This is a question which cannot be treated within the narrow limits of the text, but must be considered from a viewpoint of wider scope, and in order to bring clear judgment to bear we must try to divest ourselves of the influence of that natural love we feel for our own.
The subject is one which good men, and bad men too, from opposite motives, prefer to avoid: a reticence which is probably the most potent weapon in the armoury Of ambitious women. Hence we have with us that perversion of the Divine Will referred to as " Emancipation of Women." If we *ere able to attribute to that a greater regard for virtue than existed in, say, Victorian days, there might be something to say for it. But are the "chattel's " and those unhappy women whom bad men "offend," fewer in number to-day ? Is not the prevailing impiety, which we deplore, nothing but the inevitable stage of decadence when man abdicates, woman usurps and both repent at the end, the same sin of disobedience as at the beginning?
Even if we need admit the charge of hypocrisy brought against Victorians, was not their implied simulation Of virtue at least a tribute to virtue; and having in it therefore the seed of a greater hope than is to be found in these days of impudent repudiation?
As regards Scriptural authority it should not be necessary to remind Christadelphians of Divine sentence passed upon woman for the beginning of sin, nor to point to the opinions of the apostle Paul. His opinions have the same weight as if uttered by the Beloved Master.
It seems that the present disobedience and revolt against the Divine law of life is the surest sign of a near end to the Gentile dispensation ; that the present world-wide distress and perplexity is the natural and inevitable consequence of such disobedience ; and that every clear-thinking person who has not our knowledge and our Faith can only see ahead race destruction and submergence under barbarism.
Meantime, let us rejoice that just as there always have been, there are still, many good women who are not rebels ; and that in many cases there are still men achieving what the world acclaims as success who owe what glory there may be, to a woman's vision and her loving devotion. May such win the great reward Concerning the attitude of women in the meeting of the church, Paul says : 1 Cor. 14, 34, " Let your woman keep silence in the churches : for it is not permitted unto them to speak ; but they are commanded to be under obedience as also saith the law. And if they will learn anything let them ask their husbands at home ; for it is a shame for women to speak in the church." Also 1 Tim. 2, 12, " But I suffer not a woman to teach. . . ." the teaching with authority as Jesus did, Matt. 7, 29. This agreed with the Synagogue meetings, where teaching, questions, disputing were allowed to men and boys, as in the case of the Lord Jesus, but not to women. It would be usurping authority over the man if she publicly argued and disputed.
On the other hand it is evident that women prayed and prophesied (1 Cor. 11, 5) and Paul gives directions regarding their attire, in order that while so doing they should not dishonour their head or husband (v. 3). In Acts 21, v. 9, the four daughters of Philip are mentioned as prophesying, in which connection Peter's quotation from Joel Acts 2, 17, is of interest : ". . . I will pour out of my Spirit upon all flesh, and your sons and your daughters shall prophesy . . ." This prophesying is not necessarily foretelling but can be expounding. If these women who prayed and prophesied possessed the Spirit, it would make an exception to the general rule ; or there is the possibility that the praying and prophesying took place, not at the Lord's Supper, but in instructing the young, baptism of women and other suitable occasions.
Considering the position of women in the church as the body of Christ, much of what they did in Paul's day is applicable to our own. In Rom. 16, 1, we read that Phebe was a servant, deaconess. or minister of the church, the same as the deacons in l Tim. 3, 8. In the early-church there seem. to have been these women, some of whose duties were to attend the sick, distribute to the poor, teach and attend women at baptism. The destitute widows were employed in this way by the church, and Tryphena, Tryphosa and Persis who laboured in the Lord, and the well-known Dorcas, may have been of this class.
Much is said in the Epistles of hospitality, an important virtue among early believers. Few inns existed, hence the need for the washing of the feet and the lodging of the wearied stranger. Circumstances of travel are different now, but the need for hospitality still remains. Often a brother has to spend Sundays away from his wife and children because they were not thought of when the brother was invited to speak. Many brethren and sisters lead lonely lives because they are little known, being poor and shy. Some are unable to attend meetings regularly on account of the journey being too long or too expensive. True hospitality would reach all these, and it is within the power of sisters to extend.
Another duty of the women is the care of the home and the teaching of children; the latter, at any rate, a pleasant task which should not be left entirely to the Sunday School. How much good may be done in this way is strikingly shewn by Paul's reference to the grandmother and mother of Timothy (2 Tim. 1, 5) whose father was a Greek (Acts 16, 1.)
Again, in visiting the sick, sometimes more than a mere chat is necessary a working hand is required.
In conclusion, it is a difficult matter to understand exactly how the women behaved and what they did in apostolic times and to apply it in these days as their churches appear to have been differently constituted from our own meetings. Perhaps a prior question is necessary the position of brethren in the church. In his epistle to Timothy, Paul speaks of elders who received honour or maintenance for their work and had authority, of deacons and of the laying on of hands ; while James speaks of praying over the sick and anointing them with oil in the name of the Lord.
What is the position of brethren in the church?