I was just thinking on this subject again recently…
So, if singleness, even singleness not necessarily tied to any kind of “vocation”, is a viable option for women, why does Paul here, instead of saying “she SHALL be saved through childbearing” rather say something like, “she MAY be saved through childbearing”, in the sense that, while childbearing is an option for women and a viable one through which she may be saved, it is not necessary for salvation? Is the argument that I suggested above (that most women did, in fact, marry and have kids at that time) a valid one here, so that we may suggest that Paul was not necessarily addressing every woman individually but that he was rather addressing the state of the majority of the women to whom he was writing? In other words, if we do take the “she will be saved through childbearing” as referring to women generally and the “if they continue in” the virtues as referrring to her physical children, could Paul simply be saying that, if a woman has children, that is as valid a way to be saved as her potentially teaching in the churches?
Still, though, it bothers me that Paul seems to address all women here as bearing children when surely there were some women who had enough means to choose to remain single even during his day, and, who, indeed, may have chosen to do so for reasons other than religious? Why did Paul not include these women in his statement “she SHALL be saved through childbearing, if they continue…”?
Perhaps the “shall” here has in mind the woman who has already had children and those children, “if they continue”, etc. will save her?
Also, is there any argument that could make this passage refer more to “child-rearing/raising” than to the actual act of the “bearing” of children? If so, this could make the “if” clause in this passage more logical/relevant.
Yet, again, though, I’m still having the issue with Paul seeming to make the generalization that all women “SHALL be saved” by child-bearing/rearing(?). I mean, even outside of child-bearing/rearing, could not women still take on other roles in the Church, even during Paul’s day? If Paul was simply saying that “child-bearing/rearing” was an option for women to “work out” their salvation, shouldn’t he have also addressed other options that women had in the Church to accomplish this as well, especially ifthere were some women who were/chose to be single for other than religious reasons? Why does Paul here seem to make the only other option for women to be saved in the Church the bearing/rearing(?) of children?