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Text -- 1 Timothy 2:10-15 (NET)

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Context
2:10 but with good deeds, as is proper for women who profess reverence for God. 2:11 A woman must learn quietly with all submissiveness. 2:12 But I do not allow a woman to teach or exercise authority over a man. She must remain quiet. 2:13 For Adam was formed first and then Eve. 2:14 And Adam was not deceived, but the woman, because she was fully deceived, fell into transgression. 2:15 But she will be delivered through childbearing, if she continues in faith and love and holiness with self-control.
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Names, People and Places:
 · Adam the father of Cain, Abel, Seth and all mankind,the original man created by God,a town on the Jordan at the mouth of the Jabbok (OS)
 · Eve the first woman created by God; wife of Adam,wife of Adam; mother of all the people of the earth


Dictionary Themes and Topics: WOMAN | UNCLEANNESS | TEACH; TEACHER; TEACHING | SIRACH, BOOK OF | SILENCE | PSYCHOLOGY | PROFESS; PROFESSION | ORNAMENT | Minister | MARRIAGE | FORM | FALL, THE | EVE IN THE NEW TESTAMENT | DEACON; DEACONESS | CHILD-BEARING | CHARITY | BODY | BECOME | AUTHORITY IN RELIGION | ADAM IN THE NEW TESTAMENT | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Robertson , Vincent , Wesley , JFB , Clarke , Calvin , Defender , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , PBC , Haydock , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes , Geneva Bible

Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Barclay , Constable , College

Other
Critics Ask , Evidence

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Robertson: 1Ti 2:10 - -- Becometh ( prepei ). Old word for seemly. Paul wishes women to wear "becoming"clothes, but theosebeian (godliness, from theosebēs , Joh 9:31, the...

Becometh ( prepei ).

Old word for seemly. Paul wishes women to wear "becoming"clothes, but theosebeian (godliness, from theosebēs , Joh 9:31, theos , sebomai , worship) is part of the "style"desired. Only here in N.T. Good dress and good works combined.

Robertson: 1Ti 2:11 - -- In quietness ( en hēsuchiāi ). Old word from hēsuchios . In N.T. only here, Act 22:2; 2Th 3:12.

In quietness ( en hēsuchiāi ).

Old word from hēsuchios . In N.T. only here, Act 22:2; 2Th 3:12.

Robertson: 1Ti 2:11 - -- In all subjection ( en pasēi hupotagēi ). Late word (Dion. Hal., papyri), in N.T. only here, 2Co 9:13; Gal 2:5. See 1Co 14:33-35.

In all subjection ( en pasēi hupotagēi ).

Late word (Dion. Hal., papyri), in N.T. only here, 2Co 9:13; Gal 2:5. See 1Co 14:33-35.

Robertson: 1Ti 2:12 - -- I permit not ( ouk epitrepō ). Old word epitrepō , to permit, to allow (1Co 16:7). Paul speaks authoritatively.

I permit not ( ouk epitrepō ).

Old word epitrepō , to permit, to allow (1Co 16:7). Paul speaks authoritatively.

Robertson: 1Ti 2:12 - -- To teach ( didaskein ). In the public meeting clearly. And yet all modern Christians allow women to teach Sunday school classes. One feels somehow th...

To teach ( didaskein ).

In the public meeting clearly. And yet all modern Christians allow women to teach Sunday school classes. One feels somehow that something is not expressed here to make it all clear.

Robertson: 1Ti 2:12 - -- Nor to have dominion over a man ( oude authentein andros ). The word authenteō is now cleared up by Kretschmer ( Glotta , 1912, pp. 289ff.) and b...

Nor to have dominion over a man ( oude authentein andros ).

The word authenteō is now cleared up by Kretschmer ( Glotta , 1912, pp. 289ff.) and by Moulton and Milligan’ s Vocabulary. See also Nageli, Der Wortschatz des Apostels Paulus and Deissmann, Light, etc. , pp. 88f. Autodikeō was the literary word for playing the master while authenteō was the vernacular term. It comes from auṫhentes , a self-doer, a master, autocrat. It occurs in the papyri (substantive authentēs , master, verb authenteō , to domineer, adjective authentikos , authoritative, "authentic"). Modern Greek has aphentes = Effendi = "Mark."

Robertson: 1Ti 2:13 - -- Was first formed ( prōtos eplasthē ). Note prōtos , not prōton , first before Eve. First aorist passive indicative of plassō , old verb, in...

Was first formed ( prōtos eplasthē ).

Note prōtos , not prōton , first before Eve. First aorist passive indicative of plassō , old verb, in N.T. only here and Rom 9:20 (cf. Gen 2:7.).

Robertson: 1Ti 2:14 - -- Being beguiled ( exapatētheisa ). First aorist passive participle of exapateō , old compound verb, in N.T. only by Paul (2Th 2:3; 1Co 3:18; 2Co 1...

Being beguiled ( exapatētheisa ).

First aorist passive participle of exapateō , old compound verb, in N.T. only by Paul (2Th 2:3; 1Co 3:18; 2Co 11:3; Rom 7:11; Rom 16:18; 1Ti 2:14). Not certain that eẋ here means "completely deceived"in contrast to simplex (ouk ēpatēthē ) used of Adam, though possible.

Robertson: 1Ti 2:14 - -- Hath fallen ( gegonen ). Second perfect indicative active, permanent state. See note on 1Co 11:7.

Hath fallen ( gegonen ).

Second perfect indicative active, permanent state. See note on 1Co 11:7.

Robertson: 1Ti 2:15 - -- Through the child-bearing ( dia tēs teknogonias ). Late and rare word (in Aristotle). Here alone in N.T. From teknogonos and this from teknon a...

Through the child-bearing ( dia tēs teknogonias ).

Late and rare word (in Aristotle). Here alone in N.T. From teknogonos and this from teknon and root genō . This translation makes it refer to the birth of the Saviour as glorifying womanhood. That is true, but it is not clear that Paul does not have mostly in mind that child-bearing, not public teaching, is the peculiar function of woman with a glory and dignity all its own. "She will be saved"(sōthēsetai ) in this function, not by means of it.

Robertson: 1Ti 2:15 - -- If they continue ( ean meinōsin ). Condition of third class, ean with first aorist active subjunctive of menō , to continue. Note change to plu...

If they continue ( ean meinōsin ).

Condition of third class, ean with first aorist active subjunctive of menō , to continue. Note change to plural from the singular (sōthēsetai ).

Vincent: 1Ti 2:10 - -- Professing ( ἐπαγγελλομέναις ) In the sense of professing only in the Pastorals. In Tit 1:2, and everywhere else in N.T. it ...

Professing ( ἐπαγγελλομέναις )

In the sense of professing only in the Pastorals. In Tit 1:2, and everywhere else in N.T. it means promise . See Act 7:5; Rom 4:21; Gal 3:19, etc.

Vincent: 1Ti 2:10 - -- Godliness ( θεοσεβείαν ) N.T.o . Several times in lxx. The adjective θεοσεβής worshipping God , Joh 9:31. It is = εὐ...

Godliness ( θεοσεβείαν )

N.T.o . Several times in lxx. The adjective θεοσεβής worshipping God , Joh 9:31. It is = εὐσέβεια . See 1Ti 2:2. Const. by good works with professing godliness: omit the parenthesis which - godliness ; take which (ὅ ) as = with that which (ἐν τούτῳ ὅ ) and construe it with adorn . The whole will then read: " That women adorn themselves in modest apparel, with shamefastness and sobriety; not with braided hair, or gold, or pearls, or costly array, but (adorn themselves) with that which becometh women professing godliness through good works."

Vincent: 1Ti 2:11 - -- Learn ( μανθανέτω ) Comp. 1Co 14:35.

Learn ( μανθανέτω )

Comp. 1Co 14:35.

Vincent: 1Ti 2:11 - -- In silence ( ἐν ἡσυχίᾳ ) See on peaceable , 1Ti 2:2. Rev. renders quietness ; but the admonition concerns the behavior of women...

In silence ( ἐν ἡσυχίᾳ )

See on peaceable , 1Ti 2:2. Rev. renders quietness ; but the admonition concerns the behavior of women in religious assemblies. Comp. 1Co 14:34. The word is used in the sense of silence , Act 22:2 : with the broader meaning quietness in 2Th 3:12.

Vincent: 1Ti 2:12 - -- Suffer ( ἐπιτρέπω ) Lit. turn over to ; thence, permit . See 1Co 14:34.

Suffer ( ἐπιτρέπω )

Lit. turn over to ; thence, permit . See 1Co 14:34.

Vincent: 1Ti 2:12 - -- Usurp authority ( αὐθεντεῖν ) N.T.o . o lxx, o Class. It occurs in late ecclesiastical writers. The kindred noun αὐθέντη...

Usurp authority ( αὐθεντεῖν )

N.T.o . o lxx, o Class. It occurs in late ecclesiastical writers. The kindred noun αὐθέντης one who does a thing with his own hand , Wisd. 12:6, and also in Herodotus, Euripides, and Thucydides. Ἁυθεντία right , 3 Macc. 2:29. The verb means to do a thing one's self ; hence, to exercise authority . The A.V. usurp authority is a mistake. Rend. to have or exercise dominion over .

Vincent: 1Ti 2:13 - -- Was formed ( ἐπλάσθη ) Comp. Rom 9:20. Strictly of one working in soft substances, as a potter in clay; moulding or shaping . Oft...

Was formed ( ἐπλάσθη )

Comp. Rom 9:20. Strictly of one working in soft substances, as a potter in clay; moulding or shaping . Often in Class. and lxx.

Vincent: 1Ti 2:14 - -- Was not deceived ( οὐκ ἠπατήθη ) Once in Paul, Eph 5:6. Comp. 2Co 11:3. Rev. beguiled . As it is evident that Adam was beguiled,...

Was not deceived ( οὐκ ἠπατήθη )

Once in Paul, Eph 5:6. Comp. 2Co 11:3. Rev. beguiled . As it is evident that Adam was beguiled, the interpreters have tried many ways of explaining the expression, either by supplying πρῶτος first , or by saying (as Bengel) that the woman did not deceive the man, but persuaded him; or by supplying by the serpent , or so long as he was alone ; or by saying that Eve was directly and Adam indirectly deceived.

Vincent: 1Ti 2:14 - -- Being deceived ( ἐξαπατηθεῖσα ) Completely or thoroughly beguiled.

Being deceived ( ἐξαπατηθεῖσα )

Completely or thoroughly beguiled.

Vincent: 1Ti 2:14 - -- Was in the transgression ( ἐν παραβάσει γέγονεν ) A.V. misses the force of γέγονεν. Γίνεσθαι ἐν o...

