Even though....you kinda twisted it a bit, essentially you agreed with me in (context of the church)....
I didnt say context of church I said on spiritual matters. If you want to equate what he said to men and women then we shoud do it evenly. He said that men should in ALL PLACES do X and Y (that has to do with worship and spirituality). So when he talks about women, we should not say ONLY in churc. He said LIKEWISE. So, women, in any place, should not teach or be on a position of authority over spiritual matters, according to Paul.
Now I can sleep...to Answer your questioning me personally and my membership on this forum and how does that fit with Paul's allocating my role as a women? I am not in church, this isn't a place of worship and I am in no way declaring myself to you or anyone as a preacher, pastor, leader, elder or deaconess. Think of me more as the cleaning lady if you like, a sleepy one at that....
You dont need to. When you explain to a man what the "teaching" is, you are not in a quiet and submissive role, which Paul says women should have in all places (remember we are under the context of the "likewise" )
He is not only talking about authority (title) but also about teaching (action).
If you are telling me what you believe the truth is, that is called teaching.
teach Pronunciation: /tiːtʃ/
Definition of teach
verb (past and past participle taught /tɔːt/)
1 [with object and infinitive or clause] impart knowledge to or instruct (someone) as to how to do something:
she taught him to read
he taught me how to ride a bike
[with object] give information about or instruction in (a subject or skill):
he came one day each week to teach painting
[with two objects]:
she teaches me French
[no object] work as a teacher:
she teaches at the local high school
2 [with object and clause]
cause (someone) to learn or understand something by example or experience:
she’d been taught that it paid to be passive
my upbringing taught me never to be disrespectful to elders
[with object]
encourage someone to accept (something) as a fact or principle:
the philosophy teaches self-control
informal make (someone) less inclined to do something:
‘I’ll teach you to forget my tea,’ he said, and gave me six with his cane