You may be seated, church. Alright, we're going to be in
1 Corinthians 11 today. Verses 2-16 to be exact. And the title of the sermon today
is, Honoring the Head or the Covering? Honoring the Head or
the Covering? Verses 2-16. I'm going to try to move through
this. There's some heavy theological things that we're going to have
to go through here. And we have a limited amount of time. Actually,
we don't, because there's food, so I'll just go really long.
No, I'm just kidding. Alright. 1 Corinthians 11, verses 2-16. Hear now the words of the living
and true God. Now, I praise you because you
remember me in everything and hold firmly to the traditions
just as I delivered them to you. But I want you to understand
that Christ is the head of every man, and the man is the head
of a woman, and God is the head of Christ. Every man who has
something on his head while praying or prophesying disgraces his
head. But every woman who has her head
uncovered while praying or prophesying disgraces her head, for she is
one and the same as the woman whose head is shaved. For if
a woman does not cover her head, let her also have her hair cut
off. But if it is disgraceful for a woman to have her hair
cut off or her head shaved, let her cover her head. For a man
ought not to have his head covered, since he is the image and glory
of God, but the woman is the glory of man. For man does not
originate from woman, but woman from man. For indeed, man was
not created for the woman's sake, but woman for the man's sake.
Therefore, the woman ought to have a symbol of authority on
her head because of the angels. However, in the Lord, neither
is woman independent of man, nor is man independent of woman.
For as the woman originates from the man, so also the man has
his birth through the woman, and all things originate from
God. Judge for yourselves. Is it proper for a woman to pray
to God with her head uncovered? Does not even nature itself teach
you that if a man has long hair, it is a dishonor to him, but
if a woman has long hair, it is a glory to her? For her hair
is given to her for a covering. But if one is inclined to be
contentious, we have no other practice, nor have the churches
of God. Thus ends the reading of God's
Holy Word. Let's pray as we approach the rest of His Word. Father
in Heaven, I need You now, dear God. Lord, we thank You that
You've given us this Word. Even this section is profitable
valuable for teaching, for reproof, for training in righteousness.
Every part of your word has value. And so, Lord, I pray that you
would help us to see the great value in this passage. I pray,
God, that we would be able to see what you really want us to
adhere to here, Lord. So, Lord, we need you to be with
us. We need you to direct us, especially me, dear God. Please
let every focus be on You and Your Word this morning. In Christ's
name I pray. Amen. So, we have just finished, what,
three chapters? Chapters 8, 9, and 10 on the
topic of idolatry and idol meat. And really, we ended with considering
the conscience of other Christians as well as unbelievers being
so selfless so that all come to Christ and stay with Christ. But the Apostle Paul is now switching
topics. As he does in his letters, he's moving on to something else.
The next four chapters from this church planter will cover various
aspects of the Corinthian church as a whole, especially on the
topic of gathering together. He's addressed that a little
bit, but he's really addressed the internal, the human heart,
the individual. But now we're going to see, what
is this supposed to look like when we're together? And that's
what this will be going over. And you know, that's kind of
an intimidating thing for people when they turn to Christ and
go to a church for the first time, especially in our state.
That man or woman thinks, what are they going to want me to
do? I imagine when people go to our service, they're like,
OK, kneel down, stand up, OK, do this. And you're wondering,
what's going on? Why are we doing that? Someone
goes, what will it be like? What am I allowed to participate
in? And of course, things as simple as What do I wear? Comes to mind. In fact, if you
go to most churches' websites now, we even have this. I think
it was... like a template, and we're like,
all right, we'll keep it. What to expect on Sunday? And
I think actually it has some value in this state. What can
you expect? You know, we talk about how long
a service runs. We talk about some people are
convicted to wear their Sunday's best. Some come with Hawaiian
shirts and hats, whatever, flip flops, you name it, whatever
you are convicted in your worship to God. So, you know, Those things
come up, but people often think that, especially I would imagine
leaving something like the LDS Church. What do I wear? What
do I wear? Is anything off limits? And so
we come to this topic of headdress today, head coverings, head veils. And I have to tell you, this
has not been a topic of debate for the whole length of the church.
I will be honest with you, very honest with you, that this has
only been up for debate for the last 150 to 200 years. And so you can say that the majority
of church history has held to the use of head coverings in
the worship service. Does scripture command that women
wear head coverings today? And you might hear the statistics. Well, the majority of the church
has done it, and for the majority of the church's length, case
closed. Novel ideas in Christianity are typically false. I'll agree
with you, generally, but not specifically here. We understand
feministic ideology has seeped into even conservative churches. So is the return of head coverings
among conservative churches a coming back to biblical standards? There's the word standard. Or
is it a coming back to a long-standing and lovely tradition? Are many
people unintentionally breaking God's law, God's commandments,
by not wearing one? And that's really serious to
me. In fact, when we started this church, Pastor Andrew and
I sat down and we poured over this and we said, we have to
know this. If we're going to stand at this pulpit and tell
you how to honor God in your worship of Him, we ought to know,
is this something that is commanded of us? This is very serious to
me. So, I encourage all of us to
let Scripture speak. Not just here, but other places
where I will go. So, a quick Few words before
we dive into the text. When it comes to head coverings,
there are three main views. The first and most widely accepted
view today is the cultural view. That the women in the first century
who practiced immodesty and maybe even prostitution did not cover
their heads. And therefore, to demonstrate
a woman had virtue, she met the cultural expectation of that
day to wear a head covering in the worship service. But today, those expectations
no longer apply to us in the 21st century. Hair covered or
uncovered communicates a neutral image among women adherents of
this view would say. It doesn't matter anymore. That
was their culture. We have a different culture. The second most popular
view for this passage is that Paul is making an argument for
long hair, and I admit it's a confusing passage. A woman's hair is her
covering, he says, and it should never be short. She should always
be easily distinguished from a man. But the issue with saying
that the foreign or external covering is the covering he's
talking about, that the hair would be that, is that Paul has
made such a great distinction between the two. He talks about
a category of an external covering, and then he mentions, just in
one verse, long hair at the very end, that it's her cover. So
that doesn't seem to make sense. Why go to such great lengths
to ask women to cover their heads if hair was simply the remedy?
