The number one reason is that no one in our culture wants to obey God! They do not love God, fear God or obey God! They do what is pleasing to them and twist the scriptures to their on damnation rather than obey the scriptures!
The bible is clear that God wants women to veil their heads while praying or prophecying. And He does not want men to veil their heads while they pray or probhecy!
God is also clear that women are not to teach men or even speak in the church! But people in our cultrue will not obey the scriptures!
Now you see the inevitable course of legalism. From women covering our heads as a sign of submission we are now told we must not teach or even speak in church, and that in spite of the fact that throughout history God has used women as judges as well as prophetesses, including in the church.
Now notice that these same legalists, usually men, who insist that we women must obey a Rabbinic tradition in order to obey God, which Paul clearly states was
not the custom of the churches of God, and which you should carefully note was
not commanded in the Law of Moses, at the same time these same men who would bind us with these Rabbinic customs will completely ignore what
was commanded in the Law of Moses that they bind themselves with the Telfillin shel Rosh and the Telfillin shel Yad!
The whole point of Paul’s letter to the Corinthians was to correct a number of “traditions” that had been introduced to the Christian congregations by the Judaizers. As I pointed out, women were never commanded in the Law of Moses to cover their heads, that was Rabbinic law, and Paul was laying out the tradition, and the justification for it, but pointing out that it was not the custom of Christians.
It’s the same thing he did when he asked them about the custom that had crept in of women not teaching or speaking in the church, which again, was a Rabbinic law, not commanded in the Torah. After laying out the custom Paul asked, “What? Did the Word of God come out from you? Or did it come to you only? If any man think himself a prophet, or spiritual, let him acknowledge that the things that I write unto you are the commandments of the Lord.”
In this Paul was admonishing the Corinthians who were teaching these Rabbinic traditions that relegated women to an inferior role (and the justification they used for it) that the Word of the Lord did not come out from them, nor were they privy to things exclusively given to them, but that it was the things which he, Paul, wrote to them that were the commandments of the Lord, not these traditions and customs that some teachers were trying to bind the churches with.
Read the entire letter and you will find that the whole context is Paul’s struggle against these traditions and customs that had no place in the Church of God. Even the Lord’s Supper had become a disgrace the way the Corinthians were observing it, and Paul launches into that immediately after addressing the custom of covering their heads which the Rabbinic Jews practiced, which I repeat was
not a commandment of the Torah but was the custom of the ancient world which the Jews adopted and the Rabbis made into law. What
was a commandment of the Torah was for men to wear the Telfillin, which I would hazard to guess not one of these men on this thread who are attempting to “teach” us women about how to “obey God” actually practices himself!
So again, think about it, nowhere in the Law were women commanded to cover their heads, or to be silent and not teach. Miriam was a prophetess, Deborah was a judge! And many other women held positions of authority and respect before the Rabbis began to formulate their traditions. The New Testament sets these things right and gives women a place of honor and respect as servants of Christ, in whom “there is neither male nor female.”
In Christ,
Pilgrimer