Travis Fentiman
Puritan Board Sophomore
Is Paul’s injunction for women to cover their heads in worship binding today (1 Cor. 11:2-16)?
Most of the Reformed, the Scottish covenanters and the Westminster divines in the Reformation and puritan era said ‘No,’ that Paul’s ordinance was relative to his culture, which used this custom.
I argue that the cultural view is conclusive from God's Word in this new in-depth book:
The book’s intro will whet your desire to invest the time to look through the rest, from which you will reap many rewards. To see how Corinthian women covered their heads, see the many pictures in the History section on pp. 188-98. For a summary of the main points of the whole book, see the Summary Conclusions beginning on p. 258.
There are sections with lots of documentation on Reformation and puritan ministers preaching with caps on, on pp. 65-68, and that puritan men normally wore hats in worship listening to the sermon on pp. 176-78.
There is a wealth of references and quotes from the reformed orthodox in the footnotes (not to mention the early and Medieval Church), often translated from the Latin.
The logical structure of the book’s two main arguments follows (from Parts I & II of the book). Each proposition is thoroughly proven in detail in the book. I am interested in your feedback, specifically about the arguments below or the book itself.
Please do look over the material. Any argument put forward for perpetuity or veiling below in comments has more than likely been answered at length in detail in the book. I will refer you to page numbers.
The above is summarized succinctly in Part II’s conclusion:
Most of the Reformed, the Scottish covenanters and the Westminster divines in the Reformation and puritan era said ‘No,’ that Paul’s ordinance was relative to his culture, which used this custom.
I argue that the cultural view is conclusive from God's Word in this new in-depth book:
1 Corinthians – Head-Coverings are Not Perpetual & they were Hair-Buns, with or without Material: Proven (RBO, 2022) 283 pp.
The book’s intro will whet your desire to invest the time to look through the rest, from which you will reap many rewards. To see how Corinthian women covered their heads, see the many pictures in the History section on pp. 188-98. For a summary of the main points of the whole book, see the Summary Conclusions beginning on p. 258.
There are sections with lots of documentation on Reformation and puritan ministers preaching with caps on, on pp. 65-68, and that puritan men normally wore hats in worship listening to the sermon on pp. 176-78.
There is a wealth of references and quotes from the reformed orthodox in the footnotes (not to mention the early and Medieval Church), often translated from the Latin.
The logical structure of the book’s two main arguments follows (from Parts I & II of the book). Each proposition is thoroughly proven in detail in the book. I am interested in your feedback, specifically about the arguments below or the book itself.
Please do look over the material. Any argument put forward for perpetuity or veiling below in comments has more than likely been answered at length in detail in the book. I will refer you to page numbers.
Part I
1. All positive, instituted worship must be “expressly set down in Scripture” or “by good and necessary consequence… deduced” therefrom; Westminster Confession of Faith 1.6. This is known as the Regulative Principle of Worship.
2. In Scripture head-coverings, or the lack thereof, bore a variety of contrary meanings and acceptability, or not, in worship. Hence they were clearly cultural.
3. Head-coverings cannot be taught by pure-nature and have no intrinsic value for worshipping God.
4. Paul only uses the language of “dishonor,” “becometh,” “glory” and “custom” about head-coverings, which are all things of social decency, but do not reflect inherent sins. As with head-coverings, Paul uses imperatives in 1 Cor. 7 about things not intrinsically sinful.
5. Some apostolic ordinances were circumstantially conditioned and mutable.
6. Universal moral reasons given for a practice, such as head-coverings, not eating creeping things (Lev. 11:41, 44), the holy kiss, foot-washing, etc. does not necessarily make it perpetual. A context is assumed and generals can only bind generally.
7. There is nothing in 1 Cor. 11 necessitating head-coverings to have a different meaning or use in worship than in society.
8. There is no necessary warrant Corinthian head-coverings were geographically or temporally universal in the apostolic churches; but if they were, this does not itself make an ordinance to be of positive religion, especially as the Greco-Roman culture (which head-coverings were appropriate to) was vast.
9. Part I’s survey of all the relevant Scriptural head-covering data (consider it for yourself) shows there is no express or good and necessary consequence from these texts that Corinthian head-coverings were a positive, perpetual rite of religion (WCF 21.1) beyond circumstances common to human society, ordered by nature’s light, Christian prudence and the Word’s general principles (WCF 1.6), which things may be culturally relative.
10. These things being the case, Paul’s statement that improper head-covering “dishonoreth her head,” (v. 5) must be, not prescriptive, but descriptive, as the case was in that society (which it was). Hence Paul’s natural and spiritual arguments are contingent on this de facto premise. A change of the premise in a different culture where not covering is not dishonoring, changes the conclusion.
11. Hence, as there is no express, necessary or valid consequence from Scripture Corinthian head-coverings were a matter of perpetual religion, this cannot be established as doctrine or a binding practice.
12. To give a use or meaning to head-coverings for worship which nature or society does not bear and God’s Word has not given, is to worship God with a device of men, which God has prohibited by his Word (Mt. 15:9; WCF 21.1).
Part II
1. The Lexical section shows it is possible, and there is a significant foundation, that “covered” may refer to hair-buns with or without cloth material and “uncovered” to let-down long hair.
2. This understanding makes the details of 1 Cor. 11 to read seamlessly, with more explanatory power than any other view.
3. Footnotes 351–52 and the History section (with many pictures) show the considerable evidence that honorable women in first-century Greece nearly universally publicly wore bound-up hair, with or without cloth material and that universal veiling was not required. Bound-up hair without material in it or over it cannot be demonstrated to have been dishonorable by the current data, and a large amount of evidence manifests its honorableness.
4. Universal female veiling was not required or practiced for pagan religious rites.
5. Certain exegetical interpretations in 1 Cor. 11 upholding female, unveiled hair-buns cannot be ruled out.
6. As there is no necessary (and hence valid) consequence from Scripture that Corinthian coverings were formally religious (proved in Part I), so Paul’s ordinance could not have been above and beyond appropriate societal custom, but rather must have been in consistency with it.
7. Hence, according to the preponderance of historical evidence, Paul did not require of women veiling, but decent, bound-up hair.
The above is summarized succinctly in Part II’s conclusion:
That head-coverings are not perpetual, Part I has demonstrated to be by divine law, jure divino.
That being the case, that Paul was not instituting a positive rite above culture, and the Corinthian culture did not practice universal, female veiling (for public decorum or for praying or religious rites), as is clear, universal, female veiling in the Corinthian assemblies is historically disproven.
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