It's not the case. Now the third most popular view,
and widely accepted in Reformed denominations, conservative denominations
such as ours, and as well as some Orthodox camps, Anabaptists,
Mennonites, is that this passage applies to women today. Indeed, it is commanded for women
to wear a covering in the worship service when they gather, And
this is just as much as it was for them back then, it is for
women of the 21st century. And John Calvin is often quoted
from proponents of this. John Calvin famously says that
if you uncover the woman's head, very soon they will uncover their
breasts. St. Augustine and many other dear
brothers and sisters and theologians agree and see head coverings
for women in worship as timeless. It should be done then. It should
be done now. And these are people we respect.
These are people we read. These are people we love. Like
I said, the universal acceptance for most of the church's history
is very compelling to me, though church history is not authoritative
enough. This morning, I will use biblical
hermeneutics, that's the study of interpretation, to go through
this text and others like it. Proper hermeneutics considers
cultural context, historical context, geographical context,
the author, the audience, the biblical context, where it's
at in Scripture, the original language, the theology of it,
everything. Everything. We must have some
level of certainty from the Word of God in this one way or the
other. And although it may not be perfect certainty today, we
will strive for that biblically holistic understanding of this
topic. This is going to be a full-orbed
view of this topic. And I'll tell you right now at
the beginning, as much as I respect these three views, except for
the hair one, I just think that's totally ridiculous. I don't see
them. I don't see these three views.
We will be viewing this with fresh eyes as Bereans. So let's
search the Scriptures together. Let's be charitable while we
do it. There are brothers and sisters we love who are very
convicted to do this, and I think that's fantastic. But let's go
through the Scripture. Paul has given the Corinthian
believers some heavy admonishment about idolatry, but he's now
going to salute them. Look at v. 2. Now I praise You,
because You remember me in everything and hold firmly to the traditions
just as I delivered them to You. Despite all the troubles that
the Corinthian church has had, they remember Paul and the traditions
he's given them. Maybe even referring to the traditions
of worship. This word tradition in the Greek
has been used in the Bible in multiple ways. Traditions here. has been used in Scripture for
the made-up traditions of men. And then even in the made-up
traditions of men, you have two subclasses. You have good traditions
of men that we're allowed to have. Then you have wicked traditions
of men. And those were things that Jesus
condemned with the Pharisees of course. And so that's one
way traditions in the Bible is used. Then this word is also
used in Paul's letters. where He says that we have handed
you down the traditions from our words, our teachings, and
from our letters. So this word, I have to tell
you, is used for authoritative traditions and non-authoritative
traditions, whether those be good or bad. We're allowed to
have traditions. They can't go against Scripture.
That's what Jesus was arguing against. And unfortunately, It's
not exactly stated what kind of tradition, how this word is
being used in this exact section. So, I'll tell you. I think he's obviously speaking
of a positive kind. And they have positively held
to these traditions he's handed down. It could be a mixture of
even authoritative and non-authoritative, but there's one tradition that
they have not held on to. And before he gets into that,
Paul will articulate what I believe is the most important part of
this passage. This is it. This is the most
important part of this passage. This is the truly timeless portion. The thing that he's most concerned
about that believers understand. Look at v. 3. But I want you
to understand that Christ is the head of every man, and the
man is the head of a woman, and God is the head of Christ. So
we're talking about heads today. And heads in more ways than one.
Paul will use this term head in both an anatomical way, a
physical way, like your head, right? Physical head. And then he'll use this word
head in a metaphorical way. to indicate proper roles in a
covenantal relationship. The word is kephale. Kephale
or head is not about subjugation. It's not about dominion. Or I
should say domination. Otherwise, Paul would have used
the master and slave language that he typically uses in other
places. Being the head of someone doesn't mean you are the master
and they are the slave and they obey your every single word in
that sort of sense. He doesn't use that. Head also doesn't mean origin
or source here either. That would create theological
errors, especially for the God and Christ relationship we see
here at the end of verse 3. He uses it in kind of a positional
sense. To be the head is to occupy the
position at the front or the position at the top. Just like
an actual body, what's at the top of your body? Your head. Each body part is needed to make
the whole, but the head is just at the top. Preeminent is one
word that a theologian uses. Pre means before. Eminent means
to stand out. Christ stands out before us in
front of the Father, and yet the Son is equal to the Father. The husband stands out before
his wife and family, and yet is equal to them. To be at the
front of other people walking is to be leading. It's to be
at the head of something. The head leads. In Jesus' earthly
ministry, His Father led Him despite their equality. They
had different roles. The husband in covenant relationship
with his wife is to lead her. It's his role. And lest anyone
take verse 3 and think that the apostle is laying out in his
sequence a hierarchy of superiority, Christ, head of man. Man, head
of the woman. He ends the sequence with God
is the head of Christ. You see, what he's trying to
say is not that, well, Christ is better than man, and man is
better than woman. That wouldn't make sense, because
at the end, the sequence ends with God is the head of Christ.
