Search This Blog

Translate

Tuesday, March 31, 2020

Head-covering: Principal or Customary?

        The great (late) R.C. Sproul speaks passionately as always in this video clip about head-covering of 1 Corinthians 11:1-16. Is head-covering a principal commandment which transcends all the cultures of all times and must be obeyed; or is it a customary practice to show the submissiveness of woman unto man, which in that case, submissiveness is the principal commandment to be obeyed in all generations; or are head-covering and submissiveness both principal commandments? You may not agree with R.C. Sproul (he argues for both to be principal), but his explanation on Principal and Customs is quite edifying.
Below is the transcript:
(00:00-05:33) . . . the panel is asked this question, “Can you comment on the method of determining from Scripture and in Scripture what is strictly cultural in the New Testament, and what is for today? The common examples are things like head covering in 1 Corinthians, women in the ministry (is on the list here) and comment on that 1Timothy, but how do you go about determining what is something that is cultural and what is still for today?”

R.C. Sproul: First thing you do is you go out and you buy a book called Knowing Scripture because it has a whole chapter on Principle and Custom, and how you deal with it because there's a biblical principle that addresses that decision and that's whatever is not of faith is sin.
Now obviously you admit it the first that there are certain things that are customs you know when Jesus tells the people on the (inaudible) sends out the 70 throughout the villages of Israel, you know, not to wear shoes. This is not a universal mandate, cross-cultural mandate for shoeless evangelism in every generation. Obviously there are certain things that are clearly customs tied to the culture of the time, and there are other things that are clearly principal that transcends time.
But what you have to do, there are times when it's not immediately apparent to determine what is principle and what is custom, and I say this principle is, the burden of proof is always on the one who says it's custom rather than principle, because the principle applies that if I'm going to err I'd rather err on the side of being over scrupulous of treating something that was a local custom as if it were a transcendent principle rather than ever being guilty of taking a transcultural principle of Almighty God and reducing it to a first-century custom.
And you know you take that business about the covering the head cover and I use that as the illustration in there, and I'm a voice crying in the wilderness because if you go and get 10 commentaries on 1 Corinthians you'll find 10 commentaries, commentators that will quick to point out that in Corinth, which was a seaport city of sin cities, the sailors coming there, big red-light district and that the sign of the prostitute was the uncovered head, and so, Paul obviously gave this mandate to the Corinthian community, for the women to keep their heads covers there, was not to scandalize the community, and there is a case where this New Testament scholar studies the (inaudible) the life situation in which the letter was written and says aha this must be why Paul told the women to cover their hair.
I said no there's an exegetical principle here and the principle I would like to suggest to biblical scholars is that when the Apostle Paul gives a reason, for instructions that he imposes upon the church, you never never never never never substitute a different one. And Paul in this case, doesn't say to the Corinthian community, “Have the ladies cover their heads because the prostitutes are walking around with their bare head.” And in fact he appeals to creation and if anything transcends local customs and boundaries it’s creation ordinances. So, I said those are certain things you look at.
Now you take the whole question about covering the head, now the reason he gives this for the woman to covers are glories and shows submission to her husband, and covered in, you can say, covers, some text, so they covered by a veil or whatever, so the question is, “Well, is the submission of the wife to the husband, is that cultural, first-century only?” A lot of people think so, and so they would say the fact that the woman is supposed to be submissive is a custom, and you show that submissiveness, by the custom of the hair covering. And the customary hair covering is a veil for the hair, whatever you however you translate it.
Then the next possibility is, No, the submissiveness of the wife to the husband is transcultural, it's the principal principal matter, but it varies from culture to culture how you display that willing submission. And in the first century the way it was, was with the woman covering her hair. My mentor, John Gerstner believed that the submissive, submission was principal, the hair covering was customary, and so that that's it.
Or you can go the whole hog and say it's all principal: that submissiveness is principal, head covering is principal, and it should be with a veil not with a kerchief of babushka or a hat even like had a hopper. It, I would say, doesn't matter what the woman covers her head, and I think that, what type of covering is customary, but I think the head covering is transcendal and principal and I'm probably the only guy left it teaches that.