murder. But by the 2nd century C.E., the term seemed to more imply a dominance of some sort.

The so-called church fathers utilized “authentein” to mean “rule or bear authority” (ibn; 90). But these also used the term in other ways such as the wielding of power and authority over someone (John Chrysostom Homily on the Gospel of St. Matthew 44:1 (Migne pg. 7.467c)); deferring a matter over to someone who had precedence over themselves (John Chrysostom’s Homily on the Gospel of St. John 66.2 (Migne pg. 8.396D)); when instructing believers not to tyrannize one’s spouse (John Chrysostom Homily on Colossians 10.1; 11.2; (Migne pg. 11.396c; 11.406E)).

Donna Howell’s The Handmaiden’s Conspiracy highlights the erroneous understanding many have of 1 Timothy 2:9-15, resulting in the silencing of women of Faith.

Donna Howell suggests that when such a thing as a Greek word or term not being used anywhere else in Scripture occurs, if we want to truly understand what that word truly means within the proper context of the passage of interest, we must turn to extra-biblical records and see how that term may have been used in those records. Unfortunately, even extra-biblical records fail to provide any true consistency in the use of the term “authentein.” Basically, “authentein” in those extra-biblical texts “meant different things to different writers” and thus “it remains a very rare word with definitions in such contrast that it’s harder to pin down what Paul would have meant” (Howell; pgs. 140,141).

Howell does cite New Testament scholar Scott Bartchy’s (New Testament scholar) study of the term:

“The verb “authentein” clearly bears the nuance of using such absolute power in a destructive manner, describing the activity of a person who acts for his or her own advantage apart from any consideration of the needs or interests of anyone else” (”Power, Submission, and Sexual Identity among the Early Christians,” Essays on New Testament Christianity—Cincinnati, OH: Standard Publishing, 1978, 71-72)

Howell references researchers that have linked ancient fertility practices that placed Eve as the originator of man, to the mysterious Greek term “authentein” (”The Meaning of Authenteo,” Bible Discussion Forum, July 25, 2017, http://www.thechristadelphians.org/forums/index.php?showtopic=14052). So if you’re trying to understand what ancient fertility practices have to do with women usurping authority over males, I assure you there is a subtle connection to be had.

The connection actually plays into ancient gnostic teachings that somehow merged with Artemis/Diana (ie., the matron goddess of Ephesus) cult teachings. This mash-up of Gnostic and pagan-cult teachings asserted the goddess’ claims (ie., Artemis/Diana) to be the source through whom all life began. Thus this mash-up of teachings hangs on the concept of authorship or originator. And the pagans were perpetrating false teachings that diametrically contradicted the Torah account of the origins of mankind.

Now, does such a concept contextually fit 1 Timothy 2:12 and Paul’s refusal to allow women to exercise authority over the man or over men? Well, it sort of does. For Timothy’s mission was to overturn the false teachers and their false teachings. And because the next verse, 13, gets into the whole Adam and Eve discussion, one could reasonably conclude that maybe “authentein” really does have something to do with what Howell postulates in her book: which is a hijacking of the creation story by certain Ephesian false teachers (ie., either Hyatt’s unnamed woman or meddlesome women operating door-to-door, passing along false teachings related to the creation story as documented in Torah.)

Richard and Catherine Kroeger happened to be one of a handful of researchers who believe in this authentein—Gnostic—pagan connection. They defend their position with the following points:

1. Ephesus was a central hub for erotic pagan religions that “placed women equal to, and often above, men in aggressive and sexual positions of authority.”

2. There is some historical evidence that suggests women in and around Ephesus “collectively usurped the authority of men in religious settings, especially those related to the temple of Artemis/Diana in Ephesus.”

3. The term “authentein,” along with the noun form authentes, denote a “form of extremely aggressive behavior.”

4. The terms “authentein” and “authentes” were not interpreted to mean “having power or authority” until the 2nd-century C.E. (Howell; pgs. 142,143).

Howell also cites Dr. Cynthia Long Westfall, exegesis professor at McMaster Divinity College, regarding authenteo:

“In the Greek corpus, the verb “authenteo” refers to a range of actions that are not restricted to murder or violence. However, the people who are targets of these actions are harmed, forced against their will (compelled), or at least their self-interest is being overridden, because the actions involve an imposition of the subject’s will, ranging from dishonour to lethal force” (”1 Timothy 2:12 in Context (Part 4),” Marag Mowczko, July 25, 2017, http://margmowczko/1-timothy-212-in-context-4/).

Thus, according to Dr. Westfall, “authenteo” is suggestive of “someone’s self-interest being overridden” (Howell; pg. 144). Howell continues to make a reasonable point on the heels of Westfall’s statement:

“Such circumstances do not have to be murderous or violent for them to also be inappropriate, and in the moment that a subject’s will is imposed by another to the point that he or she is entirely overridden, a usurpation has most definitely occurred” (Howell; pg. 144).

Howell aptly points out that Tyndale’s New Testament proceeded the KJV, which of course was published in 1611. Tyndale’s Bible, according to Wikipedia, “is credited with being the first English translation to work directly from Hebrew and Greek texts” (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/tyndale_bible). Interestingly enough, Tyndale translated the Greek term as “have authority over.” She further points out that going even earlier in history, we find “authentein” in the Latin Vulgate (4th-c. C.E.) translated as “domineer.”

Beyond biblical literature, the term seemed to denote “master,” such that it would mean “I do not permit a woman to teach, nor to master over the man” (Howell; pg. 144). Howell points out that the concepts of “master” and “usurping authority over” are NOT synonymous. For “mastering over suggests a more aggressive takeover than, say, a diplomatic disagreement between a man and a woman over theology (or some equivalent)” (Howell; pg. 144).

Yet Howell goes on to point out that Paul likely did not use the word “authentein” to denote a usurpation of authority in his day. Regardless, we have to somehow deal with the “usurpation” issue as being antagonistic or hostile because of the etymological and historical roots of the word. And this is why it is not too far fetched of an idea that Paul was directly addressing a potential “aggressive or antagonistic takeover” of the Assembly by a priestess/prostitute of Artemis/Diana “whose pagan theology was misleading the believers in Ephesus” (Howell; pg. 145).

Howell makes a credible point that demure, unlearned Ephesian Assembly women weren’t “stealing or seizing and holding in possession by force” the teaching ministries of the assembly ministers and leaders. It just doesn’t make any sense. And unfortunately, this is the very reasoning that certain religious leaders hold to a plain read of this passage to shore up their doctrines and traditions to prohibit women from teaching and preaching in their congregations. And let’s face it, is it reasonable to conclude that such a thing was indeed happening in the Ephesian Assemblies of the first-century C.E.?

I agree with Howell and the Kroegers in their assertions that what seems to be the case through a plain reading of the text would not reasonably be a normative or absolute prohibition against women teachers of the Faith. More so, that this was “an isolated, cultural/local issue and “relative” or “restrictive” regulation pertaining to the church at Ephesus” (Howell; pg. 147). Assuming this is the case, as it relates to us today, we must be careful to apply Paul’s instructions as it relates to the specific issues he was addressing with Timothy regarding women teaching in the Ephesian assemblies.

Encouragement

I recognize that all this talk about “authentein” may be a bit mind-numbing, and I’m sympathetic to this. But I promise you, if you stick with me for just a little longer, your patience and attention will pay off in the end.

An Alternate Understanding of Authentein

By the 2nd century C.E., “authentes” was being used to “denote an originator or instigator” (Kroegers; pg. 99). By this point in history, the term was used by both Jewish and Greek writers to denote or designate the “real perpetrator of a crime;” “the author of a crime;” and “the perpetrator of evils” (Josephus Wars 1.582; Diodorus of Sicily 16.61; 17.5; 35.25; Appian Mithridates 90.1).

Stay with me. This is definitely leading to a final understanding of what Paul was trying to convey to Timothy in 1 Timothy 2:12.

In the “similitudes of Hermas 9.5.6,” an early Christian writing, YHVH is referred to as “the architect and builder” (ie., “authentes”) of a tower. We find in a second century C.E. Christian novel where “authentes” was used to describe YHVH as “the sole creator” (Clementine Homilies 12, Ante-Nicene Fathers). And we find scattered throughout early Christian writings where Mashiyach is described as the author (ie., “authentes”) and introducer of a new law of salvation; and leader of the work of the gospel; the teacher and “authentes” (prime mover) of laws and teachings whereby the power of our Savior is revealed (Eusebius De Ecclesiastica Theologia 3.5; Migne pg 24.0103A).

Researchers have found that the noun form of “authentes,” which is “authentia,” is suggestive of primal cause and power. As we see it used in 3 Maccabees 2:29, it implies “original status.”

Bringing Authentein Into a Final Understanding of 1 Timothy 2:11 and 12

So bringing all that we’ve discussed in this installment together regarding 1 Timothy 2: 11 and 12, we have two competing interpretations in which to draw from. Fortunately, neither interpretation excludes the other. That is, both interpretations address false teaching and the need for the woman or women in the Ephesian assemblies to be properly educated in Torah and the Gospel.

The first interpretation is pretty cut and dry. Paul is instructing Timothy to prohibit the Ephesian assembly women from teaching (or preaching if you will) until such time that they are properly trained in Torah and the Gospel and the false teachings have been expunged from the assemblies.

Donna Howell seems to favor this “temporary” prohibition against Ephesian assembly women teaching. I respect this interpretation. However, I see it as a very safe interpretation that fails to distinguish between the women teachers and fellowship leaders who were firmly grounded in the Truth and those who were spreading false doctrine in the assemblies. It seems from this safe interpretation that Paul is penalizing the “good” along with the “bad.” I just don’t buy into this interpretation.

Which brings us to the other interpretation, which I believe best fits, contextually speaking, with the situation on the ground at the time Paul wrote his letter to Timothy, and that addresses specifically the woman (or women) responsible for spreading and teaching their heretical doctrine.

Catherine and Richard Kroeger support this second, albeit rather controversial, interpretation. Since they’ve devoted so much research to our focus passage and they have the expertise of the context, history, religion and culture of Ephesus, I’ll be referring to their work to best illustrate this interpretation of 1 Timothy 2:12.

“Authentein,” when used with the genitive, as it is written in 1 Timothy 2:12, possibly implies a claim of sovereignty and or ownership (Richard & Catherine Kroeger; pg. 102). The Kroegers go to some length to express the idea that some form of authorship or ownership is behind Paul’s use of “authentein” in our focus passage.

They offer the following interpretation of 1 Timothy 2:12:

“I do not allow a woman to teach nor to proclaim herself author of man.”

Such gnostic teaching strongly enforced the belief that a woman (conceivably Eve) was responsible for the creation of man (ibn; pg. 102). They support their contention by highlighting Paul’s mention of genealogies (1 Tim. 1:4), which had the inevitable tendency to get into matters of origins which the Apostle said promoted speculations (ie., debates or controversies), dissensions and quarrels about Torah and are worthless and futile (Tit. 3:9).

The Kroegers go further and expand their interpretation of 1 Timothy 2:12 with the following:

“I do not permit a woman to teach nor to represent herself as originator of man, but she is to be in conformity with the scriptures or with Torah, or that she keeps it a secret. For Adam was created first, then Eve”—referring to 1 Timothy 2:13 (ibn; pg. 103).

Thus, in keeping within context of the discussion in this verse, for the woman in question to be in silence would imply that she “to keep something a secret;” or rather, that she not speak such abominations in the Assemblies of Messiah (ibn; 103). In other words, Paul may have simply been saying that this woman needed to sit down, shut up, and learn the Truth. Period.

This of course is part and parcel of the mystery religions and it formed the basis of much of gnostic teachings, where Eve was exalted and venerated as the creator of Adam. This was “secret knowledge” that was only available to the adherents of the religion. And in many cases, this was knowledge that was passed along by the so-called female mediators—in some cases temple prostitutes and priestesses–of pagan cults like Artemis/Diana.

The Kroegers suggests that Paul, in his letter to Timothy, was actually opposing a doctrine which acclaimed motherhood as the ultimate reality. This heretical understanding and teaching sought to uproot and replace the Truth of Torah in the Ephesian assemblies. This is what hasatan does. He seeks to subvert the Word of Truth and lead God’s people astray.

Our bible maintain that God, who far transcends all limitations of gender, created the heavens and the earth, and that all things are of God” (ibn; 112).

The writers give credence to their claims here regarding the whole motherhood mindset of the ancients by pointing to the very next verse whereby Paul goes into the whole Adam and Eve saga (1 Tim. 2:13). Of course we know that Paul asserts that Adam was created before Eve and that Eve did not bring gnosis to humanity but transgression. And we will get into verses 13-15 and bring this study of our focus passage to a conclusion in Part 15 of this series.

Conclusion

Our focus passage of 1 Timothy 2:11 and 12 is not a prohibition against women leadership (ie., teaching and preaching) in the Body of Messiah, but a “refutation of a widespread heresy” that was ongoing in the Ephesian Assemblies of Messiah (Richard and Catherine Kroeger; pg. 117). Paul’s refutation was directed at Jewish Gnosticism or proto-Gnosticism, which featured the whole motherhood mystery teaching and religion that had threatened to destroy the Ephesian assembly if he—Paul—failed to put an abrupt stop to it.

Contextually speaking, Paul was not picking on women or the woman. He had already addressed the men who were responsible for spreading heretical doctrine in the assemblies—Hymenaeus and Alexander (1 Tim. 1:20). In our focus passage, however, he turned his attention to the unfortunate woman (or women) who were also behind the proliferation of this heretical and damaging doctrine.

Folks, I hope that this study of 1 Timothy 2:11 and 12 helps us to realize once and for all that Paul did not in any way prohibit women from teaching and preaching Torah and or the Gospels And it’s high time that we give ear and attention to proper and deep study of the Word of Truth so that we may truly hear what Father has to say to us and walk out our Faith in Spirit and Truth. Now is the time that women be finally freed from the bondage that religion has imposed upon them and that has prevented them from exercising their gifts and callings in the Body of Messiah.

Faithfully

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First-Timothy—Paul’s Inconsistencies—Myths-Tales-Torah—Part-13 of the Paul and Hebrew Roots Series

First-Timothy—Paul’s Inconsistencies—Myths-Tales-Torah—Part-13 of the Paul and Hebrew Roots Series

by Rod Thomas | The Messianic Torah Observer

This is “First-Timothy—Paul’s Inconsistencies—Myths-Tales-Torah—Part-13 of the Paul and Hebrew Roots Series.”ng Part 12—Is 1 Timothy 2:9-15 Internally Consistent?

Donna Howell in her landmark book on the subject of un-silencing women of Faith (i.e., “The Handmaiden’s Conspiracy), points to “internal consistency” as the basis upon which the true purpose and content of 1 Timothy was written. Therefore, by Ms. Howell pointing to the existence of “internal consistency” in Paul’s writings, she is saying that one must give full respect and acceptance to a presumption that Paul was not contradicting himself at any point in his letter.  

1 Timothy is about Torah teaching and the myths, tales and Jewish Gnosticism that threatened that teaching.

Internal consistency is a commonly accepted concept in nominal-Christianity. It is the accepted belief that there are no inconsistencies or contradictions in the content of Paul’s first-letter to Timothy. This concept would, of course, apply to all the other Pauline writings as well. 

Questioning the Internal Consistency of 1 Timothy

In general, biblical internal consistency, according to Wikipedia, is about the coherence and textual integrity of the bible. The Wikipedia article contends that [perceived] biblical inconsistencies or contradictions have the great potential of challenging one’s belief in the integrity of scripture. Such [perceived] inconsistencies therefore cast doubts that certain books of the bible are truly inspired. This is one of the reasons some question Paul’s writings. These see the perceived lack or absence of internal consistency in some of his letters as a basis to question the authenticity of his writings.

