I agree that women can teach, pray and worship and do all things, except Pastor a church either alone or as a co-pastor with her husband.
With all due respect, That idea is NOT Biblical but instead it is a denominational teaching to get around the directions given by Paul.
“A woman should learn in quietness and full submission. I do not permit a woman to teach or to have authority over a man; she must be silent” (
1 Timothy 2:11–12)
Verse 11 says, “Let a woman quietly receive instruction with entire submissiveness.”
The Greek adversative “de” (“but” in English) links verse 12 back to 11. Paul wants women to learn in the entire submissiveness.
Some even say that the Greek words “gyne” (woman) and “andros” (man) mean wife and husband. This would render the verse as, “But I do not allow a wife to teach or exercise authority over a husband, but to remain quiet.” (
1 Tim. 2:12). Supporters of this argument then conclude that this would not prevent a woman from being a pastor since this is not speaking of women in general but only wives in relation to their husbands.
Is this argument sound? No, it isn’t.
WHY????
If a wife were a pastor and her husband were in the congregation,
then when she taught, she’d be teaching her husband. T
his can’t work–unless the husband has to leave the church each time his wife teaches. Ridiculous? You bet!
In all of the 17 English translations of the Bible I have (Darby, ASV, ESV, HCSB, ISV, KJV, NASB95, NASB, NCV, NIV, NKJV, NLT, NRSV, WUESTNT, RSV, GNB, WorrelNT, YLT), none translate the verse as wife and husband, so why do people assert that it is about a husband and wife?