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A single chapter of Scripture can feel like it’s arguing with the modern world and 1 Corinthians 11 is one of the clearest examples. We sit down with Paul’s words on headship in worship, head coverings, and the “nature” argument about hair, and we ask the question everyone asks: is this a timeless command for the church or a principle expressed through culture-specific symbols?
We take the text seriously enough to follow Paul’s logic all the way down. He doesn’t just say “do this because Corinth does it.” He points to God’s order (God, Christ, man, woman), to creation, to the presence of angels in worship, and to what he calls nature. That leads to a candid back-and-forth: one of us sees head coverings as a continuing visible sign of authority in corporate worship, while the other argues the symbol can change while the meaning stays the same. Along the way we talk church history, modern shifts in the West, and how to keep disagreements from turning into division.
Then the conversation turns to the Lord’s Supper, where the tone gets sobering. Paul rebukes a communion practice that humiliates the poor, fractures church unity, and treats Jesus’ sacrifice like it’s ordinary. We unpack what “unworthy manner” means, why self-examination matters, and how God’s holiness shows up in loving discipline meant to protect the church.
If you care about biblical interpretation, Christian worship, communion, and how the church should live out God’s design for men and women, this is a chapter worth thinking through with us. Subscribe for more, share this with a friend who loves Scripture, and leave a review with your take on head coverings and the Lord’s Supper.
Text us at 737-231-0605 with any questions.
By Pastor Plek5
1010 ratings
Send us Fan Mail
A single chapter of Scripture can feel like it’s arguing with the modern world and 1 Corinthians 11 is one of the clearest examples. We sit down with Paul’s words on headship in worship, head coverings, and the “nature” argument about hair, and we ask the question everyone asks: is this a timeless command for the church or a principle expressed through culture-specific symbols?
We take the text seriously enough to follow Paul’s logic all the way down. He doesn’t just say “do this because Corinth does it.” He points to God’s order (God, Christ, man, woman), to creation, to the presence of angels in worship, and to what he calls nature. That leads to a candid back-and-forth: one of us sees head coverings as a continuing visible sign of authority in corporate worship, while the other argues the symbol can change while the meaning stays the same. Along the way we talk church history, modern shifts in the West, and how to keep disagreements from turning into division.
Then the conversation turns to the Lord’s Supper, where the tone gets sobering. Paul rebukes a communion practice that humiliates the poor, fractures church unity, and treats Jesus’ sacrifice like it’s ordinary. We unpack what “unworthy manner” means, why self-examination matters, and how God’s holiness shows up in loving discipline meant to protect the church.
If you care about biblical interpretation, Christian worship, communion, and how the church should live out God’s design for men and women, this is a chapter worth thinking through with us. Subscribe for more, share this with a friend who loves Scripture, and leave a review with your take on head coverings and the Lord’s Supper.
Text us at 737-231-0605 with any questions.