In a sense, throughout this series, we have touched upon internal consistency as it relates to Paul’s writings. We have looked specifically at the perceived understanding that Paul did not support women holding leadership positions in the Body of Messiah in some portions of his writings, while in other places he extolled the virtues and works of many women leaders in the various assemblies that he oversaw. These women, if you will recall, included the likes of Phoebe; Junia; Priscilla; Lydia; Synthyche, Euodia, and Tabitha to name a few.

Pauline Internal Inconsistency Explained Away   

This obvious inconsistency is explained away by those who hold to a belief in Paul’s body of writings being internally consistent with desperate claims that the women leaders under Paul’s oversight were exceptions to Paul’s rules that prohibited women from teaching, preaching, leading corporate prayer and prophesying in the Assemblies of Messiah.   

Do I believe the bible is internally consistent? Well, yes and no. It depends. I would say in most places yes. In other places, I would say not so much. Allow me to explain. 

The Apparent Inconsistency of our Focus Passage

I take somewhat of an opposing position to that of Donna Howell that our focus passage of 1 Timothy 2:9-15 is internally consistent with the whole of 1 Timothy as well as with the whole Pauline canon of writings. As I see it, 1 Timothy 2:9-15, when read in the overwhelming majority of English renderings, is internally inconsistent with the rest of 1 Timothy.

Donna Howell’s The Handmaiden’s Conspiracy highlights the erroneous understanding many have of 1 Timothy 2:9-15, resulting in the silencing of women of Faith.

Think about what we have looked at regarding this focus passage: Paul is confronting Jewish Gnosticism in the Ephesian Assemblies and he sends his young apprentice Timothy to Ephesus to take care of the problem. In so doing, Paul sends Timothy this letter of encouragement with explicit instructions on how he (Paul) wanted Timothy to confront the Gnostic problem. 

So 1 Timothy goes along just fine for the first chapter and eight verses. However, just as we witnessed in 1 Corinthians 14, out of nowhere, in 1 Timothy 2:9, after having instructed Timothy to have the men pray in their assemblies for all people lifting up holy hands, Paul brings up women specific issues. And instead of discussing women from the perspective of consistency with the previous content of his letter, he launches into a discussion on their dress; their appearance; their deportment; their learning of Torah; their teaching of Torah and the Gospel; their authority over men—presumably in the capacity of teaching in the assemblies; and their place in the natural, creative order.

 Being Honest With Ourselves and the Text

So if we are honest with ourselves and we look at this thing from a Truth-seeking perspective, we are forced into asking ourselves (and by default asking Paul posthumously) what he is really addressing in his letter to Timothy.

Let’s look at this inconsistency in the text for clarification sake:  

“(8) I desire then that in every place the men should pray, lifting holy hands without anger or quarreling…(9) likewise also that women should adorn themselves in respectable apparel, with modesty and self-control, not with braided hair and gold or pearls or costly attire…” (1 Timothy 2:8, 9; ESV).

 Plain Reading Versus Contextual Understanding

Thus, according to a plain read of these two-verses, Paul is writing Timothy expressing his desire for the “men” (i.e., the “aner” according to the Greek, specific to males) in “every place” (presumably in every assembly gathering in Ephesus) engage in corporate prayer. And the prayers that Paul desired the men of the assemblies engage in would not be defiled by anger or quarreling.

The stated “anger and quarrels” appear to have been brought on by disagreements over unstated things. Those unstated things were likely the false teachers and their false teachings. Regarding those false teachings,  Paul wrote in 1:3 and 4:

“[they] promoted speculations (ie., the Greek being “zetesis;” referring to matters of controversy or debate) rather than stewardship (ie., the Greek being “oikodomia;” that is Godly edifying and building up of the Body) from YHVH that is by faith” (ESV).

Then out of nowhere Paul brings up the whole issue of women’s appearance, attire and deportment.

 What Gives Paul?

What is happening here? Did Paul inadvertently leave out something that would connect verse 8 to verses 9 and 10, that would explain why he chose to slam the Ephesian assembly women’s appearance and deportment at this point in his letter? Where is the so-called internal consistency that Pauline scholars contend exists?

Moreover, if that weren’t enough, why Paul launch into what appears to be restrictions on Ephesian assembly women learning of Torah and prohibitions against women teachers (and presumably preaching) in verses 11 and 12?

Now, we went over the whys and wherefores of this inexplicable transition from men praying in the assemblies to women’s attire and deportment in our last installment to this series. And if you’ve not had the opportunity to review that discussion, I would humbly encourage you to do so simply by using this hyperlink.

 

There is an Obvious Answer to the Question Rests With the Writer Himself

I contend that “internal consistency” must not be presumed in any of Paul’s writings. To presume and accept that Paul’s writings are internally and externally consistent without committing one’s self to deep study and truth searching, in my mind, potentially leads one to misinterpret some of Paul’s most difficult to understand writings.  

It is not that Paul’s writings are internally inconsistent in places. I believe the problem rests with the writer himself. For we a case of a hard-to-read; hard to understand; and often impossible to accurately interpret, writer. We talked at length in the first two to three installments of this series about the man and his work; that he was a brilliant former pharisee, Jewish apologist, and Torah scholar. Moreover, I will add to this portrait of the man Paul, that he was a gifted writer who had a tendency of leaving some vitally important information out of his writings.

Consequently, it is this nagging tendency of Paul leaving important information out of his writings that has led us to the place we are today. And because important elements and issues are left out of his writings, many of us are inclined to blindly accept what is written and not seek to fill in the missing pieces which comes only through intense research and contextual studies.

 Paul Is Often Hard to Understand

Never let us forget that it was the Apostle Peter who wrote of Paul:

“And count the patience of our Lord as salvation, just as our beloved brother Paul wrote to you according to the wisdom given him, as he does in all his letters when he speaks in them of these matters. There are some things in them that are hard to understand, which the ignorant and unstable twist to their own destruction, as they do the other Scriptures” (2 Pet. 3:15, 16; ESV).

 It’s Okay to Question Our Bibles

Questioning what is printed on the pages of our bibles is never a bad thing. Questioning that which is printed on the pages of our bibles becomes a bad thing, however, when our hearts are not right; when our intent is to ignore the contextual and obvious scriptural Truth (i.e., keep God’s commandments; love one another; etc.) that is contained therein. 

Blind Acceptance is Never the Answer to Understanding Paul’s Writings

So, I assert that it is this blind acceptance of biblical internal consistency, that has been tempered with certain established male-dominated Church doctrines and traditions that has led many within and without our Faith to buy into lies and false teachings that women cannot serve as leaders in the Body of Messiah.

And I believe it is the rare, pure of heart truth-seeker who is able to clearly identify those apparent “inconsistencies” in many of Paul’s letters and cause us to consider whether we’re dealing with “Truth” or “tradition” in our understanding of key Pauline texts.

Pauline Internal Consistency Found Only in His Original Manuscripts and His Spirit Led Intent

Now, allow me do an about face here and assert that there is an internal consistency associated with Scripture. But that consistency is found only in the original autographs or manuscripts of the books of the bible, and in the Spirit-led intentions of the original writers of scripture.

I believe Paul’s writing style and the questionable hearts and works of various translators, scribes, scholars and teachers all worked together to bring us to where we are today in our discussion of Paul’s most difficult to understand works. Thus to me, it is not a question of 1 Timothy’s genuineness nor of contradictions in Paul’s writings.  For it all points back to Paul’s writing style and his Spirit-led intent. His writing style is difficult in that he left out key information. And his Spirit-led intent is clearly spelled out in the first chapter and a half of 1 Timothy.  

1 Timothy 2:9-15—Is Paul Addressing Women’s Roles in the Church or Something Else?

What we will find as we continue on in our study of verses 9-15 of 1 Timothy 2 is that our focus passage has little to nothing to do with women roles in the so-called “church.” For what we have in these 7-verses is more of a laundry list of proper-behavior and applied conduct intended to restore some semblance of order to the Ephesian assemblies. 

The cause for the disorder was false teachers and their false teachings. Let us keep this fundamental element to this story at forefront of our minds. Furthermore, we must give some attention to prevailing Ephesian cultural and religious influences as part of the reason Paul called out the women of the assemblies on their attire, appearance and behavior. Recall that we addressed this very thing in our previous installment to this series.

 Quick Revisit on Ephesian Women Attire-Appearance-Behavior

In case you don’t have the time right now to read or listen to Part 12 of this series but you just want to continue on with our present discussion, allow me to quickly summarize 1 Timothy 2:9 and 10 for you.

The CEB translation of these verses reads as follows:

In the same way, I want women to enhance their appearance with clothing that is modest and sensible, not with elaborate hairstyles, gold, pearls, or expensive clothes. They should make themselves attractive by doing good, which is appropriate for women who claim to honor God.

Bottom line: verses 9 and 10 are Pauline instructions that the Ephesian women dress and carry themselves in a Godly manner (vss. 9, 10; CEB).

However, this admonishment of women moderating their appearance and deportment was to dissuade them from mimicking the fashion styles and behaviors of secular Ephesian women—in particular the flamboyant Artemis/Diana Temple prostitutes. Either-wise referred to as “bees,” this class of women had significant fashion and deportment influence throughout Ephesus.

Houstos Kai–Vital Connector Between Two Verses

Paul’s admonishments regarding the Ephesian women’s attire and deportment in the text were preceded by the Greek phrase–“houstos kai,” which we translate in English to mean “in the same way” or “in like manner.”

The phrase “houstos kai” demands we step back a verse or two prior to verse 9 to find out what the women are supposed to do in the same way or in like manner. And we came to understand that by our going all the way back to verse one of chapter two that Paul was encouraging the men of the Ephesian Assemblies to pray publicly for all people throughout the known world without anger or quarreling. Thus, the “like manner” that Paul prefaces his attire and deportment instructions to, must reasonably be linked to Paul’s instructions to the men of the assemblies to pray. In other words, Paul was telling the women to also pray publicly, in their assemblies, for people every–just like their Ephesian male counterparts. However, in his admonishing the women to involve themselves in public assembly prayer, he proceeds to admonish them in regards to their attire and behavior.

Now, having said all this, I want to take us into a rather controversial realm understanding whereby we ask the question:

Could Paul Have Been Addressing a Single Woman in our Focus Passage?

First: A Question of Cause and Effect

 The one safe way to look at this passage is for us to look at it from a “cause and effect” perspective. What I mean by this is that Paul did not just wake up one day and decide to write a letter to Timothy for the purposes of picking on the Ephesian Assembly women. Given what we already know about Paul’s admiration for certain female leaders of his evangelistic team, one is forced to question why he would lash out, so to speak, at the Ephesian Assembly women’s appearance.

Now, we have discussed the background and likely reason to these seeming hits on the women of the Ephesian and Corinthian assemblies. And the reasons we came up with in both cases were in response to a “cause;” that is, something that prompted Paul to address the women of both assemblies in the manner in which he did.

Given Paul’s lofty position in the Body of Messiah during that time, and given the high-stakes that would be at play whenever he wrote or spoke to assembly members throughout the Roman Empire, it makes logical sense that Paul was responding to something that he felt needed to be addressed in the Ephesian Assemblies. It is an almost certainty that Paul was not writing to Timothy to share some unbridled misogynistic viewpoints about women that he happened to have tucked away in his conscience.

 The Importance of Having a “Cause and Effect” Mindset When Studying Paul

Having a “cause and effect” mindset is crucial to our being able to interpret and understand many of Paul’s most challenging writings. In other words, instead of just reading over those difficult passages and accepting the plain English-language rendering of his difficult passages, it is imperative that we ask ourselves: why did, or why would Paul write such a thing? What thing(s) or what issue(s) or what circumstance(s) prompted Paul to write what he wrote. 

Let us not be snookered into thinking that Paul wrote the things he wrote in a vacuum. Paul received data or questions from various sources related to certain issues ongoing in the assemblies he oversaw. And he responded to that data and answered those questions accordingly, just as any experienced and competent administrator would do in his/her running of an organization.

 Dr. Eddie L. Hyatt’s Single Woman Theory

Dr. Eddie L. Hyatt, in his book entitled, “Paul, Women and Church,” seems to agree with this logical approach to understanding Paul’s writings. Hyatt presumes that our focus passage (ie., 1 Timothy 2:9-12) is (1) “addressing a specific situation in Ephesus that is having a particular effect on the women” of the assembly; and (2) “he may also be addressing a particular woman (who may be representative of a company of women) who is propagating the “other doctrine” about which he is so concerned” (pg. 91).

Dr. Eddie L. Hyatt

In his book Paul, Women and Church, Dr. Hyatt comments extensively on Lydia and the Macedonian female Faith leaders.

Now, to me, Hyatt’s first presumption is obvious. However, his second presumption is most fascinating and something that I do not believe we should overlook or dismiss, despite possible conflicts with convention.

Nevertheless, Dr. Hyatt’s suggestion that Paul was addressing a specific woman is, in my opinion, not only fascinating, but also controversial and speculative. For nowhere do we find mention by name this supposed “particular woman.” And we know that Paul does not seem overtly opposed to naming names in some of his writings, as he did in another part of this letter and in a later letter to Timothy where he singles out individuals by name, such as Hymenaeus, Alexander, and Philetus (1 Tim. 1:20; 2 Tim. 2:17).  

 An Unnamed Entity

Beyond these stated individuals, Paul in his 1 Timothy letter is pretty general in his addressees, sticking simply to general descriptors and terms when addressing specific topics of discussion. Nevertheless, it would not be beyond the realm of possibility that Paul is in fact addressing a specific woman in our focus passage. 

Indeed, it is possible that Paul simply did not know the name of the specific woman in question, or that he simply wanted to spare the woman in question embarrassment by keeping her name out of the conversation. It is impossible to be certain either way. 

 Hyatt’s Contention Runs Against Hard and Fast Convention

It is extremely difficult to get past the English translations’ conventional use of “women” (plural) in virtually all English Bible translations of verses 9 and 11). 

In my BibleWorks software compilation of some 20-English translations (there are others, but I’ve chosen 20 English translations for my desktop workspace), every single translation of verse 9 uses the term “women” as opposed to “woman.” 

The Ancient Greek

In looking further into the Koine Greek term used for “woman” or “women,” which is “gune-aikos,” the common definition in the handful of Greek-English Lexicons I referenced is that of “a woman of any age, whether a virgin, or married, or a widow; a wife or betrothed woman; an adult female person of marriageable age; as a form of address in speaking politely to a female person” (Louw-Nida Lexicon). Consequently, the lexicons do not discern between the term being plural or singular, which suggests to me that the Greek term was used in both the plural and singular sense and it was up to the receiver to discern the context therein. 

So, it may be difficult to agree to Dr. Hyatt’s assertion that Paul is addressing a specific, unnamed woman in verses 9 and 10 just by simple assertion. However, verses 11 and 12 in my opinion provide him the greatest support for his “single woman” contention. 

The passage reads:  

“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” (KJV).  

Interestingly, only the Douay-Rheims translation of verse 11 is the only other English Bible translation I’ve come across, beside the KJV, that uses the phrase, “Let THE woman learn…” Otherwise, all the other English translations seem to stick to women in general.  

 Dr. Hyatt’s Theory on Paul’s Prohibition Against Women Teachers

So what we have in verse 12 in light of Dr. Hyatt’s contention is what appears to be Paul making a command decision to restrict THE woman’s (i.e., the woman in question) teaching at that particular time. 

The verse reads “I do not permit,” which is a present tense phrase in the Greek denoting “I am not permitting at this time” (ibn; pg. 9) this particular woman to teach. Or if we put aside Hyatt’s “the single woman” assertion, but rather stick to the convention that Paul is addressing all the Ephesian assembly women, Paul would be saying “I am not permitting, at this time, the Ephesian assembly women to teach.”  

Paul’s Instructions Regarding the Woman’s Teaching Was Not Gender Focused

If this is indeed the case: that Paul is placing a temporary moratorium on this one woman’s teaching practices, then his prohibition is not gender-focused. In other words, Paul’s concern, based upon the premise of the letter, was not the woman’s sex, but the content of her teaching. And it would be because of her teachings that from that point forward, she would not be permitted to teach in the Ephesian Assembly; at least not until she changed course; got some learning and understanding under her belt; and showed true competence in her ability to teach the Word of Truth. 