Was in the transgression ( ἐν παραβάσει γέγονεν )

A.V. misses the force of γέγονεν. Γίνεσθαι ἐν often signifies the coming or falling into a condition, as Act 12:11; Act 22:17; Rev 1:10; 1Co 2:3; 2Co 3:7; 1Th 2:5. Rend. hath fallen into transgression .

Vincent: 1Ti 2:15 - -- She shall be saved in childbearing ( σωθήσεται διὰ τῆς τεκνογονίας ) Better, " through the childbearing." (1...

She shall be saved in childbearing ( σωθήσεται διὰ τῆς τεκνογονίας )

Better, " through the childbearing." (1) Saved is used in the ordinary N.T. sense. (2) She shall be saved is set over against hath fallen into transgression . (3) It is difficult to see what is the peculiar saving virtue of childbearing. (4) The subject of σωθήσεται shall be saved is the same as that of ἐν παραβάσει γέγονεν hath fallen into transgression . A common explanation is that γυνή is to be taken in its generic sense as referring to all Christian mothers, who will be saved in fulfilling their proper destiny and acquiescing in all the conditions of a Christian woman's life, instead of attempting to take an active part as teachers or otherwise in public religious assemblies. On the other hand, the woman , Eve, may be regarded as including all the Christian mothers. Notice the change to the plural, " if they continue." She, though she fell into transgression, shall be saved " by the childbearing" (Gen 3:15); that is, by the relation in which the woman stood to the Messiah. This seems to be the better explanation. Τεκνογονία child bearing , N.T.o . o lxx, o Class. Comp. τεκνογονεῖν to bear children , 1Ti 5:14. The expression is utterly un-Pauline.

Vincent: 1Ti 2:15 - -- If they continue ( ἐὰν μείνωσιν ) They , the woman regarded collectively or as including her descendants. The promise does not ...

If they continue ( ἐὰν μείνωσιν )

They , the woman regarded collectively or as including her descendants. The promise does not exempt them from the cultivation of Christian virtues and the discharge of Christian duties.

Vincent: 1Ti 2:15 - -- Sanctification ( ἁγιασμῷ ) A Pauline word; but the triad, faith , love , sanctification , is unique in N.T.

Sanctification ( ἁγιασμῷ )

A Pauline word; but the triad, faith , love , sanctification , is unique in N.T.

Wesley: 1Ti 2:12 - -- By public teaching.

By public teaching.

Wesley: 1Ti 2:13 - -- So that woman was originally the inferior.

So that woman was originally the inferior.

Wesley: 1Ti 2:14 - -- The serpent deceived Eve: Eve did not deceive Adam, but persuaded him. "Thou hast hearkened unto the voice of thy wife," Gen 3:17. The preceding verse...

The serpent deceived Eve: Eve did not deceive Adam, but persuaded him. "Thou hast hearkened unto the voice of thy wife," Gen 3:17. The preceding verse showed why a woman should not "usurp authority over the man." this shows why she ought not "to teach." She is more easily deceived, and more easily deceives.

Wesley: 1Ti 2:14 - -- "The serpent deceived" her, Gen 3:13, and she transgressed.

"The serpent deceived" her, Gen 3:13, and she transgressed.

Wesley: 1Ti 2:15 - -- That is, women in general, who were all involved with Eve in the sentence pronounced, Gen 3:16.

That is, women in general, who were all involved with Eve in the sentence pronounced, Gen 3:16.

Wesley: 1Ti 2:15 - -- Carried safe through the pain and danger which that sentence entails upon them for the transgression; yea, and finally saved, if they continue in lovi...

Carried safe through the pain and danger which that sentence entails upon them for the transgression; yea, and finally saved, if they continue in loving faith and holy wisdom.

JFB: 1Ti 2:9-10 - -- The context requires that we understand these directions as to women, in relation to their deportment in public worship, though the rules will hold go...

The context requires that we understand these directions as to women, in relation to their deportment in public worship, though the rules will hold good on other occasions also.

JFB: 1Ti 2:9-10 - -- "in seemly guise" [ELLICOTT]. The adjective means properly. orderly, decorous, becoming; the noun in secular writings means conduct, bearing. But here...

"in seemly guise" [ELLICOTT]. The adjective means properly. orderly, decorous, becoming; the noun in secular writings means conduct, bearing. But here "apparel." Women are apt to love fine dress; and at Ephesus the riches of some (1Ti 6:17) would lead them to dress luxuriously. The Greek in Tit 2:3 is a more general term meaning "deportment."

JFB: 1Ti 2:9-10 - -- TRENCH spells this word according to its true derivation, "shamefastness" (that which is made fast by an honorable shame); as "steadfastness" (compare...

TRENCH spells this word according to its true derivation, "shamefastness" (that which is made fast by an honorable shame); as "steadfastness" (compare 1Ti 2:11-12).

JFB: 1Ti 2:9-10 - -- "self-restraint" [ALFORD]. Habitual inner self-government [TRENCH]. I prefer ELLICOTT'S translation, "sober-mindedness": the well-balanced state of mi...

"self-restraint" [ALFORD]. Habitual inner self-government [TRENCH]. I prefer ELLICOTT'S translation, "sober-mindedness": the well-balanced state of mind arising from habitual self-restraint.

JFB: 1Ti 2:9-10 - -- Greek, "in."

Greek, "in."

JFB: 1Ti 2:9-10 - -- Literally, "plaits," that is, plaited hair: probably with the "gold and pearls" intertwined (1Pe 3:3). Such gaud is characteristic of the spiritual ha...

Literally, "plaits," that is, plaited hair: probably with the "gold and pearls" intertwined (1Pe 3:3). Such gaud is characteristic of the spiritual harlot (Rev 17:4).

JFB: 1Ti 2:10 - -- Greek, "promising": engaging to follow.

Greek, "promising": engaging to follow.

JFB: 1Ti 2:10 - -- The Greek preposition is not the same as in 1Ti 2:9; "by means of," or "through good works." Their adorning is to be effected by means of good works: ...

The Greek preposition is not the same as in 1Ti 2:9; "by means of," or "through good works." Their adorning is to be effected by means of good works: not that they are to be clothed in, or with, them (Eph 2:10). Works, not words in public, is their province (1Ti 2:8, 1Ti 2:11-12; 1Pe 3:1). Works are often mentioned in the Pastoral Epistles in order to oppose the loose living, combined with the loose doctrine, of the false teachers. The discharge of everyday duties is honored with the designation, "good works."

JFB: 1Ti 2:11 - -- Not "teach" (1Ti 2:12; 1Co 14:34). She should not even put questions in the public assembly (1Co 14:35).

Not "teach" (1Ti 2:12; 1Co 14:34). She should not even put questions in the public assembly (1Co 14:35).

JFB: 1Ti 2:11 - -- Not "usurping authority" (1Ti 2:12). She might teach, but not in public (Act 18:26). Paul probably wrote this Epistle from Corinth, where the precept ...

Not "usurping authority" (1Ti 2:12). She might teach, but not in public (Act 18:26). Paul probably wrote this Epistle from Corinth, where the precept (1Co 14:34) was in force.

JFB: 1Ti 2:12 - -- "to lord it over the man" [ALFORD], literally, "to be an autocrat."

"to lord it over the man" [ALFORD], literally, "to be an autocrat."

JFB: 1Ti 2:13 - -- Reason of the precept; the original order of creation.

Reason of the precept; the original order of creation.

JFB: 1Ti 2:13 - -- Before Eve, who was created for him (1Co 11:8-9).

Before Eve, who was created for him (1Co 11:8-9).

JFB: 1Ti 2:14 - -- As Eve was deceived by the serpent; but was persuaded by his wife. Gen 3:17, "hearkened unto . . . voice of . . . wife." But in Gen 3:13, Eve says, "T...

As Eve was deceived by the serpent; but was persuaded by his wife. Gen 3:17, "hearkened unto . . . voice of . . . wife." But in Gen 3:13, Eve says, "The serpent beguiled me." Being more easily deceived, she more easily deceives [BENGEL], (2Co 11:3). Last in being, she was first in sin--indeed, she alone was deceived. The subtle serpent knew that she was "the weaker vessel" (1Pe 3:7). He therefore tempted her, not Adam. She yielded to the temptations of sense and the deceits of Satan; he, to conjugal love. Hence, in the order of God's judicial sentence, the serpent, the prime offender, stands first; the woman, who was deceived, next; and the man, persuaded by his wife, last (Gen 3:14-19). In Rom 5:12, Adam is represented as the first transgressor; but there no reference is made to Eve, and Adam is regarded as the head of the sinning race. Hence, as here, 1Ti 2:11, in Gen 3:16, woman's "subjection" is represented as the consequence of her being deceived.

JFB: 1Ti 2:14 - -- The oldest manuscripts read the compound Greek verb for the simple, "Having been seduced by deceit": implying how completely Satan succeeded in deceiv...

The oldest manuscripts read the compound Greek verb for the simple, "Having been seduced by deceit": implying how completely Satan succeeded in deceiving her.

JFB: 1Ti 2:14 - -- Greek, "came to be in the transgression": became involved in the existing state of transgression, literally, "the going beyond a command"; breach of a...

Greek, "came to be in the transgression": became involved in the existing state of transgression, literally, "the going beyond a command"; breach of a positive precept (Rom 4:15).

JFB: 1Ti 2:15 - -- Greek, "in (literally, 'through') (her, literally, 'the') child-bearing." Through, or by, is often so used to express not the means of her salvation, ...

Greek, "in (literally, 'through') (her, literally, 'the') child-bearing." Through, or by, is often so used to express not the means of her salvation, but the circumstances AMIDST which it has place. Thus 1Co 3:15, "He . . . shall be saved: yet so as by (literally, 'through,' that is, amidst) fire": in spite of the fiery ordeal which he has necessarily to pass through, he shall be saved. So here, "In spite of the trial of childbearing which she passes through (as her portion of the curse, Gen 3:16, 'in sorrow shalt thou bring forth children'), she shall be saved." Moreover, I think it is implied indirectly that the very curse will be turned into a condition favorable to her salvation, by her faithfully performing her part in doing and suffering what God has assigned to her, namely, child-bearing and home duties, her sphere, as distinguished from public teaching, which is not hers, but man's (1Ti 2:11-12). In this home sphere, not ordinarily in one of active duty for advancing the kingdom of God, which contradicts the position assigned to her by God, she will be saved on the same terms as all others, namely, by living faith. Some think that there is a reference to the Incarnation "through THE child-bearing" (Greek), the bearing of the child Jesus. Doubtless this is the ground of women's child-bearing in general becoming to them a blessing, instead of a curse; just as in the original prophecy (Gen 3:15-16) the promise of "the Seed of the woman" (the Saviour) stands in closest connection with the woman's being doomed to "sorrow" in "bringing forth children," her very child-bearing, though in sorrow, being the function assigned to her by God whereby the Saviour was born. This may be an ulterior reference of the Holy Spirit in this verse; but the primary reference required by the context is the one above given. "She shall be saved ([though] with childbearing)," that is, though suffering her part of the primeval curse in childbearing; just as a man shall be saved, though having to bear his part, namely, the sweat of the brow.

