Well queen esther couldnt speak only unless king xerxes said so on pain of death. She had to be invited to do so...but she was actually willing to risk it. She said if I perish, I perish.
I think women are now brave to speak but need to be aware they not speak out of turn and really the best is to wait to be invited to do so.
Its like when you are teaching a class (yes, I am sometimes a teacher) and you are the one teaching and speaking you expect your students to listen and learn in silence. Not constantly interrupt you and especially NOT to take over teaching. Why because you were given the authority not them.
Someone who is constantly interrupting an instructor and trying to take over the teaching is acting inappropriately, but that has nothing to do with gender. Similarly, Esther's risk of death had nothing to do with gender;
anyone who approached the king without invitation put their life at risk (Esther 4:11 clearly states this).
Why is it gender based in timothys instance well it would seem thats just the order of things in a church setting men first, then women.
The only "order" spoken of consistently in Scripture is "first for the Jew, then for the Gentile" as in Romans 1. When Paul refers to Aquila and Prisca, he starts in that order. Later, several times, he puts her name first (Acts 18:2 A/P; Acts 18:18 and 18:26 P/A).
Sure if eve was made first it would have been women having all the power and ruling all the time but it isnt thats just the way it is.
That application is not clearly stated; it's inferred from the proximity of the two sentences. I understand that is a natural way to read the text; what I reject is that it makes sense in that way. I don't see any inherent logical connection between verses 12 and 13 outside of a correction to a false teaching. In that light it makes perfect sense.
Imagine it this way: "I don't allow Canadians to teach or to have authority over Americans. For Columbus discovered America first." There's no logical reason why the prior discovery of America extends any sort of hierarchical authority. Similarly, there's no reason why the prior creation of Adam extends hierarchical authority to all men over all women today. Many (most) people seem to read it as you do: they just accept it, apparently without considering the sense of it.
Eve didnt die when she ate the forbidden fruit why because she was with child. GOd didnt want two people dead. But she bore Cain so that was probably punishment in itself when he killed abel. So God gave her another chance with Seth.
That's an angle I haven't considered before. I don't think it's valid, because it doesn't explain why Adam didn't die. I think there are better explanations of 1 Timothy 2:15.
I dont think women teachers or pastors are evil. God obviously called many women to these positions because the men abidcated or abused their positions. I know MANY instances where men in schools had been molesting students, priests absuing parishioners, even principals viewing pornography. Even the early church had false teachers leading young women astray because they lusted after them. You dont ever want a lecher in a pastoral role that is way too horrible even to contemplate.
I don't think God called women
because men abdicated or abused the position. There's nothing in Scripture to support that. Sin is not limited to male leaders; there have been many women in positions of authority who have abused that authority. Why is it only male priests who molest parishioners? Because only men could be priests in the RC system. Some nuns in Canadian Residential Schools were guilty of molesting First Nations children. It's not a gender-specific problem, so let's take it out of the discussion.