 False Teachings Came From Both Men and Women

Now, none of this is to say that the women of Ephesus were the only ones passing on false doctrine to the assemblies. The men were equally participatory in this spiritual crime. Let us not overlook two men who Paul named as being especially active in disseminating false teachings—Hymenaeus and Alexander. Paul describes these two men as “having rejected faith and a good conscience;” and in so doing made a “shipwreck” of the Faith in the assemblies (ibn; pg. 92; 1 Tim. 1:19, 20). So damaging was the work of these two men that Paul informed Timothy:  

“…I have delivered unto Satan (ie., Hymenaeus and Alexander) that they may learn not to blaspheme” (1:19, 20).  

The Woman Never Had The Opportunity to Learn

Whoever this female false teacher may have been (assuming Hyatt is correct in his contention), it stands to reason, at least in Paul’s mind , that she had not been given the opportunity to learn the Truth. Thus, in our cause and effect filtering of Paul’s writings, it became Paul’s instruction to Timothy that “the woman learn in silence with all submission” (2:11). 

If this is indeed true about the single woman being put into a “teaching time out” (so to speak) because she had not been afforded the opportunity to learn the Truth, Paul’s instruction that she be afforded the opportunity learn showed forth the special love and admiration he had for the women of the assemblies of Messiah. 

Willful Versus Ignorant False Teaching

This all being the case, in bringing this issue of women being temporarily barred from teaching in the Ephesian assembles because they’d not been properly taught, it would seem reasonable to conclude that the two-men condemned by Paul to hasatan knew the full Truth (that is they had been formerly trained or taught) and that they had willfully abandoned that Truth for the lie of Jewish Gnosticism or the fusing of paganism with Torah and or the True Faith. 

Paul had no pity for these two men. On the other hand, however, it seems Paul sympathized with the knowledge deficient women or the woman of Ephesus. Thus, Paul lovingly sought to give the women—or the woman—the opportunity to learn the Truth. 

Myths as Part of the Ephesian Problem 

Before digging deeper into our focus passage, we must first touch briefly upon these “myths” that were being spread around by various individuals in the Ephesian Assemblies. The responsible person could possibly have been “the woman” that Dr. Eddie Hyatt alluded to in his discussion of our focus passage. Unfortunately, we just don’t know the full extent of the players associated with the stated proliferation of myths in the Ephesian assemblies.

These myths were no doubt linked or associated with the twisting of Torah to a greater or lesser extent. The problem associated with the proliferation of these myths in and through the Ephesian assemblies was that they had the tendency of diverting the hearers from the Truth (Richard and Catherine Kroeger; “I Suffer Not a Woman”).

Richard and Catherine Kroeger meticulously examine in their book the various Gnostic and mythological influences adversely affecting the Ephesian Assemblies.

 

 Myths Versus Gnosticism

It is easy to conflate myths and Gnosticism. And as possible as it may have been for the Jewish Gnosticism and the Jewish Myths that Paul and Timothy were combating to have been one and the same things, it’s a better than average chance that they were actually two separate issues.

Paul singled out Gnosticism in his letter:

“O Timothy, guard the deposit entrusted to you. Avoid the irreverent babble and contradictions of what is falsely called “knowledge (gnosis=science in KJV)” (1 Tim. 6:20; ESV). 

However in 1 Timothy 1:3-7 instruction Timothy regarding myths:

“They (i.e., members of the Ephesian Assembly) shouldn’t pay attention to myths and endless genealogies. Their teaching only causes useless guessing games instead of faithfulness to God’s way of doing things” (CEB).  

The Cretan Assemblies were undergoing a similar problem and Paul writes in Titus 1:14:

“They (i.e., members of the assembly) shouldn’t pay attention to Jewish myths and commands from people who reject the Truth” (CEB).  

First-Century Jewish Myths

What do we know about Jewish myths at the time of Paul? The mythologizing of the “Creation and Fall” stories were in wide circulation in the first century C.E. Obviously, these myths worked hand-in-hand with the whole Jewish Gnosticism that had also taken hold in Ephesus, likely prior to the establishment of the assemblies there.

It is evident in other portions of Paul’s letter that some in the Ephesian Assembly forbade marriage (1 Tim. 4:3). Paul, in trying to work through the obvious problems associated with his opponents’ position on marriage, insisted that the younger widows of the assemblies—choice prey for these bootleg women passing on their myths and tales door-to-door—”marry, bear children, rule the household and give no opportunity for slander to the opponent” (1 Tim. 5:14; Kroegers).

Indeed, there is a companion passage in Titus where Paul instructed the older Cretan assembly women to encourage the young women of the assembly to give themselves over to domestic responsibilities “so that the Word of God would not be slandered” (Tit. 2:2-5; ibn; 172). These were slandered through the application of ongoing myths and tales.

Opposition to Moshe

Mention is made of Jannes and Jambres in the Timothy letter. Allegedly, these two Egyptian magicians opposed Moshe before Pharaoh. (Exo. 7:9-13). According to the Kroegers, Jannes and Jambres were considered“magicians par excellence” in both pagan and Jewish sources (ibn; 63). In fact, Pliny the Elder (i.e., a first-century Roman author, naturalist and philosopher and friend of Roman Emperor Vespasian) made notes in his writings of a certain Jewish sect that practiced magic and believed itself as having actually originated from Moses and Jannes (Pliny the Elder Natural History 30.2.11 (ibn; 63)).

Paul counsels Timothy to have nothing to do with these individuals who were perpetrating myths—who twisted Torah and Tanakh stories into tales that warped the Truth of God’s Word:

“But stay away from the Godless myths that are passed down from the older women. Train yourself for a holy life” (1 Tim. 4:7; CSB).

 The Proliferation of Myths and Tales by Older Women or Possibly Hyatt’s Older Woman

Richard and Cagthleen Kroeger point out that many English translations of this verse purposely leave out “from the older women,” which in the Greek is “graodeis,” an adjective (normal accusative masculine plural) that is characteristic of elderly women (ibn; 64).

The Kroegers go on to explain that in the ancient near east, certain older women were renowned for their storytelling acumen or talents. At times, the stories they told “put the gods in outrageous light” (ibn; 64). These kept alive the myths of old and these myths were described as “bebelos;” that is, they were opposed to God (ref. 1 Tim. 4:7). Yet most translators in their English translations downplay the significant threat these myths or tales posed to the Faith. Yet we can see clear evidence in these Pauline Pastorals that Paul took these tales or myths quite seriously.

The Overall Involvement of Women in the Poliferation of Myths in Ephesus

Sadly, certain Ephesian women—or in Dr. Eddie Hyatt’s thinking a particular woman—were behind the proliferation of myths in the assemblies.

Regarding women being behind the scourge of Jewish myths in the Ephesian assemblies Paul wrote:

“But refuse to enroll younger widows, for when they are drawn away from Christ by desire, they want to marry and will therefore receive condemnation because they have renounced their original pledge. At the same time, they also learn to be idle, going from house to house; they are not only idle, but are also gossips and busybodies, saying things they should not say. Therefore, I want younger women to marry, have children, manage their households, and give the adversary no opportunity to accuse us. For some have already turned away to follow Satan” (1 Tim. 5:11-15; CSB).

It seems obvious that for the most part women or a particular woman was behind the destructive heresies, false teachings and spreading of tales and myths in Ephesus, supposedly spreading them house-to-house. The Kroegers suggests (which I think is a good call on their part) that many of the homes either these women or the woman visited  actually hosted some of the home fellowships or assemblies in that region (ibn; 62).

This being the case, of course, made the spreading of these myths and tales existential threats to the individual assemblies in Ephesus. If you have these women (or the woman) spreading these tales and myths to the unwitting and ignorant hosts of the various home fellowships of Ephesus—and doing so door-to-door–it would not be too much of a stretch to think that on any given Shabbat, the teaching of false doctrines would easily spread through each fellowship and create complete and utter chaos, leading dozens, if not hundreds, astray.

The Kroegers make note of Gordon D. Fee’s work as it relates to these meddlesome women:

“It seems certain from 2:9-15, 5:11-15, and 2 Timothy 3:6, 7 that these [false teachers] have had considerable influence among some women, especially some younger widows, who according to 2 Timothy 3:6,7 have opened their homes to these teachings, and according to 1 Timothy 5:13 have themselves become propagators of the new teachings” (ibn; 61, 62).

An ancient Greek, extra-biblical literary piece—”Menander the Charioteer”—made note of the manner in which the priests of Cybele routinely drew women into their religion by going house-to-house as Paul mentioned above (ibn; 63). Therefore, an extra-biblical piece of literature testifies to that which Paul was writing to Timothy about. Our bible is Truth and we are wise to heed its Truths.

The Kroegers suggests also that some of these “busybody” women–likely satanists–likely involved themselves in the region’s age-old magic cults, which they no doubt blended with Gnosticism. It seems that certain sects of Gnosticism dabbled in the occult and in magic. These busy bodies, according to Paul, were speaking things they should not be saying. Could these unspeakable things be magical incantations or even curses? This is a good question. The blending of myths and Gnosticism with magic would be a most virulent prescription for spiritual disaster, which could have spelled the end of the Ephesian Assembly if Paul did not take the corrective actions he took.

One God and One Mediator

The last thing I’ll mention regarding the dangerous myths and tales that were being spread throughout the Ephesian assemblies by these meddlesome women (or by Hyatt’s lone-woman) is Paul having to reassert to the Ephesian assembly members a central truth of our Faith. That central Truth being that YHVH is the sole Creator of the Universe and Yahoshua is the sole Mediator between God and mankind. This central Truth of Faith seems to have been challenged by the proliferation of these myths and Gnostic teachings and tales in and around the assemblies.

Of course, this should not be at all surprising. For in a region and culture that revered a pantheon of gods and hunreds if not thousands of mediators between the pagan gods and man, Paul understood that it was critical that he set the record straight regarding there being one God (1 Tim. 2:7) and one Mediator between YHVH (i.e., God) and man (i.e., mankind). 

Paul wrote:

“There is one God and one mediator between God and humanity, the human Christ Jesus” (CEB).

It appears that certain sects of Gnosticism recognized as many as 365 “celestial beings” who possessed certain ranks in the celestial being order. In at least one sect of Gnosticism, YHVH, being the craftsman of the universe, ranked in the middle of the celestial order (Epiphanius Panarion 33.7.2). And it is with this type pagan-religious foolishness in mind that Paul asserts the Truth of there being one God. 

We have to take a step back and revisit the issue of the “hetairai” in order to address the issue of “mediator.” It appears, according to Richard and Catherine Kroeger, that the Diana/Artemis cult had three ranks of priestesses: the honeybees (or postulants); the priestesses; and senior priestesses Kroegers; 71). In fact, images of bees were carved into the statute of Artemis.

Remember the Hetairai as Mediators?

It appears that by the first-century C.E., priestesses all but entirely replaced priests in the various pagan religious cults. Thus, women of these cults were viewed as “mediators” of the gods. In fact, women were credited with introducing the mysteries of Dionysius—Greek god of wine and the grape harvest—into the Greek and Roman pantheon (Koegers; pg. 71).

Additionally, we must not overlook the story of the oracles at Delphi, Dodona and Didyma. These oracles, all women, served as the so-called mouthpieces of the gods (ibn; 72). For it was widely accepted throughout the region, “only through them was the will of Zeus and Apollo revealed. For they alone could serve the Fates and Furies” (ibn; 71).

Women as Mediators in Gnosticism

Gnosticism, we have come to learn, placed as much emphasis on women being mediators in their religion . In one Gnostic text we find the following interesting tidbit:

“Peter said to Mary, “Sister, we understand that the Savior loved you more than the rest of the women. Speak to us the words of the Savior which you recollect, those which you know and we do not, nor have we heard them” And Mary answering said, “I shall explain to you what has been hidden from you,” and she began to speak to them” (”the Gospel of Mary 10.1-8; Papyrus Berolinensis 8502.1).

Ultimately, adherents to the Gnostic religion believed that the hidden knowledge could only be revealed to men from woman. Thus, women became the default, defacto mediator between pagan gods and mankind. (Can you now see more clearly the significance of the mention of the Adam and Eve story in 1 Timothy 2:12-15?)

It should be mentioned that in the Gnostic tradition, “Mary of Bethany, Mariamne, the sister of the apostle James, Philoumene, Sophia, and Eve, all served as mediators of truth” (ibn; 72).

These twists to the Truth of God’s word; the meddlesome works of these women (or the woman) going door-to-door peddling myths and tales; the growing Jewish Gnostic threat to the true Faith once delivered, either individually or collectively, played havoc with operation of the Ephesian Assemblies and Paul sent Timothy to reverse this existential threat to the Faith there in Ephesus.

Friends, can you see that the situation as it was on the ground there in Ephesus was no simple matter of women speaking out of turn and trying to take over from men. In fact, it involved so much more. It was indeed a complex set of circumstances, centered primarily upon false teachers and false teachings. However, the false teachers and their teachers were just the tools by which the enemy was waging a spiritual war against the Ephesian Assembly of Messianic Believers. And it would be Paul, through Timothy and the work of the Holy Spirit, who would reverse the enemy’s assault on the people of God there in Ephesus. This is truly a story bigger than life that few people of Faith have actually come to understand in its fullest.

We have a lot more to discuss regarding our focus passage of 1 Timothy 2:9-15. We’ll pick this discussion up in Part 14 as Father wills.

Faithfully

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Modern Day Idolatry-God Approved Foods-Torah Keeping-Tithing–Reflections on Torah Portion Re’ eh

Modern Day Idolatry-God Approved Foods-Torah Keeping-Tithing--Reflections on Torah Portion Re eh

by Rod Thomas | The Messianic Torah Observer

Why Torah Portion Studies?

 

The point in Netzarim studying Torah is to understand the mind and heart of the Creator of the Universe. Furthermore, it is to learn about the Creator’s Ways. It has to with living a life of blessings and avoid life’s problems (i.e., curses). Then it’s to learn of and do the things that please Father; to obey His commandments; to stay within Abba’s perfect, eternal will. As well as it’s to gain an understanding of the future Kingdom of God coming soon to an earth near you.

 

The writer of the Cepher of Hebrews described Torah as

 

“…having a shadow of the good things to come, although not the actual manifestation of the originals…” (Heb. 10:1).

 

Avoid the Pitfalls of Reading the Weekly Torah Portions

 

Therefore, it is up to each of us, each week when we read and study the established passages/portions/readings that we not fall into the trap of simply reading to get through them. That is why I read the week’s portion between the first and second day of the week—prior to that week’s Sabbath reading—so that I can meditate on it for much of that week. Doing so allows the Ruach haKodesh (that is the Holy Spirit) to speak to me and show me the mysteries contained therein. I am then able to apply those elements to my day-to-day walk with Mashiyach (that is Messiah).

 

Therefore, I encourage you not make an exercise out of studying Torah each week. If you invest your heart, mind and spirit into it, and filter each reading through the teachings and examples of our Master Yahoshua, I promise that your day-to-day walk with Messiah will be greatly improved—enhanced—expanded—made whole. In addition, you shall be blessed.

 

Let’s get into Re’eh

 

Deuteronomy 11:26-16:17

 

“See, I am setting before you today a blessing and a curse: the blessing, if you obey the commandments of YHVH your Elohim, which I command you today, and the curse, if you do not obey YHVH your Elohim, but turn aside from the way that I am commanding you today, to go after other gods that you have not known” (Deu. 11:26-28; ESV).

 

Thus, we are blessed when we “shama” Torah. We are cursed when we fail to “shama” Torah AND when we turn to other gods.

 

Shama

The Hebrew term “shama” is unique in that it is a triple combination action word: to hear—to listen—and to obey.

