Women Teaching or Having Authority
“"I do not permit a woman to teach or to assume authority over a man." Is this a universal prohibition or a local instruction?”
"I do not permit a woman to teach or to assume authority over a man; she must be quiet. For Adam was formed first, then Eve." — 1 Timothy 2:12-13 (NIV)
First Timothy 2:12 is the most explicit prohibition of women's teaching in the New Testament, and it grounds its instruction in the creation narrative rather than in local custom, which has led many to read it as a universal principle. Yet the same letter mentions women who appear to have significant roles in the early church, and Paul's other letters acknowledge women prophets and coworkers. Is this a timeless norm or an address to a specific situation in Ephesus?
Hard verses are where our biases and assumptions do the most damage. Before diving into scholarly perspectives, consider which thinking patterns might be shaping how you read this passage.
The appeal to creation order (Adam formed first, then Eve) lifts the instruction above local circumstance and grounds it in the nature of male-female relations from the beginning. Scholars like Andreas Kostenberger argue authentein (translated "authority") means the legitimate exercise of authority, not a negative dominance, and that the prohibition is therefore a permanent limitation on women's roles in church leadership. The same argument appears in 1 Corinthians 14:34-35, providing a Pauline consistency across two different communities.
Many egalitarian scholars (Philip Payne, Linda Belleville, I. Howard Marshall) read the passage as addressing the specific problem of women in Ephesus who were spreading false teaching, perhaps connected to the syncretistic proto-Gnostic speculation that 1 Timothy repeatedly attacks. The unusual word authentein (used only here in the New Testament) may carry a negative sense of "domineering" rather than normal authority.
The creation argument may be correcting a Gnostic myth that Eve preceded Adam and brought superior knowledge, reversing the text to restore the correct sequence.
A majority of critical New Testament scholars classify 1 Timothy as Deutero-Pauline, written after Paul's death by a disciple in his name, reflecting a second-generation church becoming more institutionalized. This would explain why its household code restrictions are tighter than the undisputed Pauline letters, where Phoebe serves as a deacon, Priscilla teaches Apollos, and Junia is an apostle. If the letter is post-Pauline, it represents one trajectory in early Christianity rather than a universal apostolic principle.
The hapax legomenon authentein appears nowhere else in the New Testament. Studies of the word in Greek literature outside the New Testament (including Leland Wilshire's survey of 329 occurrences) show it carried negative connotations of violence, domination, and self-promotion in early literature, shifting toward neutral authority only later. If authentein in 2:12 means to domineer or usurp authority, the verse prohibits abusive behavior by women rather than any exercise of female leadership.
The key disputed word is authentein, a verb occurring only here in the New Testament. Unlike the standard Greek word for authority (exousia), authentein appears rarely in Greek literature before the second century CE. The conjunction oude ("neither...
nor") linking "teach" and "authentein" suggests the two actions form a unified concept: teaching in a domineering manner, or perhaps a pair of related activities that together constitute a problematic behavior pattern. The Greek hesuchia ("quietness") in verse 11 means tranquility or a settled disposition rather than absolute silence; a different Greek word, sige, means complete silence.
First Timothy is addressed to Timothy in Ephesus (1:3), a city whose religious environment was dominated by the cult of Artemis Ephesia, whose priesthood was female. The letter combats myths and endless genealogies and what is falsely called knowledge (gnosis, 6:20), suggesting proto-Gnostic speculation that may have drawn on female spiritual authority as a model. The women Paul addresses in 2:9-15 may be wealthy, influential women adopting the assertive public roles associated with the Artemis cult.
Reading the prohibition against this background narrows its scope considerably.
Sources: Published scholarship View all →
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