Father is the head of Christ. What he's trying to say is that
everyone has a head. Everyone has a head. Everyone has a kafale.
That's the point in verse 3. And though we could spend time
talking about Christ as the head and the Father as the head, the
Apostle intends to only talk about one headship relationship
in this passage. The headship of a man and his
one woman. You see that? That's singular.
A man isn't to be head over all women. He gets to be head over
his one woman. Singular, verse 3. But before
we get to the woman, Let's settle something about v. 4 concerning
the man. V. 4 reads, every man who has something
on his head while praying or prophesying disgraces his head. And I'll tell you what, in the
Greek, it doesn't actually say, has something on his head. It says, every man who prays
and prophesies having down from the head disgraces his head. Something is hanging down from
His head that disgraces His head. Who's the man's head in v. 3?
Just say it. Christ. Christ. Something that a man can do while
praying and prophesying disgraces and brings shame to Jesus Christ. That's what he's saying. And
you know what happened in Corinthian culture is Men wore togas, and what they
would do is when it was time to pray and prophesy to the gods,
they would, in an act of Roman piety, the men would bring their
togas up over their heads. Hanging down from their heads
is their toga. And so Paul says, this disgraces
Christ. If you do this like you used
to do, you will disgrace Jesus Christ. You will bring shame
to Him. If you do something that they did in pagan, ritualistic
worship, and you do the same thing, because they went from
praying and prophesying to false gods, Zeus, Poseidon, Artemis,
whatever, and then they come and they go to genuine, genuine,
real, Holy Spirit induced praying and prophesying, and the men
would automatically, possibly, bring their togas up in an act
of reverence, but Paul says that doesn't worship God. That's false
piety. A man who has something hanging
from his head like that brings shame to Jesus. And I'm not saying
that this was necessarily a problem in the Corinthian church. It's
possible that he's only saying this as an argument of why he's
going to talk about why a woman should wear a covering. It's
an illustration of comparison. Doing something with the physical
head that dishonors the covenantal head. So, my brothers, Men, let
it be laid to rest. This is not about wearing a hat
at church. This is not about wearing a hat
at church. It's a completely fine conviction. to not wear
one during prayer. Obviously, you see men, when
it's time to pray, we take off our hats. I think it's a great
thing. I think it's something that we
can continue to do. I'm just trying to say that this
verse doesn't support that. So you can do that. You can wear
a hat in here. You can do those things, whatever
your personal conviction is. In fact, when you think about
hats for men, In Exodus and Leviticus, the priests who prayed and sometimes
prophesied wore what? A turban, a hat, to worship God. And eventually, when you get
to the first century, you have Jewish men, layperson, synagogue
leaders and all, what did they wear in the first century? Yamakas,
head coverings for men. Paul wore this yamaka. And so really, he doesn't want
the men to incidentally do a pagan ritual to God that was for idols.
And this sets up his concern. His concern is doing something
in the context of praying and prophesying that would disgrace
their covenantal head in the case of the man Christ. Now here
comes the actual problem for the Corinthian church. Look at
verses 5 and 6. But every man I'm sorry, every
woman who has her head uncovered while praying or prophesying
disgraces her head. For she is one and the same as
the woman whose head is shaved. For if a woman does not cover
her head, let her also have her hair cut off. But if it is disgraceful
for a woman to have her hair cut off or her head shaved, let
her cover her head." Okay, again, who was the head of the man? Christ. who, according to v. 3, was the head of the woman.
The man. The husband. Praying and prophesying
while not wearing an external head covering brings shame to
her head, her husband. Not to her own physical head.
Not wearing a head covering while praying and prophesying brings
shame to her husband. And in this hyperbolic language,
Paul says, it's as if she's bald at that point. It's as if she's
bald if she does not cover her head. In some cultures, even
in Greek culture, some wives who committed adultery were banished
often from their home, and the husband would have had her head
shaved. And she would have been left out on the streets if she
committed adultery, and every man, woman, child in the village
would have known that woman committed adultery, her head is shaved.
It's disgraceful. She was marked out. And Paul
says, If a Christian woman does this, she might as well cut her
hair off. And that's not literal, of course.
He's not saying it's actually an option. Like, well, if you
don't really want to be bald, then wear a head covering. That's
not what he's trying to say. This is hyperbolic language where
he's trying to make a comparison that if she doesn't wear this
head covering while praying and prophesying, it's like she's
bald. So if she doesn't want to be
bald, which most women don't want to be bald, then she ought
to wear the covering. So let's think about some of
the context here. First, it was considered modest
for a woman to wear a head covering. Jewish women wore head coverings. Greek women also wore head coverings. It was in many, many cultures
at this time. Doing so often communicated,
I am unavailable. I have a husband or I have a
father that I respect. But I will say that the covering
wasn't a failsafe for that. You see, prostitutes did often
wear head coverings and even special veils. You see that in
Genesis with Tamar, do you not? Judah recognizes, he doesn't
see her face, but he recognizes a specific head covering on Tamar
and a veil, and goes, oh, she's a prostitute. and she seduces
him, and he lays with his daughter-in-law. And so obviously, this is not
foolproof. The question is though, why did
the Corinthian women stop wearing a covering at all? Well, socially,
a woman was only able to remove her covering in the privacy of
her own home. The family could see the mother's
hair. the mother could let her hair
out at home. And it's possible that with the
use of family, and now they're Christians and they're using
the word, hey brother, hey sister, as these new believers, these
Christians thought, well, we're all family now. I can remove
my covering around you because we're like family. But I think
what's more likely is this. I think that since there were
no church buildings back then, that this changed how they viewed
their worship. And so whether this is in the
context of a worship service or a prayer meeting or something,
I believe that this was a public gathering just like this is a
public gathering. That is what Paul addresses in
chapters 11-14, but while it was public, the Corinthians associated
religious gatherings with temples. They said, they thought to themselves,
they were raised up this way, how do you do something spiritual?