JFB: 1Ti 2:15 - -- "if the women (plural, taken out of 'the woman,' 1Ti 2:14, which is put for the whole sex) continue," or more literally, "shall (be found at the judgm...

"if the women (plural, taken out of 'the woman,' 1Ti 2:14, which is put for the whole sex) continue," or more literally, "shall (be found at the judgment to) have continued."

JFB: 1Ti 2:15 - -- The essential way to salvation (1Ti 1:5). Faith is in relation to God. Charity, to our fellow man. Sobriety, to one's self.

The essential way to salvation (1Ti 1:5). Faith is in relation to God. Charity, to our fellow man. Sobriety, to one's self.

JFB: 1Ti 2:15 - -- "sober-mindedness" (see on 1Ti 2:9, as contrasted with the unseemly forwardness reproved in 1Ti 2:11). Mental receptivity and activity in family life ...

"sober-mindedness" (see on 1Ti 2:9, as contrasted with the unseemly forwardness reproved in 1Ti 2:11). Mental receptivity and activity in family life were recognized in Christianity as the destiny of woman. One reason alleged here by Paul, is the greater danger of self-deception in the weaker sex, and the spread of errors arising from it, especially in a class of addresses in which sober reflectiveness is least in exercise [NEANDER]. The case (Act 21:9) was doubtless in private, not in public.

Clarke: 1Ti 2:10 - -- But (which becometh, etc. - That is: Good works are the only ornaments with which women professing Christianity should seek to be adorned. The Jewis...

But (which becometh, etc. - That is: Good works are the only ornaments with which women professing Christianity should seek to be adorned. The Jewish matrons were accustomed to cry to the bride: "There is no need of paint, no need of antimony, no need of braided hair; she herself is most beautiful."The eastern women use a preparation of antimony, which they apply both to the eyes and eyelids, and by which the eye itself acquires a wonderful lustre.

Clarke: 1Ti 2:11 - -- Let the woman learn in silence - This is generally supposed to be a prohibition of women’ s preaching. I have already said what I judge necessa...

Let the woman learn in silence - This is generally supposed to be a prohibition of women’ s preaching. I have already said what I judge necessary on this subject in the notes on 1Co 11:5, etc., and 1Co 14:34 (note), 1Co 14:35 (note); to which places I beg leave to refer the reader.

Clarke: 1Ti 2:12 - -- Nor to usurp authority - A woman should attempt nothing, either in public or private, that belongs to man as his peculiar function. This was prohibi...

Nor to usurp authority - A woman should attempt nothing, either in public or private, that belongs to man as his peculiar function. This was prohibited by the Roman laws: In multis juris nostri articulis deterior est conditio foeminarum quam masculorun ,; l. 9, Pap. Lib. 31, Quaest. Foeminoe ab omnibus officiis civilibus vel publicis remotae sunt; et ideo nec judicis esse possunt, nec magistratum gerere, nec postulare, nec pro alio invenire, nec procuratores existere ; l. 2, de Reg. Juris. Ulp. Lib. i. Ad Sab. - Vid. Poth. Pand. Justin., vol. i. p. 13

"In our laws the condition of women is, in many respects, worse than that of men. Women are precluded from all public offices; therefore they cannot be judges, nor execute the function of magistrates; they cannot sue, plead, nor act in any case, as proxies."They were under many other disabilities, which may be seen in different places of the Pandects

Clarke: 1Ti 2:12 - -- But to be in silence - It was lawful for men in public assemblies to ask questions, or even interrupt the speaker when there was any matter in his s...

But to be in silence - It was lawful for men in public assemblies to ask questions, or even interrupt the speaker when there was any matter in his speech which they did not understand; but this liberty was not granted to women. See the note on 1Co 14:34, 1Co 14:35 (note).

Clarke: 1Ti 2:13 - -- For Adam was first formed, then Eve - And by this very act God designed that he should have the pre-eminence. God fitted man, by the robust construc...

For Adam was first formed, then Eve - And by this very act God designed that he should have the pre-eminence. God fitted man, by the robust construction of his body, to live a public life, to contend with difficulties, and to be capable of great exertions. The structure of woman’ s body plainly proves that she was never designed for those exertions required in public life. In this the chief part of the natural inferiority of woman is to be sought.

Clarke: 1Ti 2:14 - -- Adam was not deceived - It does not appear that Satan attempted the man; the woman said: The serpent beguiled me, and I did eat. Adam received the f...

Adam was not deceived - It does not appear that Satan attempted the man; the woman said: The serpent beguiled me, and I did eat. Adam received the fruit from the hand of his wife; he knew he was transgressing, he was not deceived; however, she led the way, and in consequence of this she was subjected to the domination of her husband: Thy desire shall be to thy husband, and he shall rule over thee; Gen 3:16. There is a Greek verse, but it is not English law, that speaks a language nearly similar to that above: -

Γυναικι δ αρχειν ου διδωσιν ἡ φυσις

For nature suffers not a woman’ s rule

God has not only rendered her unfit for it, but he has subjected her, expressly, to the government of the man.

Clarke: 1Ti 2:15 - -- She shalt be saved in child-bearing - Σωθησεται δε δια της τεκνογονιας· She shall be saved through child-bearing - sh...

She shalt be saved in child-bearing - Σωθησεται δε δια της τεκνογονιας· She shall be saved through child-bearing - she shall be saved by means, or through the instrumentality, of child-bearing or of bringing forth a child. Amidst the different opinions given of the meaning of this very singular text, that of Dr. Macknight appears to me the most probable, which I shall give in his paraphrase and note

"However, though Eve was first in the transgression, and brought death on herself, her husband, and all her posterity, the female sex shall be saved (equally with the male) through child-bearing - through bringing forth the Savior, if they live in faith, and love, and chastity, with that sobriety which I have been recommending

"The word σωθησεται, saved, in this verse refers to ἡ γυνη, the woman, in the foregoing verse, which is certainly Eve. But the apostle did not mean to say that she alone was to be saved through child-bearing, but that all her posterity, whether male or female, are to be saved through the child-bearing of a woman; as is evident from his adding, If they live in faith and love and holiness, with sobriety. For safety in child-bearing does not depend on that condition at all; since many pious women die in child-bearing, while others of a contrary character are preserved. The salvation of the human race, through child-bearing, was intimated in the sentence passed on the serpent, Gen 3:15 : I will put enmity between thee and the woman, and between thy seed and her seed. It shall bruise thy head. Accordingly, the Savior being conceived in the womb of his mother by the power of the Holy Ghost, he is truly the seed of the woman who was to bruise the head of the serpent; and a woman, by bringing him forth, has been the occasion of our salvation."This is the most consistent sense, for in the way in which it is commonly understood it does not apply. There are innumerable instances of women dying in child-bed who have lived in faith and charity and holiness, with sobriety; and equally numerous instances of worthless women, slaves to different kinds of vices, who have not only been saved in child-bearing, but have passed through their travail with comparatively little pain; hence that is not the sense in which we should understand the apostle. Yet it must be a matter of great consolation and support, to all pious women labouring of child, to consider that, by the holy virgin’ s child-bearing, salvation is provided for them and the whole human race; and that, whether they die or live, though their own child-bearing can contribute nothing to their salvation, yet he who was born of a woman has purchased them and the whole human race by his blood

Clarke: 1Ti 2:15 - -- If they continue - Εαν μεινωσιν is rightly translated, if they live; for so it signifies in other passages, particularly Phi 1:25. The ...

If they continue - Εαν μεινωσιν is rightly translated, if they live; for so it signifies in other passages, particularly Phi 1:25. The change in the number of the verb from the singular to the plural, which is introduced here, was designed by the apostle to show that he does not speak of Eve; nor of any particular woman, but of the whole sex. See Macknight

Without faith it is impossible to please God, or to be saved; and without love it will be impossible to obey. Faith and Love are essentially necessary to holiness and sobriety; and unless both men and women live in these, they cannot, scripturally, expect to dwell with God for ever. Some foolish women have supposed, from this verse, that the very act of bringing forth children shall entitle them to salvation; and that all who die in childbed infallibly go to glory! Nothing can be more unfounded than this; faith, love, holiness, and sobriety, are as absolutely requisite for the salvation of every daughter of Eve, as they are for the salvation of every son of Adam. Pain and suffering neither purify nor make atonement. On the mercy of God, in Christ, dispensing remission of sins and holiness, both men and women may confidently rely for salvation; but on nothing else. Let her that readeth understand

On the subject of dress I will conclude in the words of a late writer: "What harm does it do to adorn ourselves with gold, or pearls, or costly array, suppose we can afford it? The first harm it does is, it engenders pride; and, where it is already, increases it. Nothing is more natural than to think ourselves better because we are dressed in better clothes. One of the old heathens was so well apprised of this, that when he had a spite to a poor man, and had a mind to turn his head; he made him a present of a suit of fine clothes

Eutrapelus cuicunque nocere volebat

Vestimenta dabat pretiosa

He could not then but imagine himself to be as much better, as he was finer, than his neighbor; inferring the superior value of his person from the value of his clothes."- Rev. J. Wesley’ s Sermons.

Calvin: 1Ti 2:10 - -- 10.Which becometh women; for undoubtedly the dress of a virtuous and godly woman must differ from that of a strumpet. What he has laid down are marks...

10.Which becometh women; for undoubtedly the dress of a virtuous and godly woman must differ from that of a strumpet. What he has laid down are marks of distinction; and if piety must be testified by works, this profession ought also to be visible in chaste and becoming dress.

Calvin: 1Ti 2:11 - -- 11.Let a woman learn in quietness. After having spoken of dress, he now adds with what modesty women ought to conduct themselves in the holy assembly...

11.Let a woman learn in quietness. After having spoken of dress, he now adds with what modesty women ought to conduct themselves in the holy assembly. And first he bids them learn quietly; for quietness means silence, that they may not take upon them to speak in public. This he immediately explains more clearly, by forbidding them to teach.

Calvin: 1Ti 2:12 - -- 12.But I suffer not a woman to teach. Not that he takes from them the charge of instructing their family, but only excludes them from the office of t...

