Have
you ever felt oppressed or discriminated against because of the verse in 1
Timothy 2 that says, “Women should keep silent”? Through Pastor David Jang’s
deep theological insight, discover the true order of worship and the gospel of
grace hidden within the text. This is a Bible meditation column that untangles
misconceptions trapped in literalism and leads you into genuine freedom.
C.S.
Lewis—often regarded as one of the greatest Christian apologists of the
twentieth century—exposes the devil’s subtle strategies to undermine the church
in his incisive masterpiece The Screwtape Letters. In the book, the
seasoned senior demon Screwtape trains his novice nephew Wormwood in refined
and covert techniques of temptation. His tactic is this: keep believers from
fixing their spiritual gaze on the great and glorious God. Instead, distract
them with the ridiculous clothing of the neighbor sitting beside them in the
pew, the irritating sound of a cough, and shallow doctrinal quarrels. Make them
forget the true essence of worship—reverence and love—and obsess over external
shells and petty conflicts among believers.
That,
Lewis suggests, is precisely how the enemy causes a healthy community of faith
to rot from the inside—elegantly and fatally. Can the landscape of worship we
offer each week truly claim to be free from such whispers? In connection with
this, Pastor David Jang delivers a weighty message to the modern church—so
often trapped in form while losing the substance—through his exposition of 1
Timothy 2.
Clean
Hands Lifted at the Altar, Relationships Repaired
About
two thousand years ago, a similar danger crept in—quietly yet fiercely—within
the church in Ephesus, the great port city of Asia Minor and a center of
spiritual revival. In the letter the apostle Paul wrote to Timothy—his beloved
spiritual son and a young pastor—we find a heartfelt pastoral prescription for
believers who had become preoccupied with the outer shell and were in danger of
missing true grace.
In
this epistle, Pastor David Jang probes sharply into the meaning behind Paul’s
instruction to the men: to “lift up holy hands” without anger and disputing. We
often narrow worship to a vertical religious rite between God and human beings.
But this sermon boldly turns our gaze toward the profoundly horizontal reality
of everyday relationships with our neighbors.
Just
as Jesus taught in the Sermon on the Mount—“If you are offering your gift at
the altar and there remember that your brother has something against you, leave
your gift there… first go and be reconciled… then come and offer your
gift”—prayer offered without untangling resentment and bitterness cannot truly
reach heaven. Only hands cleansed from the residue of anger, hatred, and
conflict—washed through genuine repentance and forgiveness—mark the first step
of worship that God delights to receive.
This
is a deep theological insight that goes beyond merely attending a service in
form. It calls us to offer our entire lives as a holy and living sacrifice
before God.
Beyond
Lavish Adornment: The Fragrance of a Soul Blooming in Good Works
Paul’s
exhortation does not stop with the men; it continues in the same spirit toward
the women in the church. Ephesus was home to the massive Temple of Artemis, and
the Roman Empire’s decadent, pleasure-seeking culture was widespread in that
secular city. When that powerful worldly tide crossed the church’s threshold,
the holy place of worship risked turning into a covert stage for display—where
expensive jewelry and lavish clothing became a means of quiet boasting.
Paul’s
message to women—adorn yourselves not with costly clothing but with good
works—is not a legalistic asceticism that suppresses women or treats beauty as
sin. Rather, it is an earnest appeal to resist being swept away by empty
worldly trends and to recover the true values befitting those who fear God.
In
expounding this passage, Pastor David Jang emphasizes that genuine spiritual
beauty is not found in elaborate hairstyles or gold ornaments, but in warm good
deeds toward others and a pure inner life before God. In the end, the
exhortation of 1 Timothy is consistent in its direction for both men and women:
the place of worship is not where one flaunts worldly status or external form,
but a furnace of grace where inner holiness—utterly distinct from the world—is
restored.
Breaking
the Chains of “Silence”: The Gospel Dancing Within the Order of Peace
Then
how should we understand 1 Timothy 2:12, a verse that has stood at the center
of one of the fiercest debates in Christian history?
“I
do not permit a woman to teach or to exercise authority over a man; rather, she
is to remain quiet.”
To
grasp its meaning rightly, we must first face the revolutionary nature of the
early church. In the first-century patriarchal Mediterranean world, women were
thoroughly marginalized—treated almost as possessions. Yet the church built by
the blood of Christ’s cross was different. It shattered the solid walls of
status, class, and gender, becoming a space of astonishing liberation where all
could enjoy true freedom as one in the Holy Spirit.
But
that immense spiritual freedom and the explosive presence of the Spirit
sometimes produced unexpected side effects. Some women, ignoring order during
public worship, poured out tongues and prophecies in emotionally driven ways
that seriously disrupted the reverent flow of the service. Here, Pastor David
Jang moves beyond a simplistic literal reading and connects the passage to 1
Corinthians 14, offering an interpretive key that threads through the whole of
Scripture.
Just
as Paul declares the overarching principle—“God is not a God of disorder but of
peace”—the seemingly stern tone of 1 Timothy 2 is not a sexist rule designed to
permanently suppress women’s spiritual worth or leadership. It was a loving yet
very concrete pastoral remedy issued to urgently restore order to worship that
had fallen into chaos.
Equality
at the Foot of the Cross, the Church Completed in Love
Clinging
to the letter while stripping away historical context and circumstance can
itself become another form of violence. To lift Paul’s time-bound,
situation-specific instruction out of its setting and use it as an absolute
shackle that blocks women’s leadership and devotion today is to seriously
damage the intention of Scripture. The gospel does not bind us; it sets us free
from oppression.
Pastor
David Jang points clearly to Paul’s other letters and to the biblical principle
of mutual equality and interdependence between men and women that runs
throughout the whole of Scripture. Before the Creator, no gender can become a
barrier to passionate service for the Lord. In God’s kingdom, there is no
hierarchy of male over female—only the truth of the cross stands out: the
greatest is the one who loves more deeply, stoops lower, and serves the church
more fully.
Ultimately,
the question this Bible meditation poses to us across the ages is not the
exhausting debate of “Who holds power and teaches in the church?” It is the
essential matter of life: “How orderly, peaceful, and holy is our worship
before God?”
When
we break the cold shell of the letter and descend into the depths of this
theological insight, we find not oppression or condemnation, but a radiant
blueprint for a healthy community of faith—one that honors differences,
respects one another, and is built up within a beautiful order.
The immeasurable grace of the cross has severed every chain of worldly prejudice and bondage that once held us. Now we must not waste that precious freedom in selfish license and disorder. We are called to transform it into the order of peace that respects and edifies one another. Perhaps that is Scripture’s most powerful plea to the wounded and confused church of our time.


