You go in front of a temple. How do you do something religious?
You go inside that temple. That's what they thought. So
now they've been saved and there are no church buildings. There
are large homes though. There are large homes. And what
started to happen is this family would host this Sunday, this
Lord's Day. And this family would host this
Sunday, this event. And in her home, because they
don't quite understand yet the spiritual aspect of worship, taking off coverings. Women are
just taking off coverings in homes, and they're performing
the worship service. That's possible. I'm not saying
that's 100% what it was. We don't ultimately know. Paul
doesn't say. But they were meeting in homes.
They weren't meeting in temples or church buildings. And the
family coming to my home, I can have my head uncovered. That's
a possibility. Now what is another layer of
context? This instruction for no covering
for men and a covering for women is highly specified to one occasion. What is the occasion? praying
and prophesying. And in this context of chapters
11 through 14, I understand that praying and prophesying is to
be part of a Holy Spirit-induced, charismatic event. So let's talk about that. I actually
think The charismatic praying and prophesying of the early
church has much to do with how we understand this passage on
head coverings. So go to Joel 2 with me in your
Bibles or go to your printout. Joel 2. This is going to be important. Hang with me a little bit. We'll
get back to the head coverings, but we need to see this. Look
at verses 28-32. Joel 2. Future of the New Covenant. It will come about after this
that I will pour out My Spirit on all mankind, and your sons
and daughters will prophesy. Your old men will dream dreams.
Your young men will see visions. Even on the male and female servants,
I will pour out My Spirit in those days. I will display wonders
in the sky and on the earth, blood, fire, and columns of smoke. The sun will be turned into darkness
and the moon into blood before the great and awesome day of
the Lord comes. and it will come about that whoever
calls on the name of the Lord will be delivered. For on Mount
Zion and in Jerusalem there will be those who escape, as the Lord
has said, even among the survivors whom the Lord calls." In Acts 2, the Apostle Peter
receives the Holy Spirit and he preaches his very first sermon
to the people that day of Pentecost. And what does he quote? He quotes
this exact passage from Joel chapter 2, indicating that this
spirit, this pouring out of this spirit in this moment on Pentecost
was prophesied so many hundreds of years before. He says it's
happening right now. This Joel 2 moment, he says it's
right now. That's what Peter says. And what
I want to argue is that the rest of that Joel 2 prophecy about
judgment and wonders in the sky and being rescued is not something
that is thousands of years later at the end of time. Let me say
it again. I do not believe that this rest
of this prophecy in Joel 2 is to mean something that is thousands
of years later at the end of time, that as if Peter says,
hey, this is happening now, but then that's going to happen thousands
of years later. I don't think that's what's being said. Joel
and Peter are talking about a series of events that will occur from
the ascension of Christ, which is the day of Pentecost, with
the pouring out of the Spirit, prophesying in dreams that will
occur in the middle. So you have basically the ascension
of Christ, the day of Pentecost right here. In the middle, you
have this praying and prophesying, charismatic moment of the church.
And then you'll have the coming day of the Lord. So three sections. Pentecost. Christ ascending.
The middle that the church lives in in the book of Acts. Then
finally it ends with the coming day of the Lord. Forty years
later, from the moment that Peter preached this, would be the AD
70 event, the year AD 70, which was the destruction of Jerusalem,
that Jesus warned that not one stone of the temple would be
left upon another in Matthew 24. He says in Matthew 23 and
24, He says, this will occur in your
lifetimes. You will see this. And I believe
that Jesus was not lying. That was the truth. Josephus
even records seeing a sword in the sky, seeing signs in the
sky, these amazing events in the sky. These signs did occur.
And the Roman armies did, as Jesus says in Luke, surround
Jerusalem. That indeed happened. And Josephus
records that it was one of the most horrific days of judgment
from God he's ever seen. Cannibalism because of hunger. I told you before in one of my
sermons that as people walked up to Jerusalem, they thought
they saw a fence around it, but it turned out to be so many crosses
of crucified men, women, and children that it looked like
a fence around the city. It was a horrific event, you
guys. And historically, the Christians did get rescued. They fled to
a place called Pella. Just as Joel 2 said, there would
be survivors who escape, all whom the Lord calls. These were
the ones who called upon the Lord Jesus Christ. And so, as
much as a lot of this language seems like earth-ending language,
this same prophetic and hyperbolic language occurs in many other
places in the Scripture. We see in Isaiah 13, Isaiah 34,
Ezekiel 32, Amos 8. Those are just to name a few.
And those did happen. And guess what? It says things
like the moon will turn to blood, the sky will fall. And it says
in Scripture that those days happened, but guess what? We're
still here. Those are hyperbolic and prophetic moments to say
something from God is happening and it's really big, and He's
bringing judgment. This is called a day of the Lord.
A day of the Lord. In other words, Joel's prophecy
that Peter said was occurring right there at Pentecost was
not followed by a break of thousands of years that you and I are still
waiting to have happen. Rather, this is about the setting
up of the new covenant church at Pentecost, and the next 40
years for the church, which is the church's wilderness wanderings,
just like the old covenant. where God leads them until the
winding up of the Old Covenant. What have I told you before?
