Paul on Women Speaking in Church by B. B. Warfield
Synopsis
I have recently received a letter from a valued friend asking me to send him a "discussion of the Greek words λαλέω (laleō) and λέγω (legō) in such passages as I Cor. 14: 33—39, with special reference to the question: Does the thirty-fourth verse forbid all women everywhere to speak or preach publicly in Christian churches?" The matter is of universal interest, and I take the liberty of communicating my reply to the readers of The Presbyterian. It requires to be said at once that there is no problem with reference to the relations of λαλέω (laleō) and λέγω (legō). Apart from niceties of merely philological interest, these words stand related to one another just as the English words speak and say do; that is to say, λαλέω (laleō) expresses the act of talking, while λέγω (legō) refers to what is said. Wherever then the fact of speaking, without reference to the content of what is said, is to be indicated, λαλέω (laleō) is used, and must be used. There is nothing disparaging in the intimation of the word, any more than there is in our word talk; although, of course, it can on occasion be used disparagingly as our word talk can also—as when some of the newspapers intimate that the Senate is given over to mere talk.
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