 

To hear—we hear Torah with attention or interest; that is we pay attention; hear critically as one does in a court case.

 

To listen—we give heed to Torah; we give ear to; we consent or agree to its tenets.

 

To obey—we consent to the commandments do them.

 

Diligently Keep Torah

 

A diligence that is involved here is different from our simply keeping Torah. It is really a heart thing. Sadly, however, our cousins in Judaism are more diligent to work around Torah than they are to diligently live and walk out Torah to the best of their ability.

 

Truly, we are talking about a “walking out of Torah” more than anything.

 

Then Moshe instructs us to be careful to follow all the laws and ruling that he put put before in preparation for possessing the Land of Promise and this instruction was a perpetual command (Deu. 12:1).

 

Re’ eh is About Being Exceptional-Not Like the World

 

In the process of our taking possession of the Land and living therein, Re’eh provided us the example–in my mind, it provides a prescription–whereby we extricate ourselves from the world system and live set-apart lives, wholly and acceptable unto YHVH our Elohim (12:1-14:29).

 

I believe these principles beautifully apply to us today. Unfortunately, most would not see how Re’ eh applies to us today. Their arguments against such a thing would stem from a belief that idolatry is practiced little in western society today. Others under nominal Christianity’s grace perversion believe we may worship God and live in whatever manner pleases us. Furthermore, since the Law was done away with and we’re no longer live in an agrarian culture, tithing is not applicable today. The other thing is that and we live in the ” Wild-Wild-West” as it relates to teachings, whereby anything and everything goes related to the Word of God.

 

But what I intend to show you throughout the rest of this post is just how timely Torah Portion Re’eh is and how everything contained therein applies to us even today.

 

 

  1. Rid ourselves of any vestiges of idolatrous influence in our lives (12:1-3). We were commanded to utterly destroy all idols in the land. Like the Amorites that resided in the Land, these idols would be devoted to destruction. (Listen or read my previous post where I spoke about the Amoritish people being marked/devoted for destruction and I explained why this was so.) Today, most people would not recognize the existence of idolatry existing in Western society. These would likely consider idols as outdated.

Generally a thing of the past, we should not be fooled that idolatry continues to be practiced by much of the world today.

Indeed, for the most part, idols have been relegated to museums and photographs in textbooks. However, I submit to you that the enemy is extremely cunning. For idolatry continues in the hearts, minds and consciences of most non-believing peoples of the world today. Sadly, most do not realize they are worshiping false gods:

 

  • Entertainment Industry (music-movies-television-video games-inspired often by demonic influences).

 

  • Politics (worship government-provider-governs our lives).

 

  • Outright satan worship (the increase in satan worship-return of New Age).

 

  • Abortion (modern-day sacrificing to Moloch).

 

  • Technology (the coming technocracy-the worship of technology-the Beast-obsession with cellphones-technological advancements coming from the enemy).

 

  • Drugs and Alcohol (gateways to demonic influence).

 

  • Carnality (that which God deemed evil is now good; that which God deemed as good is now evil)—owned by false gods of antiquity.

 

  • Homosexuality-LGBTQ—owned and proliferated by false gods of antiquity.

 

  • Modern day participation in ancient pagan rites, festival and holidays (Catholic holidays-satanic celebrations such as the Day of the Dead celebration; spirit cooking).

 

  • Western culture and traditions (fashion–ideology-social media—focus on sexuality and sensuality—instant gratification—the blurring of lines between males and females—séances—the strange affinity towards adopting Islam and Sharia Law while rejecting Judeo-Christian values and Faith).

 

So important was the abolition of idolatry to the early Body of Messiah that James, the Brother of our Master Yahoshua established 4-basic requirements for new converts to be received into the Body of Messiah. Consequently, those 4-basic requirements came straight out of Torah. James stated to those gathered in the Jerusalem Council:

 

“Therefore, I conclude (this after receiving Paul’s, Barnabas’ and Peter’s testimony before the Council) that we shouldn’t create problems for Gentiles who turn to God. Instead, we should write a letter, telling them to avoid the pollution associated with idols, sexual immorality, eating meat from strangled animals and consuming blood…refuse food offered to idols, blood, the meat from strangled animals, and sexual immorality. You will do well to avoid such things” (Act. 15.19, 20, 29–Jerusalem Council; CEB).

 

Paul recognized the existential danger to those who held to idolatrous ways:

 

“Don’t you know that people who are unjust won’t inherit God’s kingdom? Don’t be deceived. Those who are sexually immoral, those who worship false gods, adulterers, both participants in same-sex intercourse…” (1 Cor. 6.9; CEB) .

 

Paul discussed the wisdom of avoiding foods that were offered to idols in order to not present a stumbling block to others of the Faith–(1 Cor. 8:1-13). In so doing Paul acknowledges that idols in and of themselves are not gods, but simply graven images. However, it’s what they represent that is the problem. For these represent actual, true and living demigods who rule the earth and the heavens.

 

Thus, Paul instructs the Corinthians–once a hotbed of rampant, unbridled idolatry to: “…flee from idolatry.” He admonishes the Corinthians to set themselves apart from the common social and dietary practices of their community. For in continuing to partake in such anti-Torah behavior, the Corinthian disciples would be giving themselves over to communion with demons (1 Cor. 10.14, 20-22).

 

Even the Apostle John wrote to His disciples that they guard themselves from idolatry (1 Joh. 5.21).

 

  1. Worship YHVH according to the manner in which He prescribed in His Torah (12:4-14, 26, 27). We were not to worship YHVH as the Amoritish people worshiped their gods. Once we entered into the Land we were to worship YHVH according to His prescribed ways. We were commanded to worship YHVH exactly as He prescribed in His Torah at the place where He chose to place His Name at His prescribed times. There we would bring our tithes, burnt and freewill offerings and rejoice before YHVH. We would be prohibited from performing any sacrifices within the confines of our communities and homes, but only at the appointed place. Today, we worship YHVH in Spirit and in Truth–according to His Word and to the leading of the Ruach HaKodesh. Our Master spoke to the Samaritan Woman at Jacob’s Well about this:

 

“But the hour cometh, and now is, when the true worshippers shall worship the Father in spirit and in truth: for the Father seeketh such to worship him.  God is a Spirit: and they that worship Him must worship Him in spirit and in truth” (Joh. 4:23, 24; KJV).

 

Today, our worship of YHVH is vastly different from that of those that went before us. We no longer engage in animal sacrifices. Our offerings are no longer burnt offerings. Instead, our offerings are that of the fruit of our lips as we offer praise and adoration for our God. The writer of Hebrews described it this way:

 

“Through Him then let us continually offer up a sacrifice of praise to God, that is, the fruit of lips that acknowledge His Name” (Heb. 13:15; ESV).

 

The Apostle Peter described our worship as “spiritual sacrifices, acceptable to Yah, by Yahoshua Messiah” (1 Pet. 2:5). We render petitions unto YHVH in personal and communal prayers—either in our very own prayer closets or within our group gatherings. Paul described our worship to the Ephesian Assembly Members as “speaking to themselves in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing and making melody in their heart to YHVH; giving thanks always for all things unto YHVH and the Father in the Name of our Master Yeshua Messiah” (Eph. 5:19, 20).

 

With the sacrifice of Yahoshua haMashiyach and the destruction of the Temple, we no longer are required to journey to Jerusalem to keep the Feasts nor to render unto Him sacrifices. In fact, our set-apart bodies have replaced the Temple and it is our bodies where the Spirit of YHVH resides. Of this, Paul wrote:

 

“Don’t you know that your body is a temple for the Ruach HaKodesh who lives inside you, whom you received from God? The fact is, you don’t belong to yourselves…” (1 Cor. 6:19; CJB).

 

The other thing we do besides worshiping our Creator in Spirit and in Truth is that we keep His 7-mandated Feasts, also in Spirit and in Truth. We don’t as I mentioned just a second ago, have to go on over to Jerusalem 3-times a year to keep the Feasts—I guess standing in front of Wailing Wall, which is really a part of a Roman Fort and not Herod’s Temple—as some in our Faith Community shame the unknowing of our Community into doing. If you are led, however, to conduct pilgrimages to Jerusalem to keep the Feasts each year, you should follow the leading of the Ruach in your lives. However, that becomes your specific calling, but it is not a commandment for the Body of Messiah. We keep that of Torah, which we can keep, and we do it to the best of our ability to do so under the guidance of the Ruach HaKodesh. Nevertheless, our Temple is where we stand and who we are in Y’shua Messiah today.

 

This brings us to the next point.

 

  1. Follow Father’s prescribed food laws (12:15-17, 25; 14:3-21). Father provided us specific instructions on the class of animals that we could consume that He deemed to be food. Just because Father created animals does not mean that they were meant or designated by YHVH be consumed as food by us. It should be understood that wherever we find in the Bible that Father said that He gave us all meats for food, He is saying that He gave us those meats that He has designated as food and we should not restrict ourselves to only certain of those meats. Father means for us only to consume foods—not things that are not food. Animals such as pigs, shellfish and scavenger birds clean up our natural environment. Their bodies were designed to consume refuse and dead creatures from the natural environment. In addition, when we begin to see that Father created everything for a purpose—including the animals and us—then we can better understand why He prohibited us from consuming those things that He deemed as NOT food. Unfortunately, it is a fair bet that the pagan Canaanite nations we were instructed to devote to destruction consumed these non-food creatures and Father wanted to ensure that we not follow in their dietary regimen. Today, because the rest of the world follows food consumption as the gods of this world prescribe, in order for us to be His set-apart people, we are compelled to keep His Dietary Laws. Believe it or not, a great many of the things that the world consumes and treats as foods, if they existed back during the time Moshe passed Torah along to us, no doubt Father would have prohibited most of those items. Processed foods; foods that are made in a lab; pork and shell fish products; and even certain pharmaceuticals are not to be consumed as foods by the redeemed of the Most High. The other thing that must be taken into account is the consumption of blood, which from the very beginning, YHVH vehemently prohibited (Gen. 9:4, 5; Lev. 17:11, 14, Deu. 12:23). The reason given to us by Father for not consuming blood is simply that “blood is the life.” Blood has always been special or even sacred to Father and that is why He chose to use blood to ratify and establish many of the covenants between Him and us. (Covenants and Blood are a series we will be doing next year—Abba willing—so standby.) Continuing, Father prescribed how we are to humanely slaughter animals for food, as well as for sacrifices: the animal’s blood is to fall to the ground (or collected in a container when used as a sacrifice), and thus, our meat would be devoid of blood. Sadly, we have no control today over how our animals are slaughtered or whether they were processed with blood in them. That is why it is important that we diligently examine our food—not just the type of food we are looking at consuming–but also how the food was processed and what was done with it in the processing.

 

  1. Finances—Tithes and Offerings are Vital Parts of Worship (12:17, 18; 14:22-29). Our worship was to include the giving of a 10th of our increase during the 3-pilgrimage Feasts of YHVH. Part of the tithe was to support the Levite that dwelt within and served our community. Another portion of our tithes—every 3rd year in fact—was to be used to support the forgotten of our community—specifically the orphans and widows and the Levites. Add to this the Sh’mittah —Sabbath Year–observes every 7th year—whereby we would give the Land we inherited from YHVH rest; free any Hebrew slaves we had procured over the previous 6-years, and forgive any unpaid debt owed to us (which I’ve spoken about at length in previous installments of TMTO) and our service unto YHVH would eliminate poverty from our community (15:4). Thus the financial system that Father put into place prior to our entering and taking possession of the Land would maintain in great part the priestly system, keep us spiritually in-tune with YHVH by exercising our Faith, and by taking care of our community needs—i.e., the least fortunate of us. Today, many in our Faith Community reject the concept of Tithes and Offerings. These contend that we cannot practice tithing the way it was given to us to do YHVH in His Torah. Well, I say, if that is the case, then we can not keep His Feasts—right? If that is the argument—that we can’t tithe because we’re not an on an agricultural system as our forefathers were, then it stand to reason that we can’t keep the Feasts, especially the 3-mandated pilgrimage feasts because we can’t keep it as stipulated in Torah. Let’s stop the foolishness. We worship YHVH in spirit and in truth. Thus, we keep the Feasts in the spirit in which Father gave it to us. Therefore, we must practice tithing and the giving offerings with the same spirit. Giving is part of worship, as well as it helps to offset the costs associated with serving the Body of Messiah. Paul talked about God “loving the cheerful giver” (2 Cor. 9:7). Paul also addresses the importance of supporting those who administer the Word of Truth to the Body on a full-time basis (1 Cor. 9:9; 1 Tim. 5:18). I recognize that parts of nominal Christianity fell for the “prosperity movement,” which soured many in our Faith in their giving of Tithes and offerings. Nevertheless, that is their problem, but we know and should do better. Tithing and the giving of offerings willingly and joyously should be an integral part of our Spirit and Truth worship of YHVH such that the needs of the Body are properly taken care of and such that YHVH receives the glory and honor He so justly deserves.

 

  1. We are not to seek after nor follow in the idolatrous ways of the people of the Land (12:29-31). These commit horrendous abominations to their gods, all of which YHVH hates. (Yah singles out the sacrifice of children as most abominable–which is for us modern day abortion and child trafficking.) A popular teaching within and without our Faith Community of late has been that of the identification and the worship of the false gods of antiquity and predictions that these will return in the End Days. Nevertheless, Abba instructs in His Torah that we are not to even name them or inquire how these were worshiped. Father commanded:

 

“And in all things that I have said to you take care; and make no mention of the name of other gods, nor let them be heard out of your mouth” (Exo. 23:13).

 

In fact in our preparation to take possession of the Land, Yah commanded us:

 

“And ye shall overthrow their altars (speaking about the idols of the Amorites that were devoted for destruction by us) , and break their pillars, and burn their groves with fire; and ye shall hew down the graven images of their gods, and destroy the names of them out of that place (Deu. 12:3).

 

As tempting and especially interesting as inquiring and discovering the things pertaining to the worship of ancient pagan peoples, we are commanded to not do so. I think it is important to know about such things, but we must be cognizant that such studies must have a reasonable limit and not consume our thoughts and attention.

 

  1. We must shama Abba’s Word explicitly without adding to or subtracting from it (13:1). Repeatedly throughout His Word, Father explicitly commands us to not add to or take away from His Word. Unfortunately, many within and without our Faith Community do so without impunity and with gusto. The Jews are most renowned for doing exactly this very thing that Father prohibited us from doing. Yet these defend what they have done—implementing the Talmudic system that they claim puts a fence around Torah. Nominal Christianity has done similarly by implementing the perverted grace doctrine, which takes the believer 180-degrees in the opposite direction, whereby the believer lives as they so choose, erroneously believing that the Law was completely done away with.

 

  1. We are to abhor and reject those who teach or preach false doctrine as well as avoid those that follow and keep false teachings (13:2(1)-13:7 (6)). Father in this passage specifically targeted false prophets who would come and by virtue of their proved prophetic gifts, then lead many astray by coaxing them to follow false gods. Today, the violation is not only that of leading the supposed people of God away from YHVH to follow after false gods, but also leading people astray to follow after false Gospels and a rejection of Torah. Moreover, we see that happening more than we’d care to think about.

 

Conclusion

 

What we have in these seven or so preparatory elements in my opinion was a foretaste—a rudimentary sketch if you will—of the coming Kingdom of YHVH. Although we cannot keep all these elements as they were originally passed down to us, it becomes our responsibility to keep them as our Master described our present day worship practices, in Spirit and in Truth. We examine and sort out those things that we must keep—those normative elements of Torah that directly apply to us as they did to our forefathers—from those that are restrictive—those elements that for whatever reason we can’t keep as originally passed down—and consider how we should live those elements out in the spirit in which they were given.

 

When we do these things—when we walk out our Faith in such a way—our Faith Community is guaranteed to prosper and we stand as lights to a dark world. Non-believers will be drawn to us and inquire why we are so blessed and why we do what we do. Our Jewish cousins will be moved to jealousy and inquire why we do what we do and ultimately come to accept Yahoshua as their Messiah and establish a true and substantive relationship with the Creator of the Universe.