That the church in the book of Acts is in this unique position. We've never been in it. At this
time in the book of Acts, these 40 years of the church, you have
an overlap. The Old Testament and the New
Testament are overlapped. And the book of Hebrews says
one day, the Old Testament, the Old Covenant, will fade away. It will go away. And what will
remain is the New Covenant. what's shaken and remains. I've told you about this overlap.
We're talking about the fact that Jesus sacrificed Himself
and He ascended into heaven. But in a town called Jerusalem,
in a temple, priests were still dressed up with the ephod and
the turban, and they were sacrificing animals to appease God. And God
goes, I will not have that anymore. No one will sacrifice another
animal in place of My Son. My Son's been sacrificed. And
so this temple will be destroyed. This city will be ended. And
you know what? It has not been rebuilt to this
very day. I believe for that reason. Because
Jesus is the ultimate sacrifice. There will be no other sacrifices
but Him and His alone. So, the old is passing away. The new has come. This is the
period in which the Corinthian church lives. This middle area.
This 40 years. And so, let me give you a few
more things to help you wrap your mind around this, some typology.
Think about it this way. Luke. Luke is a Gospel writer. He wrote the Gospel according
to Luke. That was like the book of Genesis for the New Covenant. How the Creator God, in a sense,
came down and recreated people. Jesus calls it, what, being born
again. It is the new birth. It is the
regeneration, the regenesis. And then Luke also pairs his
Gospel of Christ with, what, the book of Acts. Acts. He is the author of the Acts
of the Apostles, Luke. This is the account of the exodus
made new. This is the departing from slavery
from sin, like the Israelites departed from the slavery in
Egypt. This is leaving the old taskmaster
of Satan, like fleeing Pharaoh. The waters of the Red Sea were
like our waters of baptism. Then, having God's own presence
in a pillar of cloud by day and a pillar of fire by night to
lead His people is like at the day of Pentecost when fire rested
on them as the Holy Spirit. And now, the Holy Spirit leads
them. Just like the pillar led the
Israelites. Heading to the Promised Land,
which is the global establishment of the Gospel of the Kingdom.
What is the new promised land? The entire earth. The whole world
is the new promised land. There is not one place that will
not be Christ. From the sea to sea, from the
river to the ends of the earth, all of this is Jesus' and we
will inherit this kingdom. And so this is the promised land.
But to get to this promised land, The Israelites needed direction
from God through revelation, and what did they get in the
Old Testament? They got a prophet, Moses. Well, likewise, direction
was needed for Christ's church in their 40 years being in this
middle portion as they wandered and wandered, and the Gospel
spread, and it was becoming solidified. They needed revelation from God.
And so apostles and prophets were given during this time for
that reason. And you think about it this way.
Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceeds
from the mouth of God. That is to say, Scripture is
often illustrated by bread. What happened in the wilderness?
Manna fell from heaven. And I will use that analogy to
demonstrate that during this 40 years of the church wandering
in the book of Acts, they needed manna from heaven as little nuggets
of prophecy. Dreams, prophecies, visions. They rained down. They came down
upon God's people. They needed direction. There
was no New Testament yet. There was nothing solidified
yet. These things came down from God during this time. It was
for the church's benefit until the canon of Scripture was formed,
which is like our stone tablets. There was old stone tablets.
Now we have the solidified stone tablet that God wrote called
the Holy Scriptures, your Bible. They're set in stone. And the
canon is complete today. So you see, Genesis, Exodus,
Luke, Acts, type, fulfillment, shadow, substance. So, what does
any of that have to do with head coverings for women today? I
believe it has everything to do with it. As Joel and Peter
said, your daughters will prophesy. There will be prophetesses. In
fact, before this time, there were several prophetesses. You
had Miriam, Deborah, Huldah, and Noadiah. They're all mentioned
in the Old Testament as being prophetesses. Even in the New
Testament, right when Jesus is born, they go to the temple and
a woman named Anna Anna is a prophetess and Luke 2 comes up to him. However,
in the 40 years between Pentecost and Jerusalem's destruction,
the coming day of the Lord, there would not be the unusual, singular,
lone prophetess. One random prophetess for 40
years. That would not be the case. There would be many, many
prophetesses raised up. Even Philip the Evangelist in
Acts 21.9 had four virgin daughters who possessed the gift of prophecy.
So we see at this point in the church's history, it was no longer
a rarity among women, but now is common in the church age to
prophesy. So that leads us into the context
of our passage in question. 1 Corinthians 11. During the
time of the letter to the church at Corinth, it would have been
that 40 years as I keep telling you, and they needed prophecy. head coverings were then for,
as Paul says, not all of Christian life, but what? What does it
say? While praying and prophesying. He doesn't say wear this always. Wear this when you see each other
every day. Wear it all day. He says specifically,
I find it interesting, he qualifies. He could have just said without
any qualifier, a woman ought to wear a head covering. Why
does he say, while praying and prophesying? It's a praying and
prophesying occasion. And as I said, at that time Paul
was writing, before the completion of the canon of Scripture, most
churches would have had very little, if any, New Testament
text that we have now. Some letters were circulating,
but it was very early on. They needed more direct teaching
from God. And it seems that the raising
up of male prophets and female prophetesses foretold by Joel,
just as Joel said, and just as it was confirmed by the Apostle
Peter at Pentecost, it was precisely for this reason. The gift of
prophesying spoken of in this epistle contains Not even foretelling. Telling the future. But it contains
foretelling. What God has already done. And
we're going to go more into that when we get into chapter 14.