12.But I suffer not a woman to teach. Not that he takes from them the charge of instructing their family, but only excludes them from the office of teaching, which God has committed to men only. On this subject we have explained our views in the exposition of the First Epistle to the Corinthians. 39 If any one bring forward, by way of objection, Deborah (Jud 4:4) and others of the same class, of whom we read that they were at one time appointed by the command of God to govern the people, the answer is easy. Extraordinary acts done by God do not overturn the ordinary rules of government, by which he intended that we should be bound. Accordingly, if women at one time held the office of prophets and teachers, and that too when they were supernaturally called to it by the Spirit of God, He who is above all law might do this; but, being a peculiar case, 40 this is not opposed to the constant and ordinary system of government.

He adds — what is closely allied to the office of teaching — and not to assume authority over the man; for the very reason, why they are forbidden to teach, is, that it is not permitted by their condition. They are subject, and to teach implies the rank of power or authority. Yet it may be thought that there is no great force in this argument; because even prophets and teachers are subject to kings and to other magistrates. I reply, there is no absurdity in the same person commanding and likewise obeying, when viewed in different relations. But this does not apply to the case of woman, who by nature (that is, by the ordinary law of God) is formed to obey; forγυναικοκρατία (the government of women) has always been regarded by all wise persons as a monstrous thing; and, therefore, so to speak, it will be a mingling of heaven and earth, if women usurp the right to teach. Accordingly, he bids them be “quiet,” that is, keep within their own rank. 41

Calvin: 1Ti 2:13 - -- 13.For Adam was first created He assigns two reasons why women ought to be subject to men; because not only did God enact this law at the beginning, ...

13.For Adam was first created He assigns two reasons why women ought to be subject to men; because not only did God enact this law at the beginning, but he also inflicted it as a punishment on the woman. (Gen 3:16.) He accordingly shews that, although mankind had stood in their first and original uprightness, the true order of nature, which proceeded from the command of God, bears that women shall be subject. Nor is this inconsistent with the fact, that Adam, by falling from his first dignity, deprived himself of his authority; for in the ruins, which followed sin, there still linger some remains of the divine blessing, and it was not proper that woman, by her own fault, should make her condition better than before. 42

Yet the reason that Paul assigns, that woman was second in the order of creation, appears not to be a very strong argument in favor of her subjection; for John the Baptist was before Christ in the order of time, and yet was greatly inferior in rank. But although Paul does not state all the circumstances which are related by Moses, yet he intended that his readers should take them into consideration. Now Moses shews that the woman was created afterwards, in order that she might be a kind of appendage to the man; and that she was joined to the man on the express condition, that she should be at hand to render obedience to him. (Gen 2:21.) Since, therefore, God did not create two chiefs of equal power, but added to the man an inferior aid, the Apostle justly reminds us of that order of creation in which the eternal and inviolable appointment of God is strikingly displayed.

Calvin: 1Ti 2:14 - -- 14.And Adam was not deceived He alludes to the punishment inflicted on the woman: “Because thou hast obeyed the voice of the serpent, thou shalt b...

14.And Adam was not deceived He alludes to the punishment inflicted on the woman:

“Because thou hast obeyed the voice of the serpent, thou shalt be subject to the authority of thy husband, and thy desire shall be to him.” 43 (Gen 3:16.)

Because she had given fatal advice, it was right that she should learn that she was under the power and will of another; and because she had drawn her husband aside from the command of God, it was right that she should be deprived of all liberty and placed under the yoke. Besides, the Apostle does not rest his argument entirely or absolutely on the cause of the transgression, but founds it on the sentence which was pronounced by God.

Yet it may be thought that these two statements are somewhat contradictory: that the subjection of the woman is the punishment of her transgression, and yet that it was imposed on her from the creation; for thence it will follow, that she was doomed to servitude before she sinned. I reply, there is nothing to hinder that the condition of obeying should be natural from the beginning, and that afterwards the accidental condition of serving should come into existence; so that the subjection was now less voluntary and agreeable than it had formerly been.

Again, this passage has given to some people an occasion for affirming that Adam did not fall by means of error, but that he was only overcome by the allurements of his wife. Accordingly, they think that the woman only was deceived by the wiles of the devil, to believe that she and her husband would be like the gods; But that Adam was not at all persuaded of this, but tasted the fruit in order to please his wife. But it is easy to refute this opinion; for, if Adam had not given credit to the falsehood of Satan, God would not have reproached him:

“Behold, Adam is become like one of us.” (Gen 3:22.)

There are other reasons of which I say nothing; for there needs not a long refutation of an error which does not rest on any probable conjecture. By these words Paul does not mean that Adam was not entangled by the same deceitfulness of the devil, 44 but that the cause or source of the transgression proceeded from Eve.

Calvin: 1Ti 2:15 - -- 15.But she shall be saved The weakness of the sex renders women more suspicious and timid, and the preceding statement might greatly terrify and alar...

15.But she shall be saved The weakness of the sex renders women more suspicious and timid, and the preceding statement might greatly terrify and alarm the strongest minds. For these reasons he modifies what he had said by adding a consolation; for the Spirit of God does not accuse or reproach us, in order to triumph over us, when we are covered with shame, but, when we have been cast down, immediately raises us up. It might have the effect (as I have already said) of striking terror into the minds of women, 45 when they were informed that the destruction of the whole human race was attributed to them; for what will be this condemnation? Especially when their subjection, as a testimony of the wrath of God, is constantly placed before their eyes. Accordingly, Paul, in order to comfort them and render their condition tolerable, informs them that they continue to enjoy the hope of salvation, though they suffer a temporal punishment. It is proper to observe that the good effect of this consolation is twofold. First, by the hope of salvation held out to them, they are prevented from falling into despair through alarm at the mention of their guilt. Secondly, they become accustomed to endure calmly and patiently the necessity of servitude, so as to submit willingly to their husbands, when they are informed that this kind of obedience is both profitable to themselves and acceptable to God. If this passage be tortured, as Papists are wont to do, to support the righteousness of works, the answer is easy. The Apostle does not argue here about the cause of salvation, and therefore we cannot and must not infer from these words what works deserve; but they only shew in what way God conducts us to salvation, to which he has appointed us through his grace.

Through child-bearing To censorious men it might appear absurd, for an Apostle of Christ not only to exhort women to give attention to the birth of offspring, but to press this work as religious and holy to such an extent as to represent it in the light of the means of procuring salvation. Nay, we even see with what reproaches the conjugal bed has been slandered by hypocrites, who wished to be thought more holy than all other men. But there is no difficulty in replying to these sneers of the ungodly. First, here the Apostle does not speak merely about having children, but about enduring all the distresses, which are manifold and severe, both in the birth and in the rearing of children. Secondly, whatever hypocrites or wise men of the world may think of it, when a woman, considering to what she has been called, submits to the condition which God has assigned to her, and does not refuse to endure the pains, or rather the fearful anguish, of parturition, or anxiety about her offspring, or anything else that belongs to her duty, God values this obedience more highly than if, in some other manner, she made a great display of heroic virtues, while she refused to obey the calling of God. To this must be added, that no consolation could be more appropriate or more efficacious then to shew that the very means (so to speak) of procuring salvation are found in the punishment itself.

If they continue in faith In consequence of the old translation having used the expression, “the birth of children,” it has been commonly thought that this clause refers to the children. But the term used by Paul to denote “child-bearing” is a single word, τεκνογονία, and therefore it must refer to the women. As to the verb being plural, and the noun singular, this involves no difficulty; for an indefinite noun, at least when it denotes a multitude, has the force of a collective noun, and therefore easily admits a change from the singular to the plural number.

Besides, that he might not represent all the virtue of women as included in the duties of marriage, immediately afterwards he adds greater virtues, in which it is proper that godly women should excel, that they may differ from irreligious women. Even “child-bearing” is obedience acceptable to God, only so far as it proceeds from faith and love To these two he adds sanctification, which includes all the purity of life which becomes Christian women. Lastly follows sobriety, which he formerly mentioned, while he was speaking about dress; but now he extends it more widely to the other parts of life.

Defender: 1Ti 2:12 - -- Paul is not saying that women should never teach, for he later said they should teach the younger women (Tit 2:4) and commended Lois and Eunice for te...

Paul is not saying that women should never teach, for he later said they should teach the younger women (Tit 2:4) and commended Lois and Eunice for teaching Timothy (2Ti 1:5; 2Ti 3:14, 2Ti 3:15). He knew Priscilla, and, evidently, approved of her part in teaching Apollos (Act 18:2, Act 18:26). The emphasis here (and in 1Co 14:34, 1Co 14:35) is on authoritative public teaching in the church, a ministry for which God-called men had been specially created. They are not to take over the primary teaching ministry (which would clearly include that of the pastor) from the men."

Defender: 1Ti 2:13 - -- The intended leadership role for men in the basic institutions of the home and church dates from the creation itself. That is, Eve was formed from Ada...

The intended leadership role for men in the basic institutions of the home and church dates from the creation itself. That is, Eve was formed from Adam's side to be "an help meet for him" (Gen 2:18). This is not an invention of the supposedly anti-feminist apostle, as some have alleged but the stipulation of God Himself, even before the entrance of sin and the curse into the world. This in no way means that man is superior to woman in God's sight, for both were created "in the image of God" (Gen 1:27), and both are "one in Christ Jesus" (Gal 3:28). Each, however, was created for a distinctive role and purpose, and neither is truly fulfilled apart from that.

Defender: 1Ti 2:13 - -- There is no conceivable way in which some process of evolution could first form men and then women. According to theistic evolution, both male and fem...

There is no conceivable way in which some process of evolution could first form men and then women. According to theistic evolution, both male and female human beings evolved simultaneously from a population of hominids, and this verse, as well as many others, flatly contradicts this notion. "Neither was the man created for the woman; but the woman for the man" (1Co 11:8, 1Co 11:9)."

Defender: 1Ti 2:14 - -- In addition to the nature and purpose of her creation, there is a secondary reason why woman should not be taking the leadership role in the home or c...

In addition to the nature and purpose of her creation, there is a secondary reason why woman should not be taking the leadership role in the home or church. When the first woman took such a role, yielding to the temptation to reject God's Word without first consulting her husband, she then induced Adam to sin also, thereby bringing sin into God's perfect world (Gen 3:6; Rom 5:12). Adam was not deceived by Satan's lie, but deliberately associated himself also with Eve in her sin because of her wanting him to join her in eating the forbidden fruit (Gen 3:12) and, presumably, also because of his love for her and his willingness to share her punishment. The many daughters of Eve share the trusting nature of their first mother and so (in general, at least) are more easily deceived by those evil spirits who can masquerade as angels of light (2Co 11:13-15). Although there may be exceptions when, for want of masculine leadership, a Christian woman may be forced to assume the spiritual leadership in the home (for example, Timothy's own mother and grandmother) or even in the family of God (Deborah - Jdg 4:4, Jdg 4:8), this is not the divinely ordained way. There is no New Testament example of a woman serving as an elder or bishop or pastor of a local church, with the possible exception of the false prophetess, Jezebel, in the church at Thyatira (Rev 2:20), who was, evidently, herself also deceived by Satan."