 

Our cousins in Judaism and our forefathers in the Hebrew Faith failed to carry through with the original plan because their hearts were not in to bringing about the Kingdom of God here on earth. Torah was not in their hearts nor was it written on their minds (Heb. 10:16). We, on the other hand, have received the initial down payment of the renewed covenant and we have Torah thriving within us—we have the example of Yahoshua to guide us in our walk—we have the Ruach HaKodesh to aid us in living and walking out Torah in grand style, despite living in an evil and depraved world. All that is necessary for us to be successful in our journey is to be “shama” His Word—love YHVH and follow the example and teachings of Yahoshua His Son—and give ourselves over the guidance of Yah’s precious Holy Spirit. In so doing, Yah promises to do the rest.

 

Let’s us crossover and possess the Land—the Spiritual Land of Promise—as we await the return of our Master.

 

Faithfully

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Obedience to Torah-Marked for Destruction-The Wisdom of Wearing Phylacteries-Reflections on Torah Portion ‘Ekev

Obedience to Torah-Marked for Destruction-The Wisdom of Wearing Phylacteries-Reflections on Torah Portion 'Ekev

by Rod Thomas | The Messianic Torah Observer

 

This is Reflections on Torah Portion ‘Ekev—Obedience to God’s Instructions—Marked For Destruction—The Wisdom of Wearing Phylacteries.

 We find this week’s Torah Portion/Reading, entitled, “’Ekev,” in Deuteronomy 7:12-11:25.

 

‘Ekev

 

The term ‘Ekev, used as the title of our reading this week, is interpreted by Jewish Torah scholars as “because.”

 

So why do we also have names or titles given to each week’s Torah Portion?

 

The Rabbis, in their apportionment of Torah into 54-weekly sections, also gave each parshah (ie. weekly portion or reading) a name “the first distinctive word in the Hebrew text of the portion in question, often from the first verse” of that week’s reading (Wikipedia).

 

The English rendering of the Hebrew term ‘Ekev is “because.” Because is used in the JPS translation of the Tanakh, as well as by the ESV, CJB and the RSV translations.

 

In the KJV, however, the translators chose to use “if ye.” I find the translation differences interesting: the JPS’ (and the other cited translations) use of “because” in my mind presumes that we have and continue to “hearken to these ordinances and keep and do them, that the LORD thy God shall keep with thee the covenant and the mercy which He swore unto thy father.” Conversely, the KJV, along with other prominent English translations state “if we hearken…” then we would receive mercy and fulfillment of the covenant that YHVH made with our ancestors. The “if ye hearken” to me suggests that we still have to prove ourselves, whereas the “because you did…” suggests to me that we’ve already proved ourselves. Personally, I much prefer the “if ye hearken…” than “because,” but one should not think too deeply on this. I just found it interesting is all.

 

A Content Rich Portion

 

Of the five books of Torah, I have to say that Deuteronomy is my favorite. It is my favorite because it offers us a 30,000-foot overview of the previous four-books of Torah. Moreover, Moshe does a phenomenal job rehashing YHVH’s indescribable exploits. He also describes how He brought us through many arduous experiences in our wilderness journey. As well as Moshe reminds us repeatedly of the benefits of keeping Yah’s Torah and the consequences of not keeping Torah.

 

Moshe writes Deuteronomy at the time of the great “Conquest of the Promised Land.” Moshe does not let us forget, he—Moshe—having put up with the people’s shenanigans for 40-years would, as punishment for his denying YHVH the glory He so just deserved, be denied the opportunity to enter the Promised Land. In addition, in some passages of Deuteronomy Moshe opens up to the reader and describes his anguish and broken-heart, denied the opportunity to enter the Land.

 

Moshe’s punishment stems from the “Waters of Meribah” incident, found in Numbers 20:7-12. It reads as follows:

 

“Then YHVH spoke to Moses: ‘Take the staff and assemble the community, you and Aaron your brother, and then speak to the rock before their eyes. It will pour forth its water, and you will bring water out of the rock for them, and so you will give the community and their beasts water to drink.’ So Moses took the staff from before YHVH, just as He commanded him. Then Moses and Aaron gathered the community together in front of the rock, and he said to them, ‘Listen, you rebels, must we bring water out of this rock for you?’ Then Moses raised his hand, and struck the rock twice with his staff. Moreover, water came out abundantly. Therefore, the community drank, and their beasts drank too. Then YHVH spoke to Moses and Aaron, ‘Because you did not trust me enough to show me as holy before the Israelites, therefore you will not bring this community into the land I have given them (Num. 20:7-12; NET).

 

Thus Moshe’s punishment should serve as a stark reminder to each of us that YHVH is a jealous God who is sovereign, and most importantly, He is righteous and holy in all His ways. Furthermore, He will not share His glory with anything or any being. In fact, Abba stated through the writing of the Prophet Isaiah: “I am Yehovah, that is my name; and my glory will I not give to another…” (Isa. 42:8; ASV).

 

Abba is very serious about this. Moreover, I am afraid that too many of us take this aspect of YHVH’s character for granted. For I contend that many of us may be going through some bad stuff in our lives (be it of a financial, health, or relational nature) in part because we take Yah for granted. In essence, this is what Moshe did at the rock at Meriba. Father instructed Moshe to “speak” to the rock and it would then yield forth water. However, Moshe, in his ire toward the complaining people, struck the rock with his staff—not once, but twice. In addition, despite Moshe changing the script unannounced on YHVH, Father still kept His promise and provided the nation their much-needed water. Nevertheless, Father miraculously carrying through with bringing forth water from the rock did not dismiss the fact that Moshe failed to do as Abba instructed Him to do—which was to “speak to the rock.”

 

Why is this important to Father? Well, for one, Father requires of His chosen ones complete and utter obedience without compromise. And when we choose to go beyond that which Abba commands and do things our way—regardless how genuine and pure our intentions may be—we run the risk of invoking Yah’s wrath. For Father knows exactly what He is doing when He gives us commands and instructions. He is the Creator of all things of course. Moreover, if things are to go as they are supposed to go—according to YHVH’s purpose and timing—then they must go according to Yah’s implicit instructions.

 

Allow me to take you back to the Nadab and Abihu incident. Recall that these were two of Aaron’s sons. This incident took place at the time of the ceremonial installation of Aaron and his sons into what we refer to as the Levitical Priesthood (Lev. 9). During that solemn ceremony, specifically ordered and arranged by YHVH, Nadab and Abihu for whatever reason, elected to offer “unauthorized fire before YHVH.” Some translations famously refer to Nadab’s and Abihu’s actions as “offering strange fire before the LORD” (KJV). Regardless, Nadab’s and Abihu’s unauthorized act led to their cataclysmic, summary execution by YHVH’s consuming fire.

 

In the immediate aftermath of Nadab’s and Abihu’s death, Moshe tells Aaron, in the midst of Aaron’s obvious shocked grief:

 

“Among the ones close to Me I will show myself holy, and in the presence of all the people I will be honored” (Lev. 10:3; NET).

 

In other words, things are going to have to be done My Way, or they are going to have to be done My Way by those that are His elect. For in the end Yah will get the glory and honor that justly belongs to Him.

 

I love how J. H. Hertz, in his commentary of this passage puts it:

 

“…the greater a man’s knowledge or position, the stricter the standard by which he is to be judged, and the greater the consequent guilt and punishment, if there is a falling away from that standard. With the righteous, God is exacting, even to a hair’s breath” (Penteteuch and Haftorahs).

 

Sadly, the same sentiment applies to Moshe’s case, although Moshe was not subject to the horrendous death that Nadab and Abihu experienced. In Moshe’s case, at Meribah, Moshe, no doubt acting out of righteous indignation toward the rebellious people, struck the rock as opposed to speaking to it. This act of striking the rock denied YHVH the honor that belonged to Him and Him alone. For if Moshe would have simply done exactly what Father instructed him to do—speak to the rock which follows Father’s prescription of speaking into existence all that exists in the universe—Yah would have fully own that miracle. Moshe, through his selfish act, stole, in my opinion, Father’s miracle; and consequently unwittingly drew honor unto him.

 

 

How many times in our lives have we pulled a Moshe or an Abihu and Nadab, instead of doing things YHVH’s Way? When we do things our way and they run contrary to the way YHVH wants them to be, we stand a good chance of reaping the consequences of our selfish actions.

 

Paul wrote:

 

“Do not be deceived. God will not be made a fool. For a person will reap what he sows, because the person who sows to his own flesh will reap corruption from the flesh, but the one who sows to the Spirit will reap eternal life from the Spirit. So we must not grow weary in doing good, for in due time we will reap, if we do not give up.” (Gal. 6:7-9; NET).

 

Circling back to our discussion of ‘Ekev, we find in this reading a brief rehashing of the many miraculous and often tumultuous events leading up to our conquest of Canaan. In addition, the theme that is played out repeatedly throughout this entire reading is that of obedience—uncompromising obedience to Yah’s instructions—leading to things going well for our families and us. Repeatedly Moshe instructs us to remember what YHVH did for us individually and for our nation. And he drills into our conscience the wisdom of keeping Yah’s commandments; fearing (yare) YHVH; constantly dwelling upon Yah’s Torah; and to not delude ourselves into thinking that we’ve done anything to deserve the blessings of the Land that was coming to us. Indeed, it is a circuitous read, but these repeated themes and admonishments serve as a reminder to us even today of how important obedience to Yah and His Word is to our well-being, and that our obedience leads to fulfillment of the covenant Yah has made with us.

 

(Now, I am not talking necessarily about fulfilling the “Land Covenant” as is the case in our reading of ‘Ekev. Yes, that covenant continues to exist to this day as Paul taught in Galatians 3:17. We, engrafted into the commonwealth of Israel, are eligible to enjoy that same covenant that Yah made with the Patriarchs. However, our focus is must be on the renewed covenant described in the books of the prophets and is fully summarized in Hebrews 8, 9 and 10. We’ll touch briefly upon covenant a little later on in this post, but suffice to say that discussion of covenant as it relates to us today is something I’m looking forward to discussing with you sometime in the near future.)

 

Highlighting “Ekev.”

 

Therefore, what I wish to do for the remainder of this post is to simply highlight the areas of the reading that stood out most for me in ‘Ekev, and apply those principles to our walk with Messiah today.

 

 

Obedience to YHVH’s Torah

 

We find in Deuteronomy 7:12-8:10—the very first section of our ‘Ekev reading this week—where Moshe extols the blessings derived through obedience to YHVH’s instructions:

 

“And because you listen (i.e., shema—hear-keep-obey) to these rules and keep and do them, YHVH your God will keep with you the covenant and the steadfast love that He swore to your fathers” (Deu. 7:12; ESV).

 

Moshe is essentially communicating to us in this section of the reading that when we keep covenant with YHVH, He blesses us in the here and now of our lives. In addition, that blessing places us in Yah’s favor above all other peoples of the earth. Thus, our lives would be secure and blessed. And all the terrible things of life—the things that happen to so many of the non-believing peoples of the world—well (eg., poverty; sickness; hopelessness, fear, etc.), such things will not be known among us (Deu. 7:12-15).

 

Then in 7:16-26, Moshe instructs us that we were to destroy those nations YHVH would hand over to us in the process of taking possession of the Land of Promise. These nations, interestingly enough, were “marked or devoted for destruction” because of their many abominations.

 

Now, some have marginalized or outright ignored the significance of what Moshe was telling the Israelites regarding the nations that were “marked (or devoted) for destruction.” The common understanding of these nations being “marked/devoted for destruction” is that these 7-nations (the list can be found in Deu. 7:1) had for centuries engaged in idolatry; and that sin alone earned them the punishment of being destroyed—i.e., marked for destruction–by Israel. However, truth be told, the abominations these nations committed went well beyond their worshiping idols. Remember, Israel would have been the only nation on the face of the planet at that time that was not worshiping false gods—Egypt being one of the most notable of the lot.

 

However, so heinous were the sins of these 7-nations—which Father deemed as abominable (Deu. 7:25)–that Father required us to render unto them absolutely no pity and completely obliterate them from the face of the planet: every man, woman and child. As was done to Bashan and Heshbon before, Father, through Moshe recorded:

 

“And we devoted them to destruction…devoting to destruction every city, men, women and children” (Deu. 3:6; ESV).

 

That destruction of these cities (ie., Heshbon and Bashan) took place east of the Jordan River. So a short time later, as we prepared to cross the Jordan and conquer the Land, Abba reiterated the same strong punishment be rendered unto the 7-nations that were in possession of Canaan at that time:

 

“…and when the Lord your God delivers them up before you, and you defeat them, then you must totally destroy them. You shall make no treaty with them, nor show mercy to them. You shall not intermarry with them; you shall not give your daughters to their sons, nor shall you take their daughters for your sons. For they will turn your sons away from following Me so that he may serve other gods; thus the anger of the Lord your God will be kindled against you, and He will destroy you quickly. But this is how you must deal with them: you shall break down their altars, dash their pillars into pieces, cut down their Asherim, and burn their graven images with fire” (Deu. 7:2-4; QBE). 

 

There was no provision in Yah’s grace plan for the abominable nations that would be dispossessed of their land and destroyed. We, Yah’s chosen people—His set-apart people (as flawed as we may have been) would be acting on Yah’s behalf as His “righteous arm” (e.g., strong hand) in this earthly-physical plain. We would physically destroy these abominable nations, although YHVH would be doing the fighting for us in the spiritual realm. Three times in Deuteronomy Moshe told us “YHVH shall fight for you” (1:30; 3:22; 20:4). For Moshe revealed that Father would send ahead of our onslaught “terror” in the form of a hornet infestation (either literally or figuratively, although most sources I consulted support a literal attack of some species or form of hornets or bees) that would drive the enemy from their various hiding-places and systematically reduce their ability to wage war and resist our attack (Deu. 7:20; ref. J. H. Hertz). And one-by-one, in YHVH’s perfect timing and plan, these nations would fall. The leaders of these nations would most notably be destroyed and their names—their reputations—their notoriety—would be wiped out of all memory.

 

YHVH devoted or marked the peoples of these nations for destruction in part because these were descendants of Anak. Apart from their idolatrous activities, it is almost impossible to understand why Father had such disdain for these nations using just biblical references. Why would Father have such disdain for the descendants of Anak—or more so the Amorite peoples, in general terms? The Anakim were a race of giants descended from Anak, according to the Tanakh, who lived in the southern part of the Land of Canaan—Gen. 23:2; Jos. 15:13.) And because these were descended from the Nephilim—the products of the union between the Watchers (Genesis 6 and 1 Enoch–the angels that kept not their first estate, but left their own habitation, whose destinies were everlasting chains under darkness unto the judgment of the Great Day—Jude 1:6) and the “fair daughters of men” (Gen. 6:1), Father devoted or marked these races and nations for destruction.

 

Again, the progeny of the union between the watchers and the human women described in Genesis 6 were giants; the most notable of these races in biblical history being Og of Bashan and Goliath. Because these were products of a terribly corrupted natural order, YHVH required that they be marked or devoted for destruction. In addition, this is information that few people in churchianity actually understand. Unfortunately, the general absence of this knowledge and history among, not just people of Faith, but also the non-believing peoples of the world, makes it easy for the average person to view YHVH as a terrible, mean, and unforgiving God or tyrant. However, with such information in the back of our minds when we read these passages, we understand why Abba required no mercy to these nations. If Father were to ever fully restore paradise to this world and mankind to the place he/she was originally designed to be at, the corruption of Yah’s natural order and the worship of fallen angels as gods had to be harshly dealt with.

YHVH devoted the Amorite nations for destruction because their sin was deemed by Him to be abominable.

