Mythologizing the Bible
Our core value this week is Equality, and in the main presentation we spent quite a bit of time talking about Paul’s beautiful image in 1 Corinthians 10. “Because there is one loaf, we who are many are one body.” It’s a powerful metaphor. Everybody shares from the same source. Everybody belongs. Everybody matters. The image cuts across wealth, status, ethnicity, nationality, and social class. It presents a vision of humanity that is remarkably inclusive for a text written nearly two thousand years ago. But if you’ve ever sat down and read more of 1 Corinthians, you may have noticed something strange. In fact, “strange” might be putting it politely! Just a few chapters after Paul presented his inclusive “one body” image, we encounter one of the most frequently quoted passages used to exclude women from leadership in the church. Suddenly, the same letter that seemed to be dismantling social barriers appears to be reinforcing them. The same author who sounds radically egalitarian in one chapter sounds surprisingly authoritarian in another. One moment we’re all one body. The next moment women are told to sit down, shut up, and let the men handle things. That should make us uncomfortable. Not because we’re modern people imposing modern values onto an ancient text, but because the contradiction exists inside the text itself. The tension is already there. If Paul is truly building a community based on shared dignity and participation, why does he suddenly sound like he’s auditioning for a first-century patriarchy appreciation society? Most Christians are taught that the answer must be theological. Maybe Paul changed topics. Maybe there’s hidden context. Maybe we’re misunderstanding the Greek. Maybe there’s an invisible footnote that only appears if you’ve attended three years of seminary and consumed an unhealthy amount of coffee. But what if we’re asking the wrong question? What if the real question isn’t what Paul meant? What if the real question is whether Paul wrote every word attributed to him in the first place? So, let’s dive into that… in this episode of Afterthoughts! CODA Project is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. Get full access to CODA Project at www.thecodaproject.com/subscribe [https://www.thecodaproject.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]
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