Defender: 1Ti 2:15 - -- In the original, there is a definite article here: "the childbearing." It is probable that a very specific birth is in view, not childbearing in gener...

In the original, there is a definite article here: "the childbearing." It is probable that a very specific birth is in view, not childbearing in general. If so, and in light of the context, it seems that Paul is referring to the great protevangelic promise of Gen 3:15 : "And I will put enmity between thee and the woman, and between thy seed and her seed; it shall bruise thy head, and thou shalt bruise his heel." It is in the very next verse (Gen 3:16) that God told Eve henceforth, "in sorrow thou shalt bring forth children; and thy desire shall be to thy husband, and he shall rule over thee." Because of being "in the transgression," Eve and her daughters would bring forth children, begotten of the husband's seed, in sorrow (a word implying labor and suffering), but there would be one particular birth one day, uniquely born of her seed, rather than of her husband's seed, and He (the virgin-born God/man) would finally inflict a mortal wound on the old Serpent. It was by this "childbearing" that "she shall be saved." In a secondary sense, every birth is a type of that special birth, in its reminder and promise that salvation is preceded by suffering, and that the joy of life follows travail and possible death (or at least willingness to die). As Jesus said: "A woman when she is in travail hath sorrow, because her hour is come: but as soon as she is delivered of the child, she remembereth no more the anguish, for joy that a man is born into the world" (Joh 16:21).

Defender: 1Ti 2:15 - -- The childbearing would bring salvation to women, but on condition that they continue in "faith and charity and holiness with sobriety" (that is, sober...

The childbearing would bring salvation to women, but on condition that they continue in "faith and charity and holiness with sobriety" (that is, soberness of mind and demeanor). This cannot, of course, contradict the doctrine of salvation by grace. However, such salvation is received through faith and its reality demonstrated by charity (Christian love), holiness and soberness in the true Christian woman."

TSK: 1Ti 2:10 - -- women : 1Pe 3:3-5; 2Pe 3:11 with : 1Ti 5:6-10; Pro 31:31; Act 9:36, Act 9:39; Eph 2:10; Tit 2:14, Tit 3:8; 1Pe 2:12; 2Pe 1:6-8; Rev 2:19

TSK: 1Ti 2:11 - -- Gen 3:16; Est 1:20; 1Co 11:3, 1Co 14:34, 1Co 14:35; Eph 5:22-24; Col 3:18; 1Pe 3:1, 1Pe 3:5, 1Pe 3:6

TSK: 1Ti 2:13 - -- Gen 1:27, Gen 2:7, Gen 2:18, Gen 2:22; 1Co 11:8, 1Co 11:9

TSK: 1Ti 2:14 - -- Gen 3:6, Gen 3:12; 2Co 11:3

TSK: 1Ti 2:15 - -- she : Gen 3:15; Isa 7:14, Isa 9:6; Jer 31:22; Mat 1:21-25; Luk 2:7, Luk 2:10,Luk 2:11; Gal 4:4, Gal 4:5 in childbearing : Gen 3:16 in faith : 1Ti 1:5 ...

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: 1Ti 2:10 - -- with good works\} But (which becometh women professing godliness) with good works - That is, it is not appropriate for women who profess to be t...

with good works\} But (which becometh women professing godliness) with good works - That is, it is not appropriate for women who profess to be the followers of the Saviour, to seek to be distinguished for personal, external decorations. If they are Christians, they have seen the vanity of these things, and have fixed the heart on more substantial realities. They are professed followers of Him "who went about doing good,"and the performance of good works especially becomes them. They profess to have fixed the affections on God their Saviour, and to be living for heaven; and it is not becoming in them to seek such ornaments as would indicate that the heart is supremely attached to worldly things. There is great beauty in this direction. Good works, or deeds of benevolence, eminently become a Christian female. The nature of woman seems to be adapted to the performance of all deeds demanding kindness, tenderness, and gentleness of feeling; of all that proceeds from pity, sympathy, and affection; and we feel instinctively that while acts of hardy enterprise and daring in a good cause especially become a Christian man, there is something exquisitely appropriate to the female character in deeds of humble and unobtrusive sympathy and benevolence. God seems to have formed her mind for just such things, and in such things it occupies its appropriate sphere rather than in seeking external adorning.

Barnes: 1Ti 2:11 - -- Let the woman learn in silence - Listen attentively to instruction, without attempting to teach in public; see the notes on 1Co 14:35. Wit...

Let the woman learn in silence - Listen attentively to instruction, without attempting to teach in public; see the notes on 1Co 14:35.

With all subjection - With due subjection to those who are in authority, and who are appointed to minister in holy things; notes, 1Co 14:34.

Barnes: 1Ti 2:12 - -- But I suffer not a woman to teach - see the notes on 1Co 14:34. Nor to usurp authority over the man - notes, 1Co 11:3.

But I suffer not a woman to teach - see the notes on 1Co 14:34.

Nor to usurp authority over the man - notes, 1Co 11:3.

Barnes: 1Ti 2:13 - -- For Adam was first formed, then Eve - The apostle, in this verse, and the following, gives reasons why a woman should occupy a subordinate situ...

For Adam was first formed, then Eve - The apostle, in this verse, and the following, gives reasons why a woman should occupy a subordinate situation, and not usurp authority. The first is, that she was second in the act of creation, or was made subsequent to man. The reason here assigned cannot be understood to be merely that of priority of existence - for then it would give every old person authority over a younger one; but it must refer to the circumstances of the case as detailed in the history of the creation; Gen. 1\endash 2. Man was made as the lord of this lower creation and placed in the garden, and then the woman was made of a rib taken from his side, and given to him, not as a lord, but as a companion. All the circumstances combine to show the subordinate nature of her rank, and to prove that she was not designed to exert authority over the man; compare notes on 1Co 11:8-9.

Barnes: 1Ti 2:14 - -- And Adam was not deceived - This is the second reason why the woman should occupy a subordinate rank in all things. It is, that in the most imp...

And Adam was not deceived - This is the second reason why the woman should occupy a subordinate rank in all things. It is, that in the most important situation in which she was ever placed she had shown that she was not qualified to take the lead. She had evinced a readiness to yield to temptation; a feebleness of resistance; a pliancy of character, which showed that she was not adapted to the situation of headship, and which made it proper that she should ever afterward occupy a subordinate situation. It is not meant here that Adam did not sin, nor even that he was not deceived by the tempter, but that the woman opposed a feebler resistance to the temptation than he would have done, and that the temptation as actually applied to her would have been ineffectual on him. To tempt and seduce him to fall, there were needed all the soft persuasions, the entreaties, and example of his wife.

Satan understood this, and approached man not with the specious argument of the serpent, but through the allurements of his wife. It is undoubtedly implied here that man in general has a power of resisting certain kinds of temptation superior to that possessed by woman, and hence that the headship properly belongs to him. This is, undoubtedly, the general truth, though there may be many exceptions, and many noble cases to the honor of the female sex, in which they evince a power of resistance to temptation superior to man. In many traits of character, and among them those which are most lovely, woman is superior to man; yet it is undoubtedly true that, as a general thing, temptation will make a stronger impression on her than on him. When it is said that "Adam was not deceived,"it is not meant that when he partook actually of the fruit he was under no deception, but that he was not deceived by the serpent; he was not first deceived, or first in the transgression. The woman should remember that sin began with her, and she should therefore be willing to occupy an humble and subordinate situation.

But the woman being deceived - She was made to suppose that the fruit would not injure her, but would make her wise, and that God would not fulfil his threatening of death. Sin, from the beginning, has been a process of delusion. Every man or woman who violates the law of God is deceived as to the happiness which is expected from the violation, and as to the consequences which will follow it.

Barnes: 1Ti 2:15 - -- Notwithstanding she shall be saved - The promise in this verse is designed to alleviate the apparent severity of the remarks just made about th...

Notwithstanding she shall be saved - The promise in this verse is designed to alleviate the apparent severity of the remarks just made about the condition of woman, and of the allusion to the painful facts of her early history. What the apostle had just said would carry the mind back to the period in which woman introduced sin into the world, and by an obvious and easy association, to the sentence which had been passed on her in consequence of her transgression, and to the burden of sorrows which she was doomed to bear. By the remark in this verse, however, Paul shows that it was not his intention to overwhelm her with anguish. He did not design to harrow up her feelings by an unkind allusion to a melancholy fact in her history. It was necessary for him to state, and for her to know, that her place was secondary and subordinate, and he wished this truth ever to be kept in memory among Christians. It was not unkind or improper also to state the reasons for this opinion, and to show that her own history had demonstrated that she was not designed for headship.

But she was not to be regarded as degraded and abandoned. She was not to be overwhelmed by the recollection of what "the mother of all living"had done. There were consolations in her case. There was a special divine interposition which she might look for, evincing tender care on the part of God in those deep sorrows which had come upon her in consequence of her transgression; and instead of being crushed and broken-hearted on account of her condition, she should remember that the everlasting arms of God would sustain her in her condition of sorrow and pain. Paul, then, would speak to her the language of consolation, and while he would have her occupy her proper place, he would have her feel that "God was her Friend."In regard to the nature of the consolation referred to here, there has been a considerable variety of opinion. Some have held, that by the expression "she shall be saved in child-bearing,"the apostle designs to include all the duties of the maternal relation, meaning that she should be saved through the faithful performance of her duties as a mother.

Robinson, Lexicon. Rosenmuller regards the words rendered "child-bearing"( τεκνογονία teknogonia ), as synonymous with education, and supposes that the meaning is, that a woman, by the proper training of her children, can obtain salvation as well as her husband, and that her appropriate duty is not public teaching, but the training of her family. Wetstein supposes that it means "she shall be saved from the arts of impostors, and from the luxury and vice of the age, if, instead of wandering about, she remains at home, cultivates modesty, is subject to her husband, and engages carefully in the training of her children."This sense agrees well with the connection. Calvin supposes that the apostle designs to console the woman by the assurance that, if she bears the trials of her condition of sorrow with a proper spirit, abiding in faith and holiness, she will be saved. She is not to regard herself as cut off from the hope of heaven. Doddridge, Macknight, Clarke, and others suppose that it refers to the promise in Gen 3:15, and means that the woman shall be saved through, or by means of bearing a child, to wit, the Messiah; and that the apostle means to sustain the woman in her sorrows, and in her state of subordination and inferiority, by referring to the honor which has been put upon her by the fact that a woman gave birth to the Messiah. It is supposed also that he means to say that special honor is thus conferred on her over the man, inasmuch as the Messiah had no human father. Doddridge. The objections to this interpretation, however, though it is sustained by most respectable names, seem to me to be insuperable. They are such as these:

(1) The interpretation is too refined and abstruse. It is not that which is obvious. It depends for its point on the fact that the Messiah had no human father, and in the apostle had intended to refer to that, and to build an argument on it it may be doubted whether he would have done it in so obscure a manner. But it may reasonably be questioned whether he would have made that fact a point on which his argument would turn. There would be a species of refinement about such an argument, such as we should not look for in the writings of Paul.