In fact, few people realize that Y’shua Messiah came not only to atone for the sins of the world, but to also dispossess or remove the legal hold that the enemy—the fallen ones—had over the nations of the world. That legal hold in part goes back to the “Tower of Babel” incident (Gen. 11). Moshe cryptically rehashes what appears to have been Father giving to certain angels oversight of the nations of the world at that time. We read in Deuteronomy 32:8:

 

“When God Most high divided up the nations—when He divided up humankind-He decided the people’s boundaries based on the number of the gods” (CEB).

 

Now, most of the authorized, highly respected English translations erroneously render this verse as “…He (i.e., YHVH) set the borders of the peoples according to the number of the children of Israel” (ASV, CJB,HCSB, NASB, KJV, JPS, and others). But this rendering of “according to the number of the children of Israel” makes no sense given that Israel had not become a nation at the time to which this verses is referring. However, when we look at the rendering of the LXX and the Qumran Deuteronomy Scrolls of this verse, we get what appears to be a more contextually accurate rendering of the verse, whereby the apportionment of the nations of men by YHVH was based upon a set number of divine beings or “sons of God;” sons of God being a general Old Testament reference to angelic beings. Why the difference? It appears that possibly Hebrew scribes around the time of Rabbi Akiba (2nd century A.D.) were responsible for replacing what could only be the original wording of “bene YHVH” with “bene Yisra’el.” Was this an intentional or an innocent scribal error? Or could this be something even bigger? I have my ideas on why, but I do not want to slide down that rabbit hole in this post and take us away from our focus passage. This is certainly something for another day’s discussion. 

 

Anyway, at the Tower of Babel incident, Yah entrusted these angels to oversee the pagan nations of the world. Father eventually separated unto Himself out of these nations a people that would be wholly devoted to Him as their God and who would serve Him as His priests to the unbelieving nations of the world. He of course started off with Abraham of Ur, who Father established a covenant with (i.e., the Abrahamic Covenant), and the rest is history. Moreover, in case you did not know, Father called Abraham out of Ur, a pagan nation. He was neither a Hebrew nor a Jew at the time of his calling. He descended from a family that worshiped these angelic-based false gods. But Father saw something special in Abraham; called Him out of his father’s home; led him away from His family’s pagan nation; and sent him on an amazing journey, replete with covenantal promises and most importantly, a deep and abiding relationship with the Creator of the Universe:

 

“And the Scripture was fulfilled that says, ‘Abraham believed God, and it was counted to him as righteousness’ and he was called a friend of God” (Jas. 2:23; ESV).

 

YHVH’s War Against Idolatry

 

But getting back to these angels who were tasked with overseeing the nations by YHVH: it appears that those angels ultimately betrayed Yah’s trust. They enslaved the nation peoples by requiring them to worship them as gods.

 

 

What are idols? They are nothing more than carved images of the perceived forms of some of these fallen angels who took over the imaginations of the ancients. Thus the idols of these 7-abominable nations who were devoted or marked for destructions were to be completely destroyed as well (7:25), regardless the idol’s apparent value in gold and silver. For according to YHVH through Moshe, if one were to salvage an idol for its perceived monetary value, it is a certainty that he or she would succumb to the idol’s inherent evil. The whole thing, regardless of its material value, was abhorrent to YHVH. In fact, these idols brought with them curses; for curses inherently rested upon them (7:26). Thus, we must detest—loathe these articles as Yah does. These too were “marked or devoted for destruction” (7:26).

 

Idols Also Marked For Destructions

 

This issue of destroying the idols of the Amoritish nations and those idols having no place in the lives of the ancients, would of course equally apply to us as Netzarim today. How many of us, in many cases unknowingly, have had or currently have in our possession things like Buddhas, Native American articles, or any other articles that have some connection or link to pagan worship? These things, although they are not gods—they’re really just wood, metal, plastic or stone objects designed for the purpose of worshiping these fallen angelic beings–bring with them curses. Thus having them in our lives will ultimately bring curses upon our lives. Additionally, Father just outright hates them with extreme prejudice. Moreover, being a member of Yah’s elect, we must understand the things our Father loves and those things He loathes, such as idols, regardless how innocent they may appear to us. Father has little tolerance whatsoever for such things and neither should we.

 

Israel As An Arm of the Father

 

Thus, Israel would fulfill a few things in dispossessing the Amoritish nations of the Land: (1) We would destroy the last vestiges of the Nephilim—the Rephaim—the descendants of the Genesis 6 Watchers and their human wives. Their forbidden act perverted YHVH’s natural order and threatened to interfere in Yah’s Great Plan of Redemption and Salvation. (2) We would end, in part, the legal hold some of these angels, turned gods, held over nations of that region. In addition (3) our conquest of the Land would fulfill the Land Covenant YHVH made with the Patriarchs.

 

Later on, Y’shua our Messiah would finish the job during His earthly ministry and sacrifice.

 

Oh by the way, Moshe made it a point to let us know that our taking possession of the Land of Promise was in no way a reward for our righteousness. Our taking possession of the Land, in a great sense, was an historical example of Yah’s grace and love towards us and towards all mankind.

 

Father Was Tough On Us For a Reason

 

Moshe went on to remind us how Father miraculously carried us along our 40-year wilderness sojourn, all the while humbling and testing us (i.e., examining our hearts in the process). YHVH subjected us to hunger, thirst for purposes of building our trust in Him so that we would learn to recognize that everything we have comes from YHVH, and that we learn not to be slaves to our physical needs and desires (8:3). For Abba provided for our every need during those 40-years, despite our disobedience and lack of trust in Him, even after witnessing some of the greatest miraculous feats any human has ever seen with their own eyes (cf. Mat. 4:4; Luk. 4:4; 12:29, 30; Heb. 13:5, 6). Thus, we are to obey Yah’s Torah: living as He directs us, and fearing (yare) Him (8:6).

 

A Covenant Written on Stone and Hearts

 

In Deuteronomy 10:1-11, we find where Moshe rehashes the story of his receiving the 10-Commandments the first time on 2-stone-tables. YHVH provided the stone tables and wrote His commandments on them at that first go-round. When Moshe descended Mt. Sinai with those 2-tables, he found that the people had turned to the worship of the Golden Calf (a terrible throwback to their time of Egyptian bondage no doubt). In disgust and fierce anger towards the people, Moshe threw down to the ground and destroyed those 2-tablets that contained Yah’s commandments. He then  destroyed and ground into dust the golden calf, which he threw into a nearby stream, the mixture of which he made the people to drink thereof (Exo. 32:20). It was Moshe’s intense mediation on behalf the people and his reaction to the peoples’ iniquity—their sin—that ultimately spared the nation from complete and total annihilation at the hands of an angry and jealous God (Exo. 32:9-14).

 

Later, YHVH called Moshe back up Mount Sinai to receive His 10-Words: this time, however, instead of YHVH cutting  out stone tables and inscribing His Word upon them, Yah required Moshe to cut the 2-stone tables and bring them to YHVH where He inscribed His Word upon them.

 

This act obviously foreshadows the renewed covenant whereby we—House of Israel–bring YHVH our stony hearts and He inscribes upon them His Words—His Ways:

 

“Behold, the days come, saith YHVH, that I will make a new covenant with the house of Israel, and with the house of Judah: not according to the covenant that I made with their fathers in the day that I took them by the hand to bring them out of the land of Egypt; which my covenant they brake, although I was an husband unto them, saith YHVH: But this shall be the covenant that I will make with the house of Israel: After those days, saith YHVH, I will put my law in their inward parts, and write it in their hearts; and will be their God, and they shall be my people. And they shall teach no more every man his neighbor and every man his brother saying, Know YHVH: for they shall all know me, from the least of them unto the greatest of them, saith YHVH: for I will forgive their iniquity, and I will remember their sin no more (Jer. 31:31-34; KJV).

 

Many contend that the renewed covenant has not taken place yet. And to a great extent I most certainly agree with them. However, I do believe in my heart of hearts that a down payment of that new covenant—a foretaste has already been realized by us: those who are Yah’s elect, saved by the blood of the Lamb, who possess His testimony and His Holy Spirit. Indeed, Yah writes His Torah upon our hearts and on our minds, even today. Soon, physical Israel—both houses of Judah and Israel—will realize this same covenant. Yah will restore paradise lost.

 

 

Phylacteries—Truth or Tradition?

 

In Deuteronomy 11:13-21, we come upon a rather challenging portion of Torah. I say this portion of Torah is challenging because the rabbis have instituted, as a result of their literal reading of the text, traditions and practices that when this passage is read, may cause us to wonder if God really requires us to wear “phylacteries,” otherwise known as “tefillin. “

 

The highlights of this section of our passage reads as such:

 

“And it shall come to pass, if ye shall hearken diligently unto my commandments which I command you this day, to love YHVH your Elohim, and to serve Him with all your heart and with all your soul…Therefore shall ye lay up these my words in your heart and in your soul, and bind them for a sign upon your hand, that they may be as frontlets between your eyes…And thou shalt write them upon the door posts of thine house, and upon thy gates that your days may be multiplied, and the days of your children, in the land which YHVH sware unto your fathers to give them, as the days of heaven upon the earth” (KJV).

 

As mentioned, the rabbis have taken this critical piece of scripture, which is also a brilliant piece of prose, and made it into yet another set of traditions and practices that are based upon an erroneous reading and understanding of this passage.

 

Tefillin or phylacteries are a set of small leather boxes containing scrolls of parchment inscribed with verses from Torah. Tefillin are worn by orthodox Rabbinic Jewish males during daily morning prayers, excluding Sabbaths.

 

The laws governing phylactery composition and use was developed by Rabbis and are contained in the Talmud (Sanh. 88b). These Rabbinic laws are literal interpretations of Deuteronomy 6.8; 11.18; Exodus 13.9,16.

 

Each leather box contains 4 scriptural passages: Exodus 13.1-10, 11-16; Deuteronomy 6.4-9; 11.13-21. According to the Rabbis, these passages must be written in black ink, in Hebrew square lettering, on parchment (reference Shab. 79b; Men. 32a), from the skin of a clean animal (Shab. 108a).

 

Talmud explicitly directs how the Torah verses are to be arranged on the parchment, the mode of writing (ie., rules on how the scribe is to draft the passages onto the parchment), how one is to put on the tefillin (ie., the order in which the phylacteries are to be donned and its exact placement on the body), when the implements may be worn, and the exact blessings to be recited while wearing them.

 

Let’s step back now into reality—spiritual reality that is–and understand the true meaning of this passage in Spirit and in Truth.

 

Contextually speaking, we find in our ‘Ekev Reading that Father was so insistent that we keep His Torah, that He gave to us examples of just how much we are to honor and keep His Word. These examples are essentially metaphors for the depths of Torah keeping we are expected to keep as Yah’s elect. Essentially, Father was saying to us that our commitment to Torah must be manifested in our labor—the works of our hands—thus the binding of His Word as a sign upon our hand. Furthermore, Father’s Torah must be ever on our minds—in our every thought so to speak–likened unto frontlets between our eyes (i.e., the frontlets representing the fulcrum of our thoughts). Additionally, the boundaries of our homes should reflect the pervasiveness of Yah’s Word in our lives, such that it appears as if Yah wrote His Word upon the doorposts and gates of our homes. Remember, in the ancient world, the gates and doorposts of the home was sacred and some have deemed these places as the most important places bar-none of a man’s home. It is a place where covenants were established and deep abiding relationships were made. Back in the day, not just anyone would go into another’s home. One had to be welcomed and then invited through a man’s gate and past the doorpost of his home. Any who would attempt to come into another man’s home absent such a welcome or invitation was customarily viewed as an intruder and they would be dealt with appropriately.

 

 

Thus, for the Hebrew, Yah’s Word must become the first line of defense over a man’s home. For every member of that man’s family would have to fear YHVH; every child must be taught YHVH’s Torah perpetually; the governing of the home would be under the auspices of Torah; the protection of the home and every member’s safety and wellbeing  therein would be under that of Yah’s eternal Torah and the blessings derived from keeping Torah therein.

 

To limit Torah to a verse or two on a piece of parchment that is to be contained in a small box that is to be tied to one’s head and forearms, or that is encased in a mezuzah that is nailed to the doorpost of one’s home, does not in any way fulfill the instruction that Moshe is giving here, nor does it fulfill the context of the passage.

 

Moshe, before getting to the part where he talks about frontlets, bindings and mezuzahs, instructs us to “…lay up these my words in your heart and in your soul.” Therefore, to think that one can simplify the importance of keeping the whole of Torah by wearing phylacteries and nailing mezuzahs to our homes is ludicrous. Our entire life must be occupied by YHVH’s Word; His Ways; His Spirit. And it becomes our responsibility to teach His Words and Ways to our children and so forth. In so doing, we will prosper and live long in the Land that our Elohim gave us (11:13-21).

 

Is it wrong to done tefillin or phylacteries or install mezuzahs on the doorposts of our homes? Yes and no. The answer to that question is dependent upon whose instructions you are going to follow in carrying out these activities. Tefillin or phylacteries are rabbinic inventions and traditions. The rules that govern phylactery use is regulated to the extreme point of being overly complex and difficult to carry out and be compliant with Rabbinic specifications.

 

Remember how Y’shua our Master denounced the traditions and practices of the rabbis:

 

 13 But woe unto you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! for ye shut up the kingdom of heaven against men: for ye neither go in yourselves, neither suffer ye them that are entering to go in.

 14 Woe unto you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! for ye devour widows’ houses, and for a pretence make long prayer: therefore ye shall receive the greater damnation.

 15 Woe unto you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! for ye compass sea and land to make one proselyte, and when he is made, ye make him twofold more the child of hell than yourselves.

 (Mat 23:13-15 KJV)

 

By implementing the traditions of phylactery use, the Rabbis have added to Torah, which in and of itself is a violation of Torah:

 

“Ye shall not add unto the Word which I command you, neither shall ye diminish ought from it, that ye may keep the commandment of YHVH your Elohim which I command you” (Deu. 4:2; KJV).

 

Thus I would say that the use of phylacteries is not advisable.

 

The traditions and laws of the Rabbis also govern mezuzah use. But I can also see how one may bring glory to Yah and respect to the Faith that is practiced by the household that maintains a mezuzah by following the Spirit of the tradition and this mitzvot. We have a mezuzah on the doorframe of our home, but we do not adhere to the rules of the Rabbis that govern its use. For us it is purely symbolic and ornamental, and it serves as a means by which to attract inquiries into what it is we believe and practice. So, if one is considering installing a mezuzah who is a member of our Faith community, I would only advise him or her to seriously consider under whose authority you would be installing and using the thing, and then do accordingly.

 

Well, that concludes our reflection of ‘Ekev. I pray that it provided you food for thought and that it encourages you to conduct your own read and study of this beautiful and thought-provoking passage.

 

Abba willing, we will be back next week with another installment of the Messianic Torah Observer. Until then, may you be most blessed fellow saint in training. Shalom and take care.

 

Faithfully.

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1 Timothy-The Properly Attired Praying Woman-Part-12 of our Paul and Hebrew Roots Series

1 Timothy-The Properly Attired Praying Woman-Part-12 of our Paul and Hebrew Roots Series

by Rod Thomas | The Messianic Torah Observer

1 Timothy—The Properly Attired Praying Woman—Part 12 of the Paul and Hebrew Roots Series

 

Review of Last Two Posts

 

As promised, we’re going to finally get into an examination of 1 Timothy 2:9-15 and today’s focus will be that of the properly attired praying woman according to Paul.

 

But to quickly bring us up to speed, recall that over the last two installments to this series, in preparation for our examination of 1 Timothy 2:9-15, we discussed the following (https://www.themessianictorahobserver.org/2019/08/09/first-timothy-pauls-war-strategy-against-gnosticism-part-11-paul-hebrew-roots-series/):

 

  1. Inherent problems associated with 1 Timothy such as the language in which the text was originally written; missing information; and expressed concerns over the genuiness of the its author—Paul.