But the office of preaching was unique from this prophetic, charismatic
praying and prophesying for women. We're going to see in chapter
14, and this is I'm telling you, I think that you've possibly
been told wrong about 1 Corinthians 14 where it says a woman should
keep silent in church. I can't wait to get to that because
you might be looking at this. She's praying and prophesying
in a public gathering setting, but then he says to be silent.
I can't wait to tell you all about what that means. And we'll
get to it. I was talking to Pastor Andrew
about it earlier this morning. Let me just get you excited for
that. But essentially, the office of
preaching is definitely a prophetic one. But there's a distinguished
element here from foretelling or revelatory prophecy that according
to chapter 13, he says prophecies will be done away with. They
will pass away. And so as much as we're heading
a little bit into concepts of later chapters, I'll give more
evidence then in the future. This is where we're going. We're
going to be talking about the spiritual gifts. But what I will
tell you today is that the spiritual gifts of healings, tongues, and
prophecies, according to Scripture, have ceased in a normative sense
among Christians today. Seeing as how these charismatic
gifts Their greatest purpose was served to spread the Gospel
like wildfire in an anti-Christian Roman empire, as well as these
gifts were meant to edify and aid the church until the New
Testament Word was given. Now, Pastor Wade doesn't believe
in miracles. That's false. I believe that
miracles are happening all over the world today. I've heard some
of you express miracles that have happened to you yourself.
But, each Christian man, each Christian woman, each Christian
child, I believe is not getting these gifts indiscriminately.
not in a normative sense. You simply won't walk in to Christian
churches all over this country or even all over the world today
and see these gifts used in their true and biblical and ordered
sense that Paul delivered them. You just won't go in. Go to some
of the most biblical, faithful churches. You just won't see
this. Is there something wrong with them? Is there something
wrong with you? Is there something wrong with
me? I haven't broken out in tongues in the four years we've been
here. What's wrong with us? What's wrong with the most faithful
church? I'm talking Christ-loving people,
and they don't possess prophecy, tongues, or immediate healing. What's wrong with them? Well,
some people would say we're all not believers. And that's just
completely erroneous. I believe the Scripture shows
The gifts of charismatic praying and prophesying have ceased in
a normative sense. Head coverings, therefore, have
lost their time and occasion for which they were prescribed.
This charismatic, Holy Spirit-induced praying and prophesying that
was for the middle portion of the church has ceased in a normative
sense, so this occasion for prophetesses who would wear head coverings
has ended. There's no occasion for this.
This is not happening in the world today. But the question
might be in your mind, why were the head coverings needed at
all? Read verses 7 through 12 with me of 1 Corinthians 11. For a man ought not to have his
head covered, since he is the image and glory of God, but the
woman is the glory of man. For man does not originate from
woman, but woman from man. For indeed, man was not created
for the woman's sake, but woman for the man's sake. Therefore,
the woman ought to have a symbol of authority on her head because
of the angels. However, in the Lord, neither
is woman independent of man, nor is man independent of woman.
For as the woman originates from the man, so also the man has
his birth through the woman, and all things originate from
God. What was verse 3 about? Heads. Proper heads. Headship. Do you
see how we just come right back to headship? This created order. This is what this is. Verses
7-12. This is the created order. Shows headship as well. And yet
once again, just in case anyone thinks that these verses change
the value of a woman, Paul states the husband's and wife's interdependence. They need each other equally
and mutually. It says, although that this is
the way it happened, he needs her, and she needs him. It clarifies. So what we see here is that headship
plays out in this either shaming or bringing glory to your respective
head. The wife is the glory of her
husband and should honor him in her actions. She should seek
to represent Him well. The Bible shows this headship
in multiple places. We see it in Peter's epistle.
We especially see it in Ephesians 5. We see it even in the Gospels.
We see it in the Old Testament. If you want to even read, this
word head, kephale, is in Ephesians 5. I put it in your printout.
This headship. This is important to God. These
roles. Even the Trinity has different
roles. So you have to understand, the
spiritual gifts weren't given to Christians indiscriminately.
And what do I mean by that? What I mean is, oh hey, I'm a
believer, so I'm going to get every single gift. I'm going
to get tongues. I'm going to get prophecy. I'm going to get
healings. I'm going to get exercising of demons. Whoa! That's like
relegated to Christ and the apostles, right? And so even during this
40 years of the church wandering, as I keep calling it, you probably
got one of those things. You didn't get all of them indiscriminately. You've got to think about it
this way. A husband may have been given the gift of healing.
He can pray over someone, and by the power of God, not the
power in him, by the power of God, he could heal someone. But
then, But then he goes and his wife is now a prophetess in the
church. She gets the gift of prophecy
and prophetic praying. Maybe this man had the gift of
tongues, but his daughters can have this charismatic praying
and prophesying. But I have to tell you, there
is a temptation even back then, for when someone has the gift
of revelation, to exalt them. Wow! This woman, she speaks for
God. Wow! We should honor her. We
should pay reverence to her. Wow! This man's daughters, we
should give them gifts. We should honor these prophetesses.
And that was a potential temptation for those in the church. And
so because of the temptation to elevate people in the congregation
with these revelatory gifts, getting direction from God, to
maintain the created order of headship, to maintain the created
order of headship, the women were given a symbol of authority
on their heads while praying and prophesying. While praying
and prophesying. While praying and prophesying.