\caps1 (2) i\caps0 t is not the obvious meaning of the word "child-bearing."There is nothing in the word which requires that it should have any reference to the birth of the Messiah. The word is of a general character, and properly refers to child-hearing in general.

\caps1 (3) i\caps0 t is not true that woman would be "saved"merely by having given birth to the Messiah. She will be saved, as man will be, as a consequence of his having been born; but there is no evidence that the mere fact that woman gave birth to him, and that he had no human father, did anything to save Mary herself, or any one else of her sex. If, therefore, the word refers to the "bearing"of the Messiah, or to the fact that he was born, it would be no more proper to say that this was connected with the salvation of woman than that of man. The true meaning, it seems to me, has been suggested by Calvin, and may be seen by the following remarks:

(1) The apostle designed to comfort woman, or to alleviate the sadness of the picture which he had drawn respecting her condition.

\caps1 (2) h\caps0 e had referred, incidentally, as a proof of the subordinate character of her station, to the first apostasy. This naturally suggested the sentence which was passed on her, and the condition of sorrow to which she was doomed, particularly in child-birth. That was the standing demonstration of her guilt; that the condition in which she suffered most; that the situation in which she was in greatest peril.

(3) Paul assures her, therefore, that though she must thus suffer, yet that she ought not to regard herself in her deep sorrows and dangers, though on account of sin, as necessarily under the divine displeasure, or as excluded from the hope of heaven. The way of salvation was open to her as well as to men, and was to be entered in the same manner. If she had faith and holiness, even in her condition of sorrow brought on by guilt, she might as well hope for eternal life as man. The object of the apostle seems to be to guard against a possible construction which might be put on his words, that he did not regard the woman as in circumstances as favorable for salvation as those of man, or as if he thought that salvation for her was more difficult, or perhaps that she could not be saved at all. The general sentiments of the Jews in regard to the salvation of the female sex, and their exclusion from the religious privileges which men enjoy; the views of the Muslims in reference to the inferiority of the sex; and the prevalent feelings in the pagan world, degrading the sex and making their condition, in regard to salvation, far inferior to that of man, show the propriety of what the apostle here says, and the fitness that he should so guard himself that his language could not possibly be construed so as to give countenance to such a sentiment.

According to the interpretation of the passage here proposed, the apostle does not mean to teach that a Christian female would be certainly saved from death in child-birth - for this would not be true, and the proper construction of the passage does not require us to understand him as affirming this. Religion is not designed to make any immediate and direct change in the laws of our physical being. It does not of itself guard us from the pestilence; it does not arrest the progress of disease; it does not save us from death; and, as a matter of fact, woman, by the highest degree of piety, is not necessarily saved from the perils of that condition to which she has been subjected in consequence of the apostasy. The apostle means to show this - that in all her pain and sorrow; amidst all the evidence of apostasy, and all that reminds her that she was "first"in the transgression, she may look up to God as her Friend and strength, and may hope for acceptance and salvation.

If they continue - If woman continues - it being not uncommon to change the singular form to the plural, especially if the subject spoken of have the character of a noun of multitude. Many have understood this of children, as teaching that if the mother were faithful, so that her children continued in faith, she would be saved. But this is not a necessary or probable interpretation. The apostle says nothing of children, and it is not reasonable to suppose that he would make the prospect of her salvation depend on their being pious. This would be to add a hard condition of salvation, and one nowhere else suggested in the New Testament. The object of the apostle evidently is, to show that woman must continue in the faithful service of God if she would be saved - a doctrine everywhere insisted on in the New Testament in reference to all persons. She must not imitate the example of the mother of mankind, but she must faithfully yield obedience to the laws of God until death.

Faith - Faith in the Redeemer and in divine truth, or a life of fidelity in the service of God.

Charity - Love to all; compare notes on 1 Cor. 13.

Holiness - She must be truly righteous.

With sobriety - All these things must he united with a becoming soberness or seriousness of deportment; notes, 1Ti 2:9. In such a life, woman may look to a world where she will be forever free from all the sadnesses and sorrows of her condition here; where, by unequalled pain, she will be no more reminded of the time when.

- "Her rash hand in evil hour.

Forth reaching to the fruit, she pluck’ d, she.

Ate;"

And when before the throne she shall be admitted to full equality with all the redeemed of the Lord. Religion meets all the sadnesses of her condition here; pours consolation into the cup of her many woes; speaks kindly to her in her distresses; utters the language of forgiveness to her heart when crushed with the remembrance of sin - for "she loves much"Luk 7:37-48; and conducts her to immortal glory in that world where all sorrow shall be unknown.

Poole: 1Ti 2:10 - -- They ought to look at the ornament of good works; for those are the ornaments which best become women professing godliness, whose hearts should desp...

They ought to look at the ornament of good works; for those are the ornaments which best become women professing godliness, whose hearts should despise the ornament of the figure of excrementitious hair, or a little yellow earth, or a stone, or the work of a pitiful silkworm.

Poole: 1Ti 2:11 - -- That is, in the public assemblies for worship, it is the woman’ s part silently to learn, showing thereby a subjection to the man, who is the h...

That is, in the public assemblies for worship, it is the woman’ s part silently to learn, showing thereby a subjection to the man, who is the head of the woman.

Poole: 1Ti 2:12 - -- But I suffer not a woman to teach not to teach in the public congregation, except she be a prophetess, endued with extraordinary gifts of the Spirit,...

But I suffer not a woman to teach not to teach in the public congregation, except she be a prophetess, endued with extraordinary gifts of the Spirit, as Mary, and Anna, and Huldah, and Deborah, and some women in the primitive church, concerning whom we read, 1Co 11:5 , that they prophesied.

Nor to usurp authority over the man: ordinary teaching of the woman was a usurpation of authority over the man, who is the head, which the apostle also forbade in 1Co 11:3 , and here repeateth. It is probable that the speaking of some women in the church who had extraordinary revelations, imboldened others also to aim at the like, which the apostle here directs his speech against. Nevertheless women may, and it is their duty to instruct their children and families at home, especially in the absence of their husbands.

Poole: 1Ti 2:13 - -- The man had the priority of the woman in his creation, he was not made for her, but she was made for a help-mate mate for him; therefore she, being ...

The man had the priority of the woman in his creation, he was not made for her, but she was made for a help-mate mate for him; therefore she, being made for him, ought to usurp no authority over him.

Poole: 1Ti 2:14 - -- Besides, Adam was not first deceived, nor indeed at all deceived immediately by the serpent, but only enticed, and deceived by the woman, who was th...

Besides, Adam was not first deceived, nor indeed at all deceived immediately by the serpent, but only enticed, and deceived by the woman, who was the tempter’ s agent; so as that she was both first in the transgression in order of time, and also principal in it, contributing to the seduction or transgression of the man; which ought to be a consideration to keep the woman humble, in a low opinion of herself, and that lower order wherein God hath fixed her.

Poole: 1Ti 2:15 - -- Though the woman was so unhappy as to be deceived by the serpent, and to be the first in taking the forbidden fruit, and an instrument to entice her...

Though the woman was so unhappy as to be deceived by the serpent, and to be the first in taking the forbidden fruit, and an instrument to entice her husband to do the like, which may give all of that sex a cause of humiliation, and show them the reasonableness of God’ s order in putting them in subjection to man, and prohibiting them to break God’ s order in usurping authority over the man; yet through the gracious interposition of the Mediator, (afterward born of a woman), she hath no reason to despair, either of a temporal salvation, from the peril and danger of child-birth, or, much less, of an eternal salvation, for

she shall be saved she stands upon equal ground with the man as to eternal salvation, who cannot be saved without faith and holiness, and a discharge of the duties incumbent upon him, and patient enduring the crosses and trials God exerciseth him with; and the woman also shall be saved, by faithful performance of her duty, and patiently enduring her crosses and trials, in the pains and peril of

child-bearing notwithstanding they are the sensible marks of God’ s displeasure for sin, yet the sufferings of Christ has taken away the said bitterness.

If they continue in faith and charity and holiness with sobriety if she also liveth in the exercise of faith in Christ, and love to God, and her husband, and all saints, and in all exercises of holiness with sobriety. Some refer the pronoun they to the children, because the apostle had been before speaking of the woman in the singular number; but there is nothing more ordinary than that change of the number, especially where collective words are used, that signify a whole species or sex; and it is unreasonable to think the apostle should suspend the salvation of the mother upon the faith and holiness of the child, and to interpret it of the mother’ s endeavours towards it, seemeth hardly a sufficient interpretation of the term continue.

PBC: 1Ti 2:11 - -- For comments on 1Ti 2:11-15 See GG: 19,24 June 13, 2004 What is the intent of women learning "in silence with all subjection?" The Greek word transla...

For comments on 1Ti 2:11-15 See GG: 19,24 June 13, 2004

What is the intent of women learning "in silence with all subjection?" The Greek word translated "silence" means "quietness; description of the life of one who stays at home doing his own work, and does not officiously meddle with the affairs of others; silence." The point is broader than merely not permitting a woman preacher in the church. Paul establishes a specific attitude of godly business for the women in the church that prohibits "officiously meddling with the affairs of others." A woman may never consider stepping into the pulpit and still grievously violate the spirit of this lesson by being an "officious meddler" in the lives of other church members. She pretends to have special "authority" in their lives. She acts "officious," as if on an official and authoritative mission for the church. She readily volunteers her opinion whether needed or requested. She pretends to act with authority that she does not actually have.

Rather than imposing a carnal motive onto Paul, we must accept this lesson no less than we accept Eph 2:8-10 as inspired Scripture from God. Whether we know it or not, He has good reason for the rules that He imposes on His church. Whether we understand them or not, we are directed to obey His commandments. Sometimes understanding grows out of obedience, not out of intellect. Both men and women in the church should respect Paul’s inspired intent in this lesson no less than we accept the truth of Eph 2:8-10. More than once I have known of preachers’ or deacons’ wives who quietly operate so that their husbands think they are submissive in their roles, but who openly boast to other women of their ability to control their husbands without the husband even knowing that he is controlled. This rebellious spirit is a disgrace to the Biblical offices involved, and to the Biblical qualifications for those offices. Such a wife disqualifies her husband from the office that he fills.