 

  1. Contextual concerns associated with 1 Timothy.

 

  1. The true purpose of 1 Timothy—was it a church organization manual as so many in churchianity claim it to be.

 

  1. The importance of deep study and what it entails, especially when trying to understand some of Paul’s more challenging and difficult to understand passages.

 

  1. We looked at the socio-cultural-economic and religious situation of first-century Ephesus.

 

  1. And we engaged in a detailed discussion of Jewish Gnosticism (ie., proto or early Gnosticism) that had seemingly overtaken the Ephesian Assemblies.

 

Important Considerations

 

So today, we will look at the properly attired, praying Ephesian woman from a couple perspectives:

 

(a) From the perspective of women leading prayers in the assemblies of Messiah.

 

(b) From the perspective of prayer being one of the standards by which the Faith is displayed by Yah’s people and the first weapon of choice for combating false teachers and their teachings.

 

So without further ado, let’s dive headlong into today’s study: 1 Timothy—The Properly Attired Praying Woman—Part 12 of the Paul and Hebrew Roots Series.

 

 

Verses 9 & 10

 

“I desire then that in every place the men should pray, lifting holy hands without anger or quarreling; likewise also that women should adorn themselves in respectable apparel, with modesty and self-control, not with braided hair and gold or pearls or costly attire, but with what is proper for women who profess godliness—with good works” (ESV).

 

In the same way

 

In order for us to fully comprehend what Paul is communicating to Timothy in this instruction, I believe at the very least we must fall back to verse 1 of this chapter. And what we find is Paul, having already established the basis for this letter (ie., addressing the Gnostic onslaught that had overtaken the Ephesian Assemblies of YHVH), Paul begins to lay out the strategy for combating the problems. And the first thing Paul instructs is that:

 

“…supplications, prayers, intercessions and thanksgivings be made for all people, for kings and all who are in high positions, that we may lead a peaceful and quiet life, godly and dignified in every way” (2:1,2; ESV).

 

Prayer—Paul’s First Tactic to Defeat Gnosticism in the Ephesian Assemblies

 

So Paul’s first tactic for defeating the Gnostic onslaught against the Ephesian Assemblies was “prayer.” In this case, we’re not just talking about personal, in your prayer-closet—daily prayers, but more so, public prayers. Paul instructs Timothy to ensure that the assembly members publicly pray for “all people,” including world leaders. And the aim of such public prayers was to ensure that members of the Body of Messiah lead a peaceful, godly, and dignified life.

 

And then in verse 8 of chapter 2, after certifying the wisdom of such an instruction, his calling and the God who the prayers would be directed towards, Paul adds something very interesting to his instructions regarding public prayers—singling out the men of the assemblies:

 

“I desire then that in every place the men should pray, lifting holy hands without anger or quarreling…” (2:8; ESV).

 

Considerations

 

Two things I would have you take note of here:

 

(1) Paul’s instruction that “men should pray in every place” is a direct call to the mature, set-apart men of the assemblies (”en topos”) when and wherever they gathered to engage in public prayer. Some may interpret the reference to men in this verse to mean “people,” “humans,” “man-kind,” which if that were the case, the Greek word Paul would have likely used would have been “anthropos.” In fact, this Greek term was used in verse 1 of this chapter where Paul calls for public prayers on behalf of all men (ie., “anthropos”). However, the term Paul uses here for men in verse 8 is “aner.” “Aner” generally refers to an adult male. So what about the women participating in this public prayer for all people? Is this a prohibition against women engaging in public prayer within the assembly gatherings? Absolutely not. In fact, we will see that Paul does indeed include women in his call to public prayer in verse 9, in just a second.

 

(2) The men, having gathered in their assemblies and engaged in petitions, supplications and intercessions on behalf of all people, as is part and parcel of such prayers, these were to lift up set-apart hands (ie., holy hands) unto the Creator, devoid of any anger or argument.

 

The Lifting Up of Holy Hands

 

What’s this “lifting up holy hands?” Well, it appears to be a common posture for prayer among the ancient peoples of Faith and the bible supports this.

 

Exodus 9:29—”Moses said to him, “As soon as I’ve left the city, I’ll spread out my hands to YHVH. Then the thunder and the hail will stop and won’t return so that you will know that the earth belongs to YHVH”” (CEB).

 

1 Kings 8:22—”Solomon stood before YHVH’s altar in front of the entire Israelite assembly and, spreading out his hands toward the sky…”(CEB).

 

Psalms 28:2—”Listen to my request for mercy when I cry out to you, when I lift up my hands to your holy inner sanctuary” (CEB).

 

Psalms 63:4—”So I will bless you as long as I’m alive; I will lift up my hands in your name” (CEB).

 

Isaiah 1:15—”When you extend your hands, I’ll hide my eyes from you. Even when you pray for a long time, I won’t listen. Your hands are stained with blood” (CEB).

 

The stipulation for those who would lift-up hands unto YHVH on behalf of all people is that those petitioners would be individuals who lived holy  lives and the symbolism of the lifting of hands during worship and prayer would need be devoid of evil.

 

Prayer As Paul’s Number One Tactic Against Gnosticism

 

Thus corporate prayer was one of Paul’s first spiritual war tactics to combat the Jewish Gnosticism that’d gripped the Ephesian Assemblies. Because Paul, under the influence of the Ruach haKodesh (ie., the Holy Spirit), knew that the battle for the soul of the Ephesian life. This cannot be overlooked: not every member of the assembly would be prime petitioners. Those who would be considered prime prayer warriors would be those who lived a set-apart life.

 

 

The Vital Importance of Corporate Prayer to the Assemblies

 

Now why do you suppose that Paul would make as his first tactic against the Ephesian Gnostic infiltration of the assemblies of Messiah public prayer? (Recall dear friend that in the last installment to this series—Part-11—I likened 1 Timothy to that of a war strategy; essentially Paul and Timothy’s fight was not against those pesky flesh and blood Jewish Gnostic false teachers he mentions throughout his letter. Instead, Paul’s first tactic in his overall war strategy against false teaching in the Ephesian Assembly was by way of the spiritual. And how does one engage in spiritual warfare? Through prayer my friend. Through prayer—intercessions—petitions.

 

In fact, it was the same Paul who, writing to the very same set of Ephesian Assemblies, that the war for the souls of the assembly members was against spiritual entitles. For Paul writes:

 

“For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places” (Eph. 6:12; ESV). 

 

But suffice to say that Paul comes right out of the gate requiring the assembly members engage in public petitions unto YHVH. No doubt, Paul’s secret weapon for launching the initial attack was to take the fight to the enemy’s own battle field: the spirit-realm.

 

And interestingly, Paul sets out to turn the tables on the chaos that had started to overtake the assemblies—anger and argument over stupid stuff; over fables; over endless genealogies. These would be replaced by a simple act of raised, set-apart hands petitioning and interceding on behalf all people.

 

The other thing that we must keep in mind here, which is vitally important to our understanding of the significance of what Paul is saying in these verses regarding corporate prayer is that corporate prayer as passed down by Paul and the other Apostles, when properly practiced, brought light to false teachings.

 

 

Women Appearance—Social-Cultural-Economic Impacts–The Hetairai Revisited

 

Recall we discussed the “hetairai” in previous installments of this series and that they were of “the professional courtesan or prostitution vocation” of Ephesus, Corinth and surrounding Greek cities (Donna Howell; pg. 128). In other words, these were temple prostitutes who held prominent standing in these Greek cities. And it was these women who made the adorning of cosmetics and fashion an art. The cosmetics and fashion were of course designed to elicit the immediate attention of “potential patrons” or clients (Donna Howell, “The Handmaiden Conspiracy;” pg. 128).

 

Now, none of this is to imply that the women of the Messianic Assemblies in Ephesus were hetairai. There’s no evidence to support such thinking. However, like today, fashion trends, regardless from whence they come, can have a tremendous impact on the day-to-day citizen of a society. In the case of the women of the Messianic Assembly in Ephesus, vanity was still a trait among assembly members that probably needed to be weeded out if Paul was to bring complete order to assemblies. So I believe there stands a better chance than not that pagan traits such as the adorning of alluring attire, hair styles, expensive jewelry, and such likely influenced some of the women of the assembly who “began to imitate this form of adornment simply because it looked feminine and pretty” (ibn, pg. 128). Again, I doubt the women of the Ephesian Assemblies were active temple of Artemis prostitute, but they instead “looked the part” for the sake of being trendy or appearing feminine or pretty as Howell suggests in her book.

 

Expectations of the Ephesian Women in Dress and Behavior (Torah and Pauline Expectations)

 

We find, when read in context, 1 Timothy 2:9 instructs Timothy “Likewise also the women” should pray in the same manner as the men in the assembly. Although extremely insightful, this verse also serves as sort of a transition verse to verse 8. Recall that in verse 8 Paul wrote of his desire that the men of Ephesus, wherever they would gather to worship, pray lifting up holy hands that would be devoid of anger or quarrels. Then Paul writes at the beginning of verse 9:

 

In like manner also (”hosautos [kai]”)…” (KJV).

 

Sadly, far too many students of the bible overlook this key transition and focus solely on what comes next in verse 9—that being a discussion on proper women attire and deportment when participating and or leading in public or corporate prayer.

 

In short, Paul writes that he desires the men of the Ephesian Assembly to pray within the guidelines of what he outlined for Timothy in verses 1-8. Then he writes, oh, by the way, I want the women of the Ephesian Assembly to do exactly what I’ve just instructed the men of the assembly to do regarding prayer.

 

The Negative Influence of Koine Greek’s Lack of Punctuation and Sentence Structure to Understanding

 

So why do so many people miss this crucial element to verse 9—in like manner? Well, in Koine Greek manuscripts, there are no punctuations: no periods; no commas; no semi-colons; no colons; no exclamation points; no quotation marks; no brackets; no paragraph starts and ends or indentations. In fact, if you simply pull up an image of a Koine Greek manuscript online, you’ll see that even the individual Greek words aren’t really separated by spaces. Thus, when New Testament translators and transcribers set out to articulate the ancient text into English, punctuation is often left to their discretion. And if you know anything about English grammar, punctuation can influence the meaning of an entire text. And when the author of the original Greek text leaves out clarifying words, translators can add to or subtract meaning to the verse in question, which we all know has the capability of leading to erroneous doctrines and traditions.

 

Let’s take, for instance verse 9, and see how various English translators rendered it from a punctuation perspective:

 

The KJV: “In like manner also, that women adorn themselves in modest apparel…” Notice here the comma that follows after “also.” And then the sentence continues with Paul’s discussion on women’s apparel. And if one were not careful, one would naturally think that Paul is telling Timothy that women should dress like who, the men, and not like the common women of Ephesus? It doesn’t make sense when you really look at this absent the previous verses to verse 9. Regardless, the “In like manner also” does cause one to ask: like what?

 

The same convention of sentence structure is followed in the ASV, the CEB, the ROT, and the ERV.

 

Other translations simply throw in the word “likewise [comma]” or “also [comma]” such as the CJB, the HCSB, the NASB. Still others such as the NET render “likewise” and leave off the comma entirely, forcing the reader to conclude that women are to dress like the men? Again, it doesn’t make sense.

 

Oh, and in case that wasn’t confusing enough, some translations such as the NLT and the NRS left off the transition words altogether and take the reader immediately into Paul’s discussion of women apparel and appearance.

 

Whether any of this is intentional in terms of forcing the reader to overlook Paul telling Timothy that women should participate in leading corporate prayers in the assemblies is speculative, but I would not rule it out. Let us never forget that the editors and translators and transcribers of our bibles have a tendency to filter their work through the lenses of their denomination and religious worldview. So if these believed as their churches or denominations or sects that women are prohibited from leading public or corporate prayer, they will force a translation in the English that will read according to their beliefs and understandings. Sad, but true.

 

Bringing The Women Into Leading Corporate Prayer

 

So Paul wants to make it clear to Timothy that the women of the Ephesian Assemblies, who met the same criteria as the men for leading the corporate prayers, also be devoid of anger and desputations; living set-apart lives, lifting up their hands in prayer unto YHVH our Elohim in supplications, petitions, intercessions and thanksgivings.

 

However, Paul throws in elements to the leading in public prayer that is germane to the women of the Ephesian Assemblies. And those elements involved the womens’ personal appearance and deportment, which seem to have been negatively impacted by the common fashion styles of the Ephesian culture. (We touched upon this just a moment ago actually.)

 

The Properly Attired Ephesian Woman of Prayer

 

Paul required that the women be arrayed modestly and appear before the assembly in a Godly manner (1 Tim. 2:9):

 

“I want women to enhance their appearance with clothing that is modest and sensible, not with elaborate hairstyles, gold, pearls, or expensive clothes” (CEB).

 

Ancient Greek culture viewed braids as “seductive.” In fact, the hairstyles worn by the hetairai for instance, required a professional to style and arrange. Juvenal, a Roman poet of the late first and early second century C.E., noted that such women who wore those types of hairstyle typically employed a slave to arrange their hair as well as a second slave to stand by with a whip to “lash the unfortunate beautician in case a cowlick proved stubborn” (Howell; pg. 75).

 

It should go without saying that “ostentatious” hairstyles were clear signs of “promiscuity” in the Ancient Near East. Paul instructed that such things as ostentatious hairstyles, as costly as they tended to be, was not an appropriate expenditure of money nor was it a suitable thing for one who professed Godliness to possess and display. As far as Paul was concerned, instead of adorning herself with costly common styles of the day, it was far better for a Godly woman to adorn herself with “good works” (1 Tim. 2:10).

 

 And let’s now throw in verse 10 to round off Paul’s observations here:

 

“…that women adorn themselves in modest apparel, with shamefacedness (ie., “aidos,” modesty) and sobriety (ie., “sophrosune,”; self-control) not with broided hair (ie., “plegma,” braided hair), or gold, or pearls, or costly array. But (which becometh women professing godliness) with good works” (KJV).

 

 

Interestingly, regarding arraying themselves with good works, the CEB expresses it this way:

 

“They (ie., women) should make themselves attractive by doing good…”

 

In summarizing this key, revelatory passage, researcher Donna Howell wrote:

 

“His (ie., Paul) was with a woman attending church in modesty and humility, and in making sure that her appearance in a place of worship would be for the right reasons (to worship, not to attract the attention of surrounding men). Paul was aware that women were weaving gold into their braids , which was a common practice for prostitutes who wanted to wear an ongoing advertisement in public that they were ‘available for hire.’ These women knew that the culture around them considered their hair to be an extension of the body’s most intimate fluids, so they drew even more attention to it with gold, fine metals, and gemstones” (Handmaiden’s Conspiracy; pgs. 127, 128).

 

The Importance of Prayer to the Assemblies of Messiah

 

Let’s look at prayer in the early Assemblies of Messiah.

 

When we think about corporate prayer today, especially in the so-called Church, we picture a church leader standing up before a congregation who rattles off a series of words—reverential as it may seem—in rather quick order, directed to God or in many congregations, Jesus Christ. And upon quickly dispensing of their acknowledgment of God or Jesus, the church leaders launch right into whatever it was they are set to do: preach—teach—admonish—sell—whatever.

 

But corporate prayer in the first-century assemblies of Messiah was actually a big thing. It was a huge part of worship each Sabbath. And when the assemblies engaged in corporate prayer, they prayed together and listened to prayers said on their behalf, which when ended, the assembly would respond in agreement: “Amen. So be it.”

 

According to Scot McKnight, in his article entitled “Prayer in the Earliest Church,” corporate prayers in the Assemblies of Messiah occurred at least 3-times each day (https://www.patheos.com/blogs/jesuscreed/2015/10/13/prayer-in-the-earliest-church/). This practice obviously stemmed from orthodox Jewish customs.

 

In fact it was an early “Christian” document that some claim was written by first-century apostles, called “The Didache,” stipulated prayer in the Body of Messiah take place 3-times daily, and the article actually recites the Lord’s Prayer. So, we’re not talking about free-will, free-form prayers uttered by a church leader during any given worship service or gathering. We’re talking about the recitation of the “Lord’s Prayer.”

