1 Corinthians 11:7-12
God's design for men and women displays both ordered distinction and mutual dependence.
Scripture Text
11:7 For a man indeed ought not to have His head covered, because He is the image and glory of God, but the woman is the glory of the man.
11:8 For man is not from woman, but woman from man;
11:9 For man wasn’t created for the woman, but woman for the man.
11:10 For this cause the woman ought to have authority over her own head, because of the angels.
11:11 Nevertheless, neither is the woman independent of the man, nor the man independent of the woman, in the Lord.
11:12 For as woman came from man, so a man also comes through a woman; but all things are from God.
God's design for men and women displays both ordered distinction and mutual dependence.
God's created order establishes both distinction and mutual dependence between men and women within the life of the church.
- 11:1 Paul gives a transition exhortation, calling the Corinthians to imitate Him as He imitates Christ.
- 11:2-16 Paul addresses headship, honor, and visible conduct in worship, especially as it relates to men and women praying or prophesying. He appeals to creation order, glory language, interdependence, propriety, and accepted practice among the churches.
- 11:17-22 Paul sharply rebukes the Corinthians for their conduct when they come together. Their gatherings do more harm than good because divisions and humiliating class distinctions corrupt what should be the Lord’s Supper.
- 11:23-26 Paul recounts the dominical tradition of the Lord’s Supper, grounding the church’s practice in what He received from the Lord: the bread and cup signify Christ’s body and the new covenant in His blood, and the meal proclaims the Lord’s death until He comes.
- 11:27-34 Paul warns that eating and drinking in an unworthy manner incurs guilt concerning the body and blood of the Lord. Believers must examine themselves, discern the body rightly, and understand present weakness, sickness, and even death among them as divine discipline. He closes with practical directives about waiting for one another and eating at home if hungry.
- Paul's discussion of honor and order does not imply that women possess less value or dignity than men.
- The passage should not be used to justify domination or mistreatment within relationships.
- Paul explicitly balances distinction with mutual dependence within the Lord.
- The ultimate emphasis of the passage is God's design and authority rather than human superiority.
- Do not interpret this passage as teaching that women are inferior to men.
- Do not ignore Paul's emphasis on mutual dependence in the Lord.
- Do not isolate the concept of headship from the broader theology of creation.
- Do not use this passage to justify domination rather than servant leadership.
- Do not overlook the dignity shared by all who bear God's image.
- The church should teach creation theology when addressing questions of relationships and authority.
- Both men and women possess dignity and purpose within God’s design.
- Christian worship should reflect the harmony of God’s created order.
- Leadership must guard against distortions that diminish either gender.
- Healthy church life reflects mutual honor and cooperation among believers.
- Covenant Significance : The chapter explicitly identifies the cup as the new covenant in Christ’s blood, making the Supper a covenant meal of remembrance, proclamation, and participation in the church’s identity under the crucified Lord. The gathered church must therefore embody covenantal fidelity, mutual regard, and holy order.
- Old Testament Foundation : Genesis 1:26-27
- Old Testament Foundation : Genesis 2:18-24
- Old Testament Foundation : Exodus 24:8
- Old Testament Foundation : Jeremiah 31:31-34
- Thematic Parallel : Luke 22:19-20
- Thematic Parallel : 1 Corinthians 10:16-17
- Thematic Parallel : Hebrews 12:5-11
- Thematic Parallel : James 2:1-9
- Thematic Parallel : Ephesians 4:1-6
Through the gospel, men and women are reconciled to God and brought into one redeemed community under Christ. While created distinctions remain meaningful, all believers share equal standing before God through the saving work of Jesus Christ.