← Contents 1 Timothy 2:8–15

1 Timothy 2:8–15

8 2:8I desire then that in every place the men should pray, lifting holy hands without anger or quarreling; 9 2:9likewise also that women should adorn themselves in respectable apparel, with modesty and self-control, not with braided hair and gold or pearls or costly attire, 10 2:10but with what is proper for women who profess godliness—with good works. 11 2:11Let a woman learn quietly with all submissiveness. 12 2:12I do not permit a woman to teach or to exercise authority over a man; rather, she is to remain quiet. 13 2:13For Adam was formed first, then Eve; 14 2:14and Adam was not deceived, but the woman was deceived and became a transgressor. 15 2:15Yet she will be saved through childbearing—if they continue in faith and love and holiness, with self-control.

Section Overview

Our passage appears amid a longer section in which Paul instructs Timothy concerning how the congregation ought to pray. In short, Paul has commanded them to pray for “kings” and “all who are in authority” because he desires God’s people to be able to lead a peaceful and quiet life. Ultimately Paul desires to preserve conditions conducive to evangelism and holiness. Now, in verses 8–15, Paul describes to Timothy how men and women in particular are to conduct themselves within the church. This is, after all, the main reason Paul writes the letter: to communicate to Timothy how people are supposed to conduct themselves “in the household of God, which is the church of the living God” (1 Tim. 3:15). In this text, he is particularly concerned with how men and women behave when they gather together for public worship.

Section Outline
  1. II. Worshiping Together in God’s Household (2:1–15) . . .
    1. B. Men and Women at Prayer Together (2:8–15)
      1. 1. Public Worship Led by Holy Men (2:8)
      2. 2. Public Worship Inhabited by Modest Women (2:9–10)
      3. 3. Public Worship Ordered by Biblical Gender Norms (2:11–15)

TABLE 6.3: Agency and Order in Creation and the Fall

The Order of Creation The Order of the Fall
God the Creator

Adam

Eve

Beasts of the Ground
Serpent

Eve

Adam

God

Paul appeals to this agency and order in creation and the fall to show that Adam’s leadership in the first marriage was established in part on the basis that God created him first—a principle of primogeniture very common in the ancient world. Because this ordering is a part of God’s original creation and is deemed by God to be “good,” Paul views it as the paradigm for all marriages to follow. God intends a certain order in the husband-wife relationship. The order of creation establishes the husband as leader in the first marriage and in all marriages to follow.

The order in marriage has wider implications for church leadership, which is the point Paul is pressing in 1 Timothy 2:12ff. Paul appeals to the nature of marriage to establish a point about leadership within the church. This is not an accident, and it corresponds with what Paul says in 1 Corinthians 11:3–16 concerning marriage, “headship,” and order within the gathered assembly. The pattern for leadership in marriage is the basis for an all-male eldership. The gender norms of the eldership must follow the gender norms for marriage. If this were not the case, the church’s leadership structure would be at odds with the leadership structure God has established for marriages within the church.

Sin came into the world when the Serpent strove to assault God’s order. Likewise, to subvert the headship principle that God established at the very beginning would be to subvert God’s design. This is why he prohibits women from teaching and exercising authority within the gathered assembly. The prohibition is not because of deficiency of intellect among women. Nor is it due to some situation specific to the Ephesian church. Because this prohibition is rooted in the order of creation, it is a transcultural principle to be observed for all times and ages. Male headship in marriage is not a result of the fall but is a part of the order of creation. So also, then, is male eldership in the church.

2:15 The interpretation of verse 15 has also been an item of great debate among commentators. The confusion over the meaning of this verse is reflected in different English translations. For example, the NASB says that “women will be preserved,” whereas the ESV says that “she will be saved.” The NASB reflects the view that Paul is merely stating that faithful Christian women will be preserved physically when they give birth. But this is implausible, because we know that not all faithful Christian women survive childbirth. The ESV is nearer the mark. This particular Greek word always refers to spiritual salvation elsewhere in the Pastoral Epistles, and we have no reason to think the verb is being used differently here.