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PBC: 1Ti 2:15 - -- SEE PB: 1Co 12:18 "Notwithstanding she shall be saved in childbearing, if they continue in faith and charity and holiness with sobriety.?" What does ...

SEE PB: 1Co 12:18

"Notwithstanding she shall be saved in childbearing, if they continue in faith and charity and holiness with sobriety.?" What does Paul intend with this sentence? First of all he is not dealing with how men or women go to heaven when they die. "Saved" must be interpreted in terms of this context. Paul has just rejected the idea of women in roles of teaching or preaching leadership in the Lord’s church. The obvious question that follows, but remains unstated in the text is "Then of what value is a woman in the teaching ministry of the church?" Paul responds with this sentence. The woman shall be "saved" to a role of value, an altogether positive role of teaching, in the church. What is this role? How can he forbid her from teaching and immediately praise her for a positive role in teaching? She is to be a primary teacher in the home. She brings children into the world and into the home. God assigns her the role of primary teacher of her children. Consider how God always qualifies people for the role that He assigns to them. With few exceptions indeed, women have far more intuitive awareness of their children than men. Through this incredible insight God gives godly women the knowledge to teach their children in the home long before the child can profitably grasp the teaching in church from the pulpit.

What is the outcome of this divinely assigned role for women teaching in their families? If the woman teaches well, earns her "saving" badge as a profitable teacher, her children will "continue in faith and charity and holiness with sobriety." By the life that they live they will prove every day of their adulthood that they learned life’s most important lessons from a master teacher, divinely called and assigned to teach them. 

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Haydock: 1Ti 2:11 - -- In silence. See 1 Corinthians xiv. 34. See St. John Chrysostom.[3] (Witham) =============================== [BIBLIOGRAPHY] In silentio. S...

In silence. See 1 Corinthians xiv. 34. See St. John Chrysostom.[3] (Witham)

===============================

[BIBLIOGRAPHY]

In silentio. St. John Chrysostom ( Greek: log. th. ) Greek: edidazen apax e gune, kai panta katestrepse.

====================

Haydock: 1Ti 2:12 - -- St. Paul only means in public. See note on ver. 11. of the next chapter. It would appear from this regulation of the apostle, as well as from the wr...

St. Paul only means in public. See note on ver. 11. of the next chapter. It would appear from this regulation of the apostle, as well as from the writings of the earliest fathers, that the practice and condemnation of women interfering at all in spiritual affairs, in not new. Tertullian says: We do not permit a woman to teach, to baptize, or to arrogate to herself any part of the duty which belongs to man. (De Veland. Virg. cap. 9.) ---

The woman has tried once to teach, when she persuaded Adam to eat the forbidden fruit, and has wofully failed. Let her now be content to remain in silence, and subjection to man; (St. John Chrysostom on this place) as appears also from the order of the creation. See ver. 13. Seduction began with Eve, a subject of profound humiliation for women; but this ought not to deprive them of confidence in God's mercy, nor take from them the hope of salvation. (Bible de Vence)

Haydock: 1Ti 2:13-14 - -- Adam was first formed....and was not seduced. That is, was not at least seduced first, as the woman. (Witham)

Adam was first formed....and was not seduced. That is, was not at least seduced first, as the woman. (Witham)

Haydock: 1Ti 2:15 - -- She shall be saved by bearing children, &c. and performing other duties of a wife, with a due submission to her husband, taking care to serve God, an...

She shall be saved by bearing children, &c. and performing other duties of a wife, with a due submission to her husband, taking care to serve God, and bring up her children in the faith of Christ, in piety, &c. (Witham) ---

This would perhaps be more properly rendered, from the Greek, by the bringing up of her children in faith, charity, and holiness. This is the duty of the woman; upon the faithful discharge or neglect of which she must expect her salvation, or reprobation, to hang. Thus repairing the evil which the first of all women brought upon man, by seducing him to evil. (Bible de Vence)

Gill: 1Ti 2:10 - -- But (which becometh women professing god likeness),.... By which is meant not any particular grace, was it, the fear of God might be designed, and so ...

But (which becometh women professing god likeness),.... By which is meant not any particular grace, was it, the fear of God might be designed, and so the Syriac version renders it; nor the whole of internal religion only; nor the form of godliness, or the whole scheme of Gospel truth, which is according to godliness; nor only outward holiness of life and conversation; but the whole of all this, all religion, internal and external, the whole of godliness, both in a doctrinal and in a practical way. All this, these women the apostle gives directions unto, had made a profession of, and had been baptized upon it, and received members of churches; and as yet held their profession: and such persons, it best became them not so much to adorn themselves with any outward adornings, as

with good works; such as are mentioned in 1Th 5:10 Good works are like good clothes, to which the apostle alludes; they do not make persons men and women, but they adorn them as such; so good works, they do not make men and women Christians, or believers, but they adorn them as such; they are ornaments to their persons, and to their profession, and to the Gospel they profess. See Tit 2:10.

Gill: 1Ti 2:11 - -- Let the woman learn in silence,.... The apostle goes on to give some other instructions to women, how they should behave themselves in public worship,...

Let the woman learn in silence,.... The apostle goes on to give some other instructions to women, how they should behave themselves in public worship, in the church of God; he would have them be learners and not teachers, sit and hear, and learn more of Christ, and of the truth of the Gospel, and to maintain good works; and he would have them learn in silence, and not offer to rise and speak, under a pretence of having a word from the Lord, or of being under an impulse of the Spirit of the Lord, as some frantic women have done; and if they should meet with anything, under the ministry of the word, they did not understand, or they had an objection to, they were not to speak in public, but ask their own husbands at home; see 1Co 14:34. And thus, they were to behave

with all subjection; both to the ministers of the word, and to their own husbands; obeying from the heart the form of doctrine delivered to them; and submitting cheerfully to the ordinances of Christ; the whole of which is a professed subjection to the Gospel, and which becomes all professing godliness.

Gill: 1Ti 2:12 - -- But I suffer not a woman to teach, They may teach in private, in their own houses and families; they are to be teachers of good things, Tit 2:3. They...

But I suffer not a woman to teach, They may teach in private, in their own houses and families; they are to be teachers of good things, Tit 2:3. They are to bring up their children in the nurture and admonition of the Lord; nor is the law or doctrine of a mother to be forsaken, any more than the instruction of a father; see Pro 1:8. Timothy, no doubt, received much advantage, from the private teachings and instructions of his mother Eunice, and grandmother Lois; but then women are not to teach in the church; for that is an act of power and authority, and supposes the persons that teach to be of a superior degree, and in a superior office, and to have superior abilities to those who are taught by them:

nor to usurp authority over the man; as not in civil and political things, or in things relating to civil government; and in things domestic, or the affairs of the family; so not in things ecclesiastical, or what relate to the church and government of it; for one part of rule is to feed the church with knowledge and understanding; and for a woman to take upon her to do this, is to usurp an authority over the man: this therefore she ought not to do,

but to be in silence; to sit and hear quietly and silently, and learn, and not teach, as in 1Ti 2:11.

Gill: 1Ti 2:13 - -- For Adam was first formed,.... Immediately by God, out of the dust of the earth; and the breath of life was breathed into him, and he became a living ...

For Adam was first formed,.... Immediately by God, out of the dust of the earth; and the breath of life was breathed into him, and he became a living soul; thus wonderfully and fearfully was he made; after this he was put into the garden of Eden, to dress it, and all creatures were brought to him, to give them names; and still an help meet or a companion was not found for him. All this while Eve was not as yet formed, but after this,

then Eve. She was formed out of him, was made out of one of his ribs; and was formed for him, for his use, service, help and comfort; and here lies the strength of the apostle's reason, why the woman should be in subjection to the man; not so much because he was made before her; for so were the beasts of the field before Adam; and yet this gave them no superiority to him; but because she was made out of him, and made for him, see 1Co 11:8. So that the woman's subjection to the man is according to the laws of nature and creation; and was antecedent to the fall; and would have been, if that had never been; though that brought her into a lower, and meaner, and more depressed estate; which the apostle next mentions. The words may be rendered, "the first Adam", or "Adam the first was formed, and then Eve". See 1Co 15:45.

Gill: 1Ti 2:14 - -- And Adam was not deceived,.... There is no need to say with interpreters, that he was not deceived first; and that he was not deceived immediately by ...

And Adam was not deceived,.... There is no need to say with interpreters, that he was not deceived first; and that he was not deceived immediately by the serpent, but by Eve; and that he is never said in Scripture to be deceived, as Melchizedek is never said to have a father or mother. The apostle's positive assertion is to be taken without any such limitations or qualifications; Adam never was deceived at all; neither by the serpent, with whom he never conversed; nor by his wife, he knew what he did, when he took the fruit of her, and ate; he ate it not under any deception, or vain imagination, that they should not die, but should be as gods, knowing good and evil. He took and ate out of love to his wife, from a fond affection to her, to bear her company, and that she might not die alone; he knew what he did, and he knew what would be the consequence of it, the death of them both; and inasmuch as he sinned wilfully, and against light and knowledge, without any deception, his sin was the greater: and hereby death came in, and passed on all men, who sinned in him:

but the woman being deceived was in the transgression: and the serpent really beguiled her; she owned it herself, Gen 3:13. And this is elsewhere said of her, 2Co 11:3 which never is of Adam. She really thought the serpent spoke truth, that she and her husband should not die, if they ate of the fruit; but that it was good to make them wise; and that, upon eating it, they should be as gods, knowing good and evil; and under this deception she fell into the transgression, and was the cause and means, by her persuasions and example, of bringing her husband into the same sin; which involved him and all his posterity in ruin and destruction. And therefore she is called by the Jews p אם העון, "the mother of iniquity and sin"; to which they refer, Psa 51:5. And they say, q she was the cause of death to Adam, and to all the world: See Gill on Rom 5:12. And they observe r the order of the punishment of the serpent, Eve, and Adam, as of their sin; the serpent was first accursed, then Eve, and last of all Adam. They say

"s Samael (the devil) could not subvert Adam, till the serpent came and turned the heart of Eve, and Eve turned his heart, and they both sinned; wherefore it is said, "the woman which thou gavest me"; Samael had no power to turn him, till Eve came, and she was the cause of his eating.''