And it showed her humble nature. Though I have this gift, I will
make little of myself. Because I don't want people to
praise me, I want people to praise God. I have this gift, but I
follow God's authority. I seek to make little of myself,
and I will honor my husband, I will honor my father, in turn
that honors God. So while speaking wonderful prophetic
utterances from God, she demonstrates with this head covering, I submit
to my head. I have this amazing gift. People
hear me in the worship service or in a prayer meeting, but she
has this covering on and it communicates, I submit to God's design. I submit
to God's design. She's not like the prophetess
in Revelation 2.20 in which Jesus calls her Jezebel. He says there's
a woman named Jezebel, a prophetess, who leads people astray. She
elevates herself above others. Above me, Jesus says, Revelation
2. Now, what does this have to do
with angels? Have you always wondered that?
Just raise your hand. Who's read this and gone, why? Because of
the angels, right? I'm sure we all have. Well, Luke
15, 1 Timothy 5, Hebrews 1, Hebrews 12, and other places in the Old
Testament demonstrate that there are observers of God's people
God's holy angels like to observe God's people. Angels enjoy your
worship of God. That is to say, when we meet
here corporately on Sundays and praise God, it's possible that
right now, even in this moment, angels are watching our service
and enjoying our praise of God. That's the reality. They observe.
Those texts show that they praise God when someone converts. All
heaven rejoices when one repents and returns. Heaven watches. The angels watch. The angels
enjoy it. They delight in it. And so because
God's angels worship God as we worship God in our gatherings,
we ought to do so with reverence and with order. And that is most
likely why Paul says to do this because of the angels in v. 10.
Headship or order in our worship service glorifies God and it
blesses the observing angels and follows in line with the
created order. Paul says they were there at
the beginning. The angels witnessed the creation of the earth. And
when God made man and women in his own image and likeness, the
angels celebrated, praise God. He's made man. And so when a
woman honors that created order of headship, the creation of
man and woman, when they correct what has been destroyed for thousands
of years from that moment in the garden of sin, when a woman
honors her husband in that way, angels are observing and they
glorify God in heaven. back to the way creation started.
And the holy angels praise the living God as they watch us.
They sing for joy. Now, if the Apostle Paul can't
convince the Corinthians of this through headship and creation,
he's going to even appeal to them with the society around
them. These are the final verses. You
see in verse 14, you see verse 15, You see these moments where
Paul talks about here. I'm not going to go all into
it. We need to keep moving, but essentially. What he's trying
to say is men who have short hair are more masculine, he supposes. I think you could get some timeless
principles out of this, that it's important for a man to look
like a man, it's important for a woman to look like a woman,
and that ought to be celebrated. But there are obviously times
in the Old Testament where you see Samson with long hair, Long
hair on a man doesn't always mean he's going against what
Paul's talking about here. A shorter haircut for a woman
doesn't always mean she's going against these very things. One
thing that you have to think about is in this culture, there
were statues all around Corinth of false gods. And in these statues
of these false gods, there would be a man next to him, and the
man would be very small, and the false god, the idol, would
be very large. And the men would be in subjugation
to the false god. And you know how they made the
men look, the Greek men look? They made them have long hair,
and they made them look effeminate. And then they made the male idols
in Corinth have short hair and look very strong, muscular, and
masculine. And so Paul appeals to them,
even in their Corinthian culture, and says, look at the statues
around you. Doesn't even your society show? That short hair
on a woman is against that. Long hair on a man is against
that. And so it's just another way for him to argue the need
for head coverings in worship service. That's all. This doesn't
derail the whole thing and go to the topic of hair and make
the covering about hair. This is just another tool of
this evangelist to convince them to wear it. And then it ends
on verse 16. And Paul puts a pretty strong
statement down. He essentially says, if there's
anyone there at Corinth inclined to argue about this, we have
no such custom of uncovered women in our church, nor do the other
churches of God. Meaning to say, this is not a
problem for anyone but you. We do this. We cover. Women cover
their heads in all the other churches. And so if anyone argues
there, just let them know that they would be the odd one out. But this head covering is done
in what occasion, church? while praying and prophesying
in charismatic utterances. And that's the key. The occasion
is gone. The timeless principles still
remain. But the charismata has ceased. The charismata is gone. Miracles are still happening
today. But you and I don't each have these individual gifts.
Neither do other people in the world. So let me conclude this
morning with some application. from these timeless principles
that we've seen. And hear me out. This is a loving challenge. Go to any church where coverings
are considered a commandment, and you will not find the women
praying and prophesying in charismatic utterance. Go to any church where
the women cover, and you will not see that. Not in the worship
service. Not in the prayer meeting or
the Bible study. Go to churches Go to a church that says they
still possess the charismatic gifts of the book of Acts today,
and they do them daily, and go to those people who say they
have the gifts, and try to find one woman with a head covering.
Try to find one woman who speaks in tongues, or prophesies and
actually wears a covering. You will not find it. You will
not find it. And something you will certainly
Not find among those types of churches is sound doctrine. They
are doing fake charismata. It's my belief. I believe that's
from scripture, and I don't say that to offend people. We're
gonna go through that. Don't line up after church. Let
me go through chapters 11, 12, 13, 14, then ask me questions,
okay? Funny how that plays out, right?
The head covering people don't do the praying and prophesying.
The praying and prophesying people don't wear the head coverings.
