Everyone knows Pauls words on women pastors or rather a women speaking or teaching in the church and at face value this would seem pretty clear however the context of the verse has to do with the issues that was going on in the church at the time but what really got me thinking was this right here
Galatians 3:28 states that in Christ Jesus, there is neither Jew nor Gentile, neither slave nor free, nor male nor female, for all are one. This verse emphasizes the equality and unity of believers in Christ, transcending traditional social and cultural divisions. It highlights that these categories, while still present in human society,
are not determinants of value or significance within the Christian community and so this verse got me thinking if this is to be true then why do we take Pauls words at face value he would be contradicting the himself
unless of course he was speaking in regards to what was going on in the church at the time then it would make sense not to mention what about the women who he even baosted about who ministered to people such as Junia?
This one verse just doesn't make sense to me if indeed women are subhuman in the church and Jesus himself never forbid women of such a thing he never even addressed it
Would Jesus forbid the gospel being preached by a women?
I believe women are fully gifted by God to teach, prophesy, evangelize, disciple, and lead in powerful ways — but not to step into the role of preaching with spiritual authority over men in the gathered church setting.
This isn’t because women are less capable — it’s because I believe God, in His wisdom and order, has set specific roles for men and women in the body of Christ. That includes male eldership and the role of pastoral preaching authority in the church.
> “I do not permit a woman to teach or to have authority over a man; she must be silent…” (1 Tim. 2:12)
Yes, women like Priscilla taught Apollos. Yes, women prophesied publicly. But those roles aren’t the same as authoritative preaching from the pulpit to the whole church body. Prophecy is spontaneous, Spirit-given insight; preaching is the public exposition and authoritative application of the Word — and I believe that role is biblically reserved for qualified men.
This doesn’t silence women — it honors God's created order. And it doesn’t mean women aren’t valuable in ministry — it means we serve in different ways, according to His design. God is not the author of confusion (1 Cor. 14:33), and when we align ourselves with His Word, the Church thrives in power and purity.
This view isn’t about control — it’s about obedience. Not tradition — but Scripture.
Women have powerful voices, and they should use them — in teaching, discipling, prophesying, writing, praying, evangelizing, and leading other women. But when it comes to the authoritative preaching role over the corporate church, I believe God has given that mantle to men, not as tyrants — but as servants, accountable before Him.
Let’s not confuse equality in value with sameness in role.
Let’s not call restriction oppression when it’s actually God’s protection.
Let’s not be ashamed of the order God called good from the beginning.