Question #173
What about the veils in 1st Corinthians 11?
Are the veils talked about in I Cor. 11:5 -16 referring to a natural or artificial head covering. I have looked at these verses many time and always thought a. Paul was referring to hair as the head covering and, b. it was a custom of the time and not to be followed in present day. If these verses mean a women’s hair as covering why in vs. 6 does it say “if a women is not veiled, let her also be shorn.”? Does the “also” there imply a second veil? Does it mean long hair vs. short hair? Also, if this is merely a custom, why does Paul not indicate it as such as in chapter 7 with the marriage in present distress advice. The closing verse on the matter is also cloudy in my understanding. Does the writer mean to say if anyone has objection not to argue with him as we have no such custom or argument is useless, I (Paul) have direct authority from God on the topic, enough said? Thank you for your thoughtful attention and all the hard work you put into this website.
The Answer:
This question is answered in Lesson 15 from our series of lessons on First Corinthians.
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