If this is the case, is Paul suggesting that women are saved by means of bearing children? This would seem to contradict Paul’s teaching that salvation is by grace through faith apart from works (e.g., Eph. 2:8). One ancient interpretation of this text avoids this question by holding that this statement refers not to childbirth generically but to the childbirth of the Messiah Jesus. This interpretation harks back to Genesis 3:15, which says that the seed of the woman will crush the head of the Serpent, a prophecy fulfilled ultimately in the birth of Christ, who destroys the works of the Devil. Thus, women are saved through the childbirth of Christ. But that interpretation makes little sense in context.

It is more likely that Paul uses childbearing as a figure of speech known as a synecdoche.7 A synecdoche is a figure in which the part stands for the whole. Childbearing is a part of a larger whole, which is the woman’s wider role to care for the home. This is the same role Paul describes in Titus 2:4–5: “Young women [are] to love their husbands and children, to be self-controlled, pure, working at home, kind, and submissive to their own husbands, that the word of God may not be reviled.”

So, in both 1 Timothy 2 and Titus 2, Paul declares that wives have a God-ordained role to play in caring for children and the home. This is not claiming that a woman must have children in order to be saved. It is not even teaching that a woman must be married to be saved. But for those women who are married, God assigns a special responsibility to care for the home.

A wife’s fulfillment of this role will be one of the evidences of perseverance in the faith. Salvation is future in this verse: “She will be saved.” Thus it is not entry into salvation that is in view but the future consummation of salvation. Women who embrace their God-ordained role while continuing in the Christian virtues of “faith and love and holiness, with self-control” will find themselves saved on the last day (cf. comment on Titus 2:5 concerning “working at home”).

1 Knight, Pastoral Epistles, 136.

2 Ibid.

3 Thomas R. Schreiner, “An Interpretation of 1 Timothy 2:9–15: A Dialogue with Scholarship,” in Women in the Church: An Interpretation and Application of 1 Timothy 2:9–15, ed. Andreas J. Köstenberger and Thomas R. Schreiner, 3rd ed. (Wheaton, IL: Crossway, 2016), 186.

4 For an extended discussion of this verse in English translation, see Denny Burk, “New and Old Departures in the Translation of Αὐθεντεῖν,” in Women in the Church: An Interpretation and Application of 1 Timothy 2:9–15, 3rd ed. (Wheaton, IL: Crossway, 2016), 279–296.

5 Andreas J. Köstenberger, “A Complex Sentence: The Syntax of 1 Timothy 2:12,” in Women in the Church: An Interpretation and Application of 1 Timothy 2:9–15, ed. Andreas J. Köstenberger and Thomas R. Schreiner, 3rd ed. (Wheaton, IL: Crossway, 2016), 117–161.

6 “Authority” does not have an inherently negative connotation. See Al Wolters, “The Meaning of Αὐθεντέω,” in Women in the Church: An Interpretation and Application of 1 Timothy 2:9–15, ed. Andreas J. Köstenberger and Thomas R. Schreiner, 3rd ed. (Wheaton, IL: Crossway, 2016), 65–115.

7 Schreiner, “An Interpretation of 1 Timothy 2:9–15,” 222.

Response

Female readers might consider whether their assumptions about discipleship line up with Paul’s. It would be unbiblical and unhealthy to assume that careful Bible study and theology are the exclusive preserve of men. This is not what Paul teaches. When Christian women gather together with the church, they are there to be instructed and discipled in the Word, just as men are. All people must be students of the deep things of God.

God has so ordered the church that its teaching authority resides with the pastors (elders). The congregation recognizes and puts forth qualified men for this position. And women are called to learn in quietness and submission within this order.

God has a reason for ordering the offices of the church in the way that he does. And Satan hates that reason. God intends the all-male eldership to reflect the principle of male headship established at creation. God intends male headship in marriage to portray Christ’s loving headship over his bride the church. That means that the principle of headship is not an imposition on God’s people. It symbolizes both to God’s people and to the world the unsurpassed beauty of Christ’s saving work.