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PrayforMallory
Guest
While certainly I believe you have a valid point, at the same time I think you are relying too much on the historical-critical method in your exegesis. Paul is certainly is speaking in a local context, to the particular Church in question, but I’m skeptical that his message is not also applicable to the Universal Church, especially in light of other passages and the fact that the Church’s Magisterium encouraged the practice, which was widely adopted, all the way up until the 1960’s, when secular attitudes began to seep into the Church.This is probably a good example of why we, as Catholics, are not Sola Scripture. If one continues to read 1 Cor. 11, one would find it self evident that women’s heads should be covered in Mass, and so on. However, being blessed with a living Magesterium, we have proper guidance. The Church understands that 1 Cor 11 must be taken in context, both historical and theological.
As the NAB notes, Paul in primarily using a local custom and particular instance to introduce a theological concept of heirarchy, which he better develops in a later letter. The irony, of course, is that by interpreting the letter as above, in contrast to the Church’s more nuanced understanding of proper male, female relationships, one is, in fact, missing what Paul is fundementally trying to teach.
Think about it, by placing one’s own interpretation of scritpture ahead of the Holy See, one is foresaking one’s proper role in the heirarchy of the body of the faithful - something we believe to be created by God. Having forsaken one’s proper role in God’s Church, one is no longer a proper Christian model - hence no longer a suitable fit for Paul’s analogy above.
Lots of women do wear head-coverings in Church, if you go to the more traditional parishes. My wife and daughter wear veils. It’s not a sign of subjugation to me. My wife makes more money than me, is likely smarter than me, and certainly stricter in regards to discipline than I am. She wears the headcovering as a sign of feminine humility before the blessed sacrament.
However, I have to work to live up to my divinely mandated duty to be the head of my family, despite the fact that I want to lay on the couch and play video games all day. As for the husband being the head of the family, this wasn’t something I derived from Sola Scriptura. I’ve never had anything but contempt for Sola Scriptura.
Pope Pius IX, in Casti Connubbi,
“False liberty and unnatural equality [in authority] with the husband is to the detriment of the woman herself, for if the woman descends from her truly regal throne to which she has been raised within the walls of the home by means of the gospel, she will soon be reduced to the old state of slavery (if not in appearance, certainly in reality) and become as among the pagans the mere instrument of man.”
Pope Leo XIII
“The man is the ruler of the family, and the head of the woman; but because she is flesh of his flesh and bone of his bone, let her be subject and obedient to the man, not as a servant but as a companion, so that nothing be lacking of honor or of dignity in the obedience which she pays… Let divine charity be the constant guide of their mutual relations, both in him who rules and her who obeys, since each bears the image, the one of Christ, the other of the Church.”