Now inasmuch as the serpent did not attack Adam, he being the stronger and more knowing person, and less capable of being managed and seduced; but made his attempt on Eve, in which he succeeded; and since not Adam, but Eve, was deceived, it appears that the man is the more proper person to bear rule and authority, as in civil and domestic, so in ecclesiastic affairs; and it is right for the woman to learn, and the man to teach: and seeing that Eve was the cause of transgression to Adam, and of punishment to him and his posterity, the subjection of the woman to the man was confirmed afresh: and she was brought into a more depressed state of dependence on him, and subjection to him; see Gen 3:16. The Ethiopic version renders the text, "Adam hath not deceived, the woman hath deceived and prevaricated".

Gill: 1Ti 2:15 - -- Notwithstanding she shall be saved,.... Not Eve, though no doubt she is saved; since she had a sense of her sin, and shame for it, a revelation of the...

Notwithstanding she shall be saved,.... Not Eve, though no doubt she is saved; since she had a sense of her sin, and shame for it, a revelation of the Messiah to her, and faith in him; see Gen 3:7. But rather any woman, particularly such as profess godliness, who shall be saved

in childbearing; which is to be understood not of a temporal salvation, or being saved through childbearing, through the perilous time, and be delivered out of it; for though this is generally the case, yet not always, nor always the case of good women. Rachel died in childbed: the Jews say t, for three transgressions women die in childbearing; because they do not take care of their menstrues, and of the cake of the firstfruits, and of lighting the lamp (when the sabbath approaches). But spiritual and eternal salvation is here meant; not that bearing children is the cause, condition, or means of salvation; for as this is not God's way of salvation, so it confines the salvation of women to childbearing ones; and which must give an uneasy reflection to maidens, and women that never bore any; but rather the meaning is, that good women shall be saved, notwithstanding their bearing and bringing forth children in pain and sorrow, according to the original curse, in Gen 3:16. And so the words administer some comfort to women, in their present situation of subjection and sorrow; though they may be rendered impersonally thus, "notwithstanding there is salvation through the birth of a son": and the sense is, that notwithstanding the fall of man by the means of the woman, yet there is salvation for both men and women, through the birth of Immanuel, the child born, and Son given; at whose birth, the angels sung peace on earth, good will to men; through the true Messiah, the deed of the woman, through the incarnate Saviour, who was made of a woman, there is salvation for lost sinners: he was born of a woman, and came into the world in order to obtain salvation for them; and he has effected it, and it is in him, for all such who apply to him for it; and with it all true believers, men and women, shall be saved through him,

if they continue in faith and charity, and holiness, with sobriety. The Vulgate Latin version reads in the singular, "if she continues", &c. but the sense is the same; for the "she", or woman, is to be taken in a collective sense, as it is in the context, for many women; even for such as profess faith and godliness. The Syriac and Ethiopic versions render the words, "she shall be saved by her children", if they continue, &c. i.e. she shall be saved by bearing of children, and bringing of them up in a religious way; if they, the children, continue as they were brought up; which is a very strange rendering of the words, and is as strange an interpretation of them; and yet is what many have given into, but needs no confutation. The meaning of the words is, that there is salvation through the incarnate Messiah, for all sorts of persons; for all men and women who believe in him, with that faith which works by love, and shows itself in holiness and sobriety; provided that they continue herein. For there are some that profess these things, that have only a temporary faith, and feigned love, and not true holiness; and these fall away, and are not saved; but such who have these graces in truth, as they do, and shall continue in them, so they shall certainly be saved.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: 1Ti 2:11 Or “receive instruction.”

NET Notes: 1Ti 2:12 Grk “but to be in quietness.” The phrase ἐν ἡσυχίᾳ (en Jhsucia) is used in Greek literature eit...

NET Notes: 1Ti 2:14 Grk “has come to be in transgression” (with an emphasis on the continuing consequences of that fall).

NET Notes: 1Ti 2:15 There is a shift to the plural here (Grk “if they continue”), but it still refers to the woman in a simple shift from generic singular to ...

Geneva Bible: 1Ti 2:12 But I suffer not a woman to teach, ( 8 ) nor to usurp authority over the man, but to be in silence. ( 8 ) The first argument, why it is not lawful fo...

Geneva Bible: 1Ti 2:13 ( 9 ) For Adam was first formed, then Eve. ( 9 ) He proves this ordinance of God, by which the woman is subject to man, first because God made the wo...

Geneva Bible: 1Ti 2:14 ( 10 ) And Adam was not ( g ) deceived, but the woman being deceived was in the transgression. ( 10 ) Then, because after sin, God gave the woman thi...

Geneva Bible: 1Ti 2:15 ( 11 ) Notwithstanding she shall be saved in childbearing, if they continue in faith and charity and holiness with sobriety. ( 11 ) He adds a comfort...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: 1Ti 2:1-15 - --1 That it is meet to pray and give thanks for all men, and the reason why.9 How women should be attired.12 They are not permitted to teach.15 They sha...

MHCC: 1Ti 2:8-15 - --Under the gospel, prayer is not to be confined to any one particular house of prayer, but men must pray every where. We must pray in our closets, pray...

Matthew Henry: 1Ti 2:9-15 - -- I. Here is a charge, that women who profess the Christian religion should be modest, sober, silent, and submissive, as becomes their place. 1. They ...

Barclay: 1Ti 2:8-15 - --The early Church took over the Jewish attitude of prayer, which was to pray standing, with hands outstretched and the palms upwards. Later Tertulli...

Barclay: 1Ti 2:8-15 - --The second part of this passage deals with the place of women in the Church. It cannot be read out of its historical context, for it springs entirel...

Constable: 1Ti 2:1--4:6 - --III. INSTRUCTIONS CONCERNING THE LIFE OF THE LOCAL CHURCH 2:1--4:5 Paul moved on from instructions aimed primari...

Constable: 1Ti 2:8-15 - --B. The primary responsibilities of the men and the women in church meetings 2:8-15 "In this paragraph Paul continues his instructions on prayers' begu...

College: 1Ti 2:1-15 - --1 TIMOTHY 2 III. DIRECTION FOR PUBLIC WORSHIP (2:1-15) Following his charge to Timothy with regard to his faith and conscience and the warning with ...

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Commentary -- Other

Critics Ask: 1Ti 2:12 1 TIMOTHY 2:12-14 —Does the Bible limit the ministry of women? PROBLEM: Paul said here that he did not “permit a woman to teach or to have au...

Critics Ask: 1Ti 2:13 1 TIMOTHY 2:12-14 —Does the Bible limit the ministry of women? PROBLEM: Paul said here that he did not “permit a woman to teach or to have au...

Critics Ask: 1Ti 2:14 1 TIMOTHY 2:12-14 —Does the Bible limit the ministry of women? PROBLEM: Paul said here that he did not “permit a woman to teach or to have au...

Evidence: 1Ti 2:14 QUESTIONS & OBJECTIONS " God made me like this. Sin is His fault!" If this won’t work in a civil court, it certainly won’t work on Judgment Day....

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Introduction / Outline

Robertson: 1 Timothy (Book Introduction) First Timothy Probably a.d. 65 From Macedonia By Way of Introduction Assuming the Pauline authorship the facts shape up after this fashion. Pau...

JFB: 1 Timothy (Book Introduction) GENUINENESS.--The ancient Church never doubted of their being canonical and written by Paul. They are in the Peschito Syriac version of the second cen...

JFB: 1 Timothy (Outline) ADDRESS: PAUL'S DESIGN IN HAVING LEFT TIMOTHY AT EPHESUS, NAMELY, TO CHECK FALSE TEACHERS; TRUE USE OF THE LAW; HARMONIZING WITH THE GOSPEL; GOD'S GR...

TSK: 1 Timothy (Book Introduction) This Epistle bears the impress of its genuineness and authenticity, which are corroborated by the most decisive external evidence; and its Divine insp...

TSK: 1 Timothy 2 (Chapter Introduction) Overview 1Ti 2:1, That it is meet to pray and give thanks for all men, and the reason why; 1Ti 2:9, How women should be attired; 1Ti 2:12, They ar...

Poole: 1 Timothy 2 (Chapter Introduction) TIMOTHY CHAPTER 2

MHCC: 1 Timothy (Book Introduction) The design of the epistle appears to be, that Timothy having been left at Ephesus, St. Paul wrote to instruct him in the choice of proper officers in ...

MHCC: 1 Timothy 2 (Chapter Introduction) (1Ti 2:1-7) Prayer to be made for all persons, since the grace of the gospel makes no difference of ranks or stations. (1Ti 2:8-15) How men and women...

Matthew Henry: 1 Timothy (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The First Epistle of St. Paul to Timothy Hitherto Paul's epistles were directed to churches; now follow...

Matthew Henry: 1 Timothy 2 (Chapter Introduction) In this chapter Paul treats, I. Of prayer, with many reasons for it (1Ti 2:1-8). II. Of women's apparel (1Ti 2:9, 1Ti 2:10). III. Of their subje...

Barclay: 1 Timothy (Book Introduction) A GENERAL INTRODUCTION TO THE LETTERS OF PAUL The Letters Of Paul There is no more interesting body of documents in the New Testament than the letter...

Barclay: 1 Timothy 2 (Chapter Introduction) The Universality Of The Gospel (1Ti_2:1-7) The Way Of Prayer (1Ti_2:1-7 Continued) Prayer For Those In Authority (1Ti_2:1-7 Continued) The Gifts...

Constable: 1 Timothy (Book Introduction) Introduction Historical background Timothy apparently became a Christian as a result o...

Constable: 1 Timothy (Outline) Outline I. Salutation 1:1-2 II. Timothy's mission in Ephesus 1:3-20 A. T...

Constable: 1 Timothy 1 Timothy Bibliography Andrews, J. N. "May Women Speak in Meeting?" Review and Herald. January 2, 1879. Reprint...

Haydock: 1 Timothy (Book Introduction) THE FIRST EPISTLE OF ST. PAUL, THE APOSTLE, TO TIMOTHY. INTRODUCTION. St. Paul passing through Lycaonia, about the year 51, some of the brethr...

Gill: 1 Timothy (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO 1 TIMOTHY Timothy, to whom this epistle is written, was eminent for his early piety and acquaintance with the sacred Scriptures; hi...

Gill: 1 Timothy 2 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO 1 TIMOTHY 2 In this chapter the apostle exhorts to prayer for all sorts of men, gives rules and directions about the dress of women...

College: 1 Timothy (Book Introduction) FOREWORD A movement which prides itself in its back-to-the-Bible underpinnings and its plea for unity should welcome any effort of the stature of the...

College: 1 Timothy (Outline) OUTLINE I. THE SALUTATION - 1:1-2 II. PAUL'S CHARGE TO TIMOTHY - 1:3-20 A. The Charge and the False Teachers - 1:3-7 B. The Lawful Use of...

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