 

According to Patristic Church Father Tertullian, the assemblies (ie., the churches) devoted themselves to the “Lord’s Prayer” and the Psalms for their prayer practices. And Tertullian is believed to have taught his followers to pray in the morning and evening and “then also at the three designated hours of 9 AM, noon, and 3 pm, and this was customary for early Christian prayer practices.

 

According to Scot McKnight, “Christians seemed to have prayed with the whole body: standing, kneeling, prostration, or more commonly standing with hands and head raised (cross-like). Hence, too, the sign of the cross.”

 

The raising and extending of the hands and or arms sound familiar?

 

It was under Roman Emperor Constantine that prayer became more public and pervasive to the cities: “The bishop is to urge the people to come constantly to church morning and evening every day, and by no means to forsake it on any account, but to assemble together continually…Assemble yourselves together every day, morning and evening, singing psalms and praying in the Lord’s house: in the morning saying the sixty-second Psalm, and in the evening the hundred and fortieth, but principally on the Sabbath day” (Ap. Const. 2.59).

 

Churchianity at it best huh?

 

According to Philip Kosloski, in his article entitled “4 Ancient Prayers From the Earliest Christians,” Christians prayed “the Psalms in a similar fashion to the Jews at the time, but developed their own prayers that they clung on to in their times of need (https://aleteia.org/2017/09/23/4-ancient-prayers-from-the-earliest-christians/).

 

Of the first 3,000 members of the Way Movement in Jerusalem days after the outpouring of the Holy Spirit on the Great Day of Pentecost, Luke wrote:

 

“And they devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching and the fellowship, to the breaking of bread and the prayers” (Act. 2:42; ESV).

 

According to Steven D. Bruns, in his article entitled “How the Early Church Used Prayer to Make Disciples, this insightful verse reveals how the first 3,000 believers were acclimated into the Faith. These learned “the prayers.” These were not simply spontaneous prayers. These “were certain prayers that were specifically taught to the new converts” (https://www.seedbed.com/early-church-using-prayer-make-disciples-2/).

 

Bruns contends that these prayers “served in an instructive and corrective role” for the disciples of Messiah. And as Gnosticism began to take a foothold in the early years of the Faith, “one of the main criteria for determining this fact (ie., which writings were genuine, apostolic writings) was whether or not the writings or sect’s beliefs conformed to how the Christians were taught to pray.”

 

Of course the major prayer that was taught would have been the “Lord’s Prayer.” Thus Bruns describes the “Lord’s Prayer” as the “paradigmatic prayer for the Church.” In the Didache (c. 50-120 AD), there are only 2-prayers mentioned: The Lord’s Prayer and the prayer during the Eucharist (ie., the Lord’s Supper), of which the Lord’s Supper was to be prayed 3-times/day. The prayers were spoken or sung.

 

Justin Maryr, in his “Apology,” (c. 155 AD), wrote that “the president of the service would offer prayers and thanksgivings according to his ability.”

 

In a composition of various writings ranging in dates from 215 to 400 AD, entitled “Apostolic Tradition,” one writer wrote: “It is not altogether necessary for the bishop to recite the very same words which we gave before as though studying to say them by heart in his thanksgiving to God; but let each one pray according to his own ability. If indeed he is able to pray suitably with a grand and elevated prayer, this is a good thing. But if on the other hand he should pray and recite a prayer according to a brief form, no one shall prevent him. Only let his prayer be correct and orthodox.”

 

Thus it appears that over time the rote prayers, especially the Lord’s Prayer, were not necessarily read, but became more guidelines to spontaneous, heartfelt petitions and intercessions.

 

The other thing that I believe is essential information to have regarding prayer in the early Church is that prayer was, according to Bruns, one of the ways the Faith “discipled its people and encouraged them in their spiritual life and growth. Correct prayer, taught by Christians to new Christians, was among the most important means of ensuring the correct faith that was once for all delivered to the saints” (Jude 1:3).

 

So the concern regarding prayer in the early church—in particular for Ephesus who was battling significant Jewish Gnosticism infiltration in the assemblies–was to ensure the one who prays had a proper relationship with God and that the individual “was addressing the correct God and using correct theology when they did speak to that God” (Brun).

 

According to Dr. D. W. Ekstrand, in his article entitled: “Worship in the Early Church:” “The most basic acts of worship in the early church were the reading and exposition of Scripture, prayer, the singing of psalms, hymns and spiritual songs, and the observance of the sacraments; all of these were derived from the example and command of Jesus Himself.” (Can you detect a little Catholicism in this statement?) (http://www.thetransformedsoul.com/additional-studies/miscellaneous-studies/-worship-in-the-early-church)

 

What Constituted Scriptures in the First Century Body of Messiah?

 

In the early years of the Way Movement in Palestine and throughout the various realms of the Roman Empire where home assemblies were established, the scriptures were the books of the Tanakh. Remember, the New Testament did NOT exist in the first century A.D. And the letters that were written and disseminated to the various assemblies by the apostles were at that time in the early stages of being copied and read throughout the whole of the Faith Community—first to the assembly members of which the letter was originally addressed; and then later the copies were shared with all the other assemblies of Messiah that were strewn throughout the Roman Empire. It would be many years before the powers that be of the so-called Church Triumph would codify and canonize these books as inspired and scripture. Nevertheless, as these letters—like 1 Timothy—were introduced to the assemblies, they were read publicly as part of the worship service.

 

The earliest members of the Way Movement were Jewish. Thus, these accepted the Tanakh as the “Word of God.” And we know that these also continued worshiping at the Temple and in their local synagogues alongside their countrymen/countrywomen each Shabbat for several decades, especially in Palestine. Of course the difference between the orthodox Jews and the Jews of the Way Movement was that the members of the Way Community were devoted to Y’shua as their “promised Messiah and that salvation was found in Him alone.” Nevertheless, these continued to worship “in a basically Jewish fashion but added the Lord’s Supper (cf. Acts 2:42, 46) and prayers in the Name of Jesus to their worship regimen (cf. Acts 4:24-30). Furthermore, it appears that the members of the Way Movement, according to Dr. Ekstrand, “gathered daily for prayer, fellowship, preaching, and teaching (cf. Acts 2:46; 5:42), the ‘chief day’ for services of worship in the church was changed from the Jewish Sabbath to the first day of the week almost from the beginning, because it was the day of resurrection.”

 

Sabbath Versus Sunday Worship in the Early Assemblies of Messiah

 

My sources differ from that of Dr. Ekstrand as it relates to the early church worshiping exclusively on Sundays. My understanding is that the early members of the Way Movement worshiped primarily on the Sabbaths, and their fellowship continued on through the following day with worship and study of the scriptures. All indications are that as long as the Apostles were standing watch over the Body of Messiah, the keeping of Shabbat would have been non-negotiable. Furthermore, Sunday worship did not become a requirement of the so-called Church until Emperor Constantine, circa early 4th century AD made it so. For it was on the 7th of March, 321 A.D., that Emperor Constantine decreed that “dies Solis,” or “the day of the sun,” would be observed as a universal day of rest.

 

And of course the sacraments mentioned in Ekstrand’s article no doubt refer to the 7-sacraments of the Catholic Church, but for our purposes, the sacraments would be limited to just the Lord’s Supper and baptism.

 

So with the exception of the Lord’s Supper, the other forms of worship really did not originate with the teachings and example of Y’shua Messiah. These “were derived from the Synagogue worship of the Jews” (Ekstrand).

 

Corporate Prayer in the Early Church Derived Primarily From Synagogal Worship Regimen

 

Synagogue worship came on to the Jewish cultural-religious-social scene around the 6th century BC, about the time of the Babylonian Exile. With the destruction of Solomon’s Temple around 586 BC and many of the Jews of Palestine taken into Babylonian Captivity, synagogues provided for the needs of public worship, absent sacrifices which according to Torah could only be performed at the Temple.

 

Synagogues continued throughout the Land of Palestine (ie., Israel) after the Babylonian Captivity and it was the synagogue that provided for the basic teaching of Torah to the new Jewish and Gentile converts to the Way Movement:

 

“For Moses from ancient generations has in every city those who preach him, since he is read in the synagogues every Sabbath” (Act. 15:21).

 

Torah Taught to First Century Assemblies Via Local Synagogues

 

Note I said Jews and Gentiles received Torah training from the synagogues throughout the Roman Empire. As we can clearly see in James’ Jerusalem Council edict to the assemblies of Messiah (reference Acts 15), Gentiles were supposed to receive training in Torah through their attendance of Sabbath worship services at the various synagogues strewn throughout the Roman Empire. And this is a crucial fact that so many people of Faith either take for granted or simply remain ignorant of. For we’ve all be erroneously taught by churchianity over the years that Jesus Christ brought forth a brand new Faith, totally disconnected from Judaism. Thus, according to churchianity, after Pentecost, the Church Triumphant ran entirely independent of Judaism, neither the two to ever again meet. Unfortunately, this lie from the pit of hades has contributed, in great part, to the hellacious teaching that Torah was done away with by the sacrifice of Jesus Christ on the cross, and the false understanding that any disciple of Y’shua who would even think of keeping any part of Torah has fallen from grace and shipwrecked his or her chances for eternal life.

 

 

Continuing on: Upon the destruction of Herod’s Temple, the synagogue “replaced Jewish Temple ritual sacrifices with Torah readings, prayer and teaching.” Furthermore, the synagogue served as “houses of prayer” and “houses of study” (ie., of Torah) and for “social gatherings.” It became the epi-center of Jewish life in every town and city where Jews had a presence. And because of these facts, synagogues were generally the first places Paul would go to deliver the Gospel. Sometimes this protocol worked out well for Paul and his evangelistic team, while in others it proved less than fruitful.

 

Recall that it was in Ephesus that Paul and His Gospel message was rejected by the synagogal leaders. Thus he was kicked out of the Ephesian synagogue. Paul ended up taking his disciples with him from the synagogue and setting up shop in Tyrannus’ Yeshivah (ie., a Jewish school for religious studies). And thus Paul evangelized and taught from Tyrannus’ Yeshivah for 2-years, drawing unto himself and his teachings Jew and Greek alike from over Asia Minor (Act. 19:9,10). And if you read further along in Acts 19, you’ll see that mighty works were manifested through Paul’s ministry there in Ephesus, leading up to the 7-sons of Sceva incident, the burning of magic scrolls by Jews and Greeks, and the Demetrius uprising.

 

Dr. Eckstrand in his article goes on to mention that first-century synagogues generally had a hall for prayer, which would constitute the main sanctuary; and smaller rooms for religious studies and other synagogal business.

 

According to Dr. Eckstrand, at some point in the latter-half of the first-century A.D.—generally after the destruction of Herod’s Temple in 70 A.D.—members of the Way Movement were prohibited from worshiping in the synagogues. Regardless, members of the Way continued with the “same rite as their Jewish counterparts with added Christian developments and themes. Thus their meeting strongly resembled synagogal worship.” And synagogal worship included the weekly Torah and Haftorah Readings; the chanting of Psalms; intercessory prayers; and teachings.

 

Is Paul’s Instructions Regarding Women Leading Corporate Prayer and Appropriate Attire Be That of a Normative or Restrictive Nature?

 

Would I mess you up to say both?

 

Indeed, in my mind at least, Paul’s stance on women leading corporate prayer in worship gathering situations and the instructions he gave regarding appropriate attire and deportment are both normative and restrictive instructions to the Body of Messiah.

 

Allow me to break it down for you.

 

Leading corporate or public prayer in the midst of Yah’s elect is a very special privilege that none of us should ever take for granted.

 

 Verse 9 clearly makes normative (ie., universal; applicable for us even today) the practice of women leading congregants in prayer during all forms of gatherings. But as it relates to Paul’s instructions on appropriate womens’ attire and general appearance and deportment in such gatherings and during their leading of corporate prayers, the apostle’s instructions are both normative and restrictive (ie., meant only for the women of the 1st-century Ephesian Assemblies). The instructions regarding womens’ general appearance, attire and deportment is restrictive to the women of the first-century Ephesian Assemblies simply because the wearing of expensive clothes, braided hair, gold jewelry and pearls today in our 21st-century, western culture are not necessarily provocative or alluring. However, Paul’s instructions become restrictive when womens’ attire, appearance and deportment become a distraction to the other members of the assembly.

 

I’m sure that you, like me, have had the experience of attending some type of worship service where certain women (and this would also apply to men for sure) would come into the service, wearing certain attire or who carried themselves in such a way that they drew attention to themselves, especially from the wandering eyes of the young men of the gathering who should have their minds focused on worship of the Almighty. In such situations, Paul’s instructions against women wearing provocative attire and carrying themselves in a common way would still apply today, especially for those women who find themselves in leadership positions in the Body and Assemblies of Messiah.

 

 

The Realities of Women Leading Public Prayers or of Women Fulfilling Leadership Roles in the Body of Messiah

 

Sadly, I have seen first hand many congregations and assemblies of Messiah where women are not permitted to lead corporate or public prayers. But growing up in the Southern Baptist Church of the 70’s and early 80’s, women were permitted only limited public or corporate prayer opportunities. I witnessed the same thing as I moved into the non-denominational sector of churchianity in the 90’s, although I did run into several congregations where women actually did lead congregational prayers.

 

And throughout all this time, I never fully understood why women were generally excluded from leading prayer in church. I knew, erroneously so, that the bible essentially prohibited women from teaching and preaching, and thus I figured this extended over to leading prayer in church as well.

 

Women Are Free In Messiah—Just Like Their Male Counterparts

 

However, it should be common knowledge that just like their male counterparts, women have freedom in Messiah (Gal. 5:1; 2 Cor. 3:17). Not the freedom that churchianity erroneously teaches that pertains to freedom to live life however one chooses (ie., a Torah-less life). But freedom to serve YHVH our Elohim in the beauty of holiness, Truth and Spirit: whether you’re a Jew or a Gentile; male or female; slave or free, we’ve all been freed to serve YHVH as He directs and leads; not controlled by religion and man-made traditions and doctrines (Gal. 3:28).

 

In Torah pass-down days, the time of the Judges and during our time in the Land and the prophets, corporate prayers were conducted exclusively by the Levitical Priests. Indeed, Hebrews commonly prayed on individual bases as their faith and personal situations dictated. Generally, these rote prayers. But the bible provides us a number of stories where women of Faith prayed privately during various situations. But corporate prayers were the exclusive domain of the Levitical Priests.

 

But when Y’shua came, things started to change in terms of women participation and leadership in the Faith. Women became an integral part of the Master’s ministry. For it was through Y’shua Messiah that women were finally “loosed” or freed from the oppression of religion and men. And under the leadership of the Apostle to the Gentiles, Paul, under the auspices of the renewed covenant, women, contrary to the false teachings of so many in churchianity, realized the full extent of the freedom women had in Y’shua haMashiyach. And as we clearly saw played out in previous installments to this series, the bible clearly suggests that women led home assemblies, preached, taught, led corporate prayers, counseled, prophesied, and even served as apostles.

 

Despite scriptural proofs to the freedoms that women were afforded in Mashiyach in terms of leadership in the Faith, male leaders in churchianity have erred on the side of misogynistic practices and mindsets of Greek culture and Judaism. And the thing that kills me about the continued denial of women to fulfill their call in Messiah by certain sects of churchianity and even our Faith Community, is that despite obvious proofs that run contrary to their misogynistic views and understanding, they choose to continue to operate, live and lead in error—much to the chagrin of their precious female members.

 

Nevertheless, our focus passage here—1 Timothy 2:9-15—serves as proof that women have every right, and dare I say every responsibility to serve the Body of Mashiyach—of Messiah—as leaders in congregational prayer. And we will find in Part 13 of this series, that womens’ leadership in the assemblies of Messiah is not limited to corporate prayer, but also extends over into learning and teaching. I pray you join me.

 

Faithfully.

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