It's interesting. And what's difficult for me,
churches, none of the language here, and I poured through the
Greek, none of the language here is in the imperative. That is
the command form. It's all in the indicative. It's
all a description. Imperative language commands
It's as if God expected this head covering while praying and
prophesying to one day cease with the gifts. There's not a
single commandment in the Mosaic law that a woman needs this to
pray or to worship God. There's not a single commandment
for this in the Gospels from Christ for women to do this. We find this in no other place
in Scripture but here. And it has this specific context
that I already told you about. I personally do not see how an
external garment could communicate headship and submissiveness today
like it did back then. I just don't see it. In all my
ministry, although I have found many humble women, many God-loving,
God-fearing, submissive, head-honoring women who are convicted to wear
head coverings, I see it. I know they're out there, so
this is not a hasty generalization. I will say, though, in my ministry,
I've encountered many frustrated men whose wife disregarded his
desire to study and pray about this and talk with their elders,
or he decided he's not convicted of this, and she decides on her
own that she will wear a head covering. Thereby going against
the very heart of this passage, I think it's entirely possible
today for you to honor your head in church. I think children can
do the same. Even without the covering. And
so ladies, does your demeanor show this? Do your actions prove
this? Do your words indicate your submission
to God's design? Meaning simple things like are
you kind and courteous to others? Do you have a gentle and discreet
spirit? Do you show preference to your husband and seek to honor
him in front of other people in this church? Do you do it
at home in front of the children? Do you practice modesty and biblical
beauty? Do you cover your body in the
right areas so that only your husband knows what it's like
uncovered? Are you a woman who reveals she knows Christ and
seeks to make Him known? Do you submit to your husband
and give him respect as the Bible calls you to? If you do these
things, it says here, you will be to your husband's glory. You
will honor him before all the saints and before even angels
and God. The heart of today's passage
is for women to not make spectacles of themselves not making much
of yourself, but making much of Christ and making much of
your husband or your father. And in turn, that honors God. On Sunday mornings, before you
enter here, consider less of your fashion and consider more
of how you humbly present yourself to the people in front of your
head and your husband. Listen. Listen to what a wife
should be to her head in Proverbs 12.4. Listen to this. An excellent
wife is the crown of her husband. Isn't that amazing? She goes
on his head where everyone can see. An excellent wife is a crown
to her husband. It shines. She shines. She shines
on him. He's proud to wear it. He's proud
to wear her. An excellent wife is a crown
of her husband, but she who shames him is like rottenness deep in
his bones." That's the heart of this passage. So at this point,
head coverings are simply a wonderful tradition in the Christian church. I think if you loved the headship
aspect of this passage, And you thought, that would be really
neat to have a visual representation of that headship, because I really
like that. I think you would be free to
start wearing one right away. In fact, you could wear one next
Sunday. Your leadership won't come up
to you. We won't say anything. This is a freedom-related thing. You could wear it. I think it
would be just fine. Any woman here can wear a head
covering if her and her husband so choose. Or you could choose
not to wear one. since you are not joining in
in charismatic praying and prophesying, and you could simply just, both
of you, both types of women, focus on honoring your covenantal
head. These choices are related to
freedom, not legalism. But what a woman is not free
to do here is to be the cause of shame to her husband like
the rottenness in his bones. Let's not let That piece of cloth
on a woman's head distract us from God's design for her. And
that's why I titled the sermon this way. I titled it, Honoring
the Head or Honoring the Covering? Honoring the Head or the Covering?
What do we honor more? Do we care more about a symbol
of headship outside Or do we care more about the headship
and the heart on the inside and in the private place? What do you do at home? What
do you do elsewhere? So, someone said that should
have been the Mother's Day sermon. There is grace for us. There
is grace. There is grace for men. There
is grace for women. If anyone should need it, repentance can
be found today. And should anyone need it, and
you do need it, and I need it, grace is ready to steadily flow
from the hand of Jesus Christ to you this morning, who is our
eternal head. He is the husband of the church.
And so this point, There you go. That's the case. And I hope
it blesses you. I hope you see the heart of this
passage. Let's go ahead and pray. Heavenly
Father, thank You for Your Word. Thank You that it's sufficient.
Lord, You know my concern. Lord, You know that I have seen
the church do this for almost 2,000 years. That definitely makes me wonder.
And yet, Lord, we cannot deny the authority of Your Word. It
speaks louder than history. It speaks louder than man-made
tradition, even though they're wonderful traditions. And so
God, I thank You that today this sermon wasn't simply just about
coverings for men and women. I thank You, God, that You really
showed us the heart of headship, the heart of right relationships,
especially towards husband and wife. So Lord, please continue
to do a work among us. We need Your sanctification.
We need to do this better, Lord. I understand, Lord, that men are
not properly loving their wives like Christ loves the church.
And that time will come when we preach on that. But Lord,
I pray that we would let this sink in today, especially for
the ladies here, how important it is to honor their head, their
husband. And to understand that I'm not
using language made up to subjugate anyone, but this is in the Holy
Scripture. And so, Lord, thank you for speaking
to us today. And Lord, we pray that you are
pleased this morning and that you will continue to be pleased
by our worship and the angels would rejoice. Pray this in Jesus'
name. Amen. All right. It is time to come to the table
for the Lord's Supper. And that's actually what we're
preaching on for the next two Sundays. So that'll be exciting. If you are a believer in the
Lord Jesus Christ, this table is open to you. Please feel free
to come to the table, enjoy, take of the elements. Remember
the blood that was shed in seeing the red wine. Remember the body
that hung on the cross in the bread. Jesus said, consume these
things, eat of these things, and remember him. If you are
not a believer in the Lord Jesus Christ, please