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  by Richard and Catherine Clark Kroeger
 
			from
			
			IntelligentChristian Website 
			
			
 Although we may idealize the early church, most of us would not have 
			enjoyed a visit to a worship service at Corinth. The impression 
			which one was most likely to receive was that of chaos and delirious 
			insanity:
 
				
				So if the whole congregation is assembled and all are using the 
			’strange tongues’ of ecstasy, and some uninstructed persons or 
			unbelievers should enter, will they not think you are mad? 
			 
				(1Corinthians 14:23, NEB) 
			
			Greeks considered madness an important aspect of worship. Women in 
			particular responded to Bacchus (also known as Dionysus), the god of 
			madness; ’him of the orgiastic cry, exciter of women, Dionysus, 
			glorified with mad honors’. (Plutarch, Moralia 671c). Ancient Corinth 
			was a center of Dionysiac worship, and Pausinius, world traveler of 
			the second century of our era gives this description:
 In the market-place, for most of the temples are there, is the 
			Ephesian Artemis, and there are two wooden statues of Dionysus, gilt 
			except the faces, which are painted with red paint, one they call 
			Lysian Dionysus and the other Dionysus the Reveler. The tradition 
			about these statues I will record. Pentheus, they say, when he 
			outraged dionysus, among other acts of reckless daring actually at 
			last went to mount Cithaeron to spy on the women, and climbed up 
			into a tree to see what they were doing; and when they detected him, 
			they forthwith dragged him down, and tore him limb from limb. And 
			afterwards, so they say at Corinth, the Pythian priestess told them 
			to discover that tree and pay it divine honors. And that is why 
			these statues are made of that very wood. (Description of Greece, II.ii; tr. 
			A.R. Shilleto)
 
 There was in Corinth, then, a significant monument memorializing the 
			savagery of female Bacchus worshippers. Nor was such a feminine 
			ferocity confined to Pentheus alone. Women under the inspiration of 
			Bacchus were said to have torn Orpheus limb from limb; and Alexander 
			the Great was supposed to have incorporated a group of these maenads 
			(mad women) into his army in his attempt to conquer India. There was 
			also a tradition that women during the course of the worship tore 
			apart young animals and ate them raw, warm and bleeding, thereby 
			receiving within themselves the life of the god. In a 1976 address 
			to the Mystery Religions Division of the Society of Biblical 
			Literature, Ross Kraemer argued that there is evidence that women 
			participated in a second level of initiation in Bacchic worship that 
			was not available to men. Among Dionysiac worshippers, writes Livy 
			in his History of Rome, ’the majority are women’ (XXXIX.xv)
 
 While women were famed for their wildness in the Bacchic cult and in 
			certain other mystery cults, other aspects of their worship were 
			more traditional. Of special importance to the study of the 
			situation Paul addresses is the concept of clamor, noisy outbursts 
			of religious pandemonium. Strabo (first century) explains how 
			popular writers describe the phenomenon:
 
				
				They represent them, one and all, as a kind of inspired people and 
			as subject to Bacchic frenzy, and, in the guise of minister, as 
			inspiring terror at the celebration of the sacred rites by means of 
			war-dances accompanied by uproar and noise and cymbals and drums and 
			also by flute and outcry...  
				(Georg., X, 3:7) 
			
			The ’sounding gong and tinkling cymbal’ used in such worship are 
			mentioned in a derogatory sense in 1 Corinthians 13:1; but the 
			religious outcry itself is dealt with more directly. It is essential 
			that we understand that much of the shouting involved in the rite 
			was the specific function of women. Euripides describes the advent 
			of Dionysiac religion to Thebes thus:  
				
				’This city, first in Hellas, 
			now shrills and echoes to my women’s cries, their ecstasy of joy’ 
				 
				(Bacchae, 11, 20-24)  
			
			The word used here for ’cry’ is olulugia, 
			defined by the Etymologicum Magnum as ’the sound which women make to 
			exult in worship’ and by E.R. Dodds as ’the women’s ritual cry of 
			triumph or thanksgiving’. Pausanias tells of ’the mountain they say 
			was called Eva from the Bacchic cry ’Evoe’ which Dionysus and his 
			attendant women first uttered there’ (Descr. of Greece, IV, xxxi) 
			 
			  
			
			Menander also demonstrates women’s role in worship:  
				
				’We were 
			offering sacrifice five times a day, and seven serving women were 
			beating cymbals around us while the rest of the women pitched high 
			the chant (olulugia)’  
				(Fragment 326).  
			
			Women were expected, then, to 
			provide certain types of sound-effects; and some of these effects 
			seem to have been limited to feminine ministrants.
 Apart from savagery and shouting, ancient writers usually describe 
			worshipers of Dionysus as engaging in dancing, drinking, sexual 
			promiscuity, varying degrees of undress, and other forms of 
			excessive behavior. It was only in frenzy that one could hold 
			communion with the god, or - in ecstasy so great that the soul 
			seemed to leave the body - to become one with him.
 
 There are significant indications that the old pagan religion still 
			exerted a powerful influence on the recent converts at Corinth. They 
			were uncomfortable over meat that had been offered to idols 
			(8:1-13), and they had to be reminded not to attend sacrificial 
			meals in pagan temples (10:20, 21) As in Bacchic feasts, there was 
			drunkenness at the Lord’s Supper and ecstatic madness at the worship 
			services. A surprising description comes from the pen of the 
			neo-Platonist Iamblichus as he explains the mystery cults, the 
			popular religions of the day, for Dionysus was not the only god who 
			inspired frenzy:
 
				
				It is necessary to investigate the causes of the divine frenzy 
			(madness). These are illuminations that come down from the gods, the 
			inspirations that are imparted from them, and the absolute authority 
			from them, which not only encompasses all things in us but banishes 
			entirely away the notions and activities which are peculiarly our 
			own. The frenzy causes words to be let fall that are not uttered 
			with the understanding of those who speak them; but it is declared, 
			on the contrary, that they are sounded with a frenzied mouth, the 
			speakers being all of them subservient and entirely controlled by 
			the energy of a dominant intelligence. All enthusiasm is of such a 
			character, and is brought to perfection from causes of such a kind.
				 
				(The Egyptian Mysteries, tr. Alexander Wilder. pp. 119f.) 
			
			Too often we regard speaking in tongues as a purely Christian 
			phenomenon, but it was known in the ancient ecstatic religions; and 
			Aristophanes in Frogs mentions ’the tongue of Bacchos’ (357). While 
			a heathen might babble without consciousness of what he was saying, 
			there is no indication that speaking a known language without prior 
			instruction was practiced outside of a Christian context. On the Day 
			of Pentecost, such languages were part of the kerygmatic 
			proclamation of the gospel. (Acts 2:4-11)
 In 1 Corinthians it is clear that the gift of ecstatic language is a 
			gift of the Holy Spirit (12:10). Yet it is also clear that the 
			situation described in 1Corinthians 14 lacked the control of the 
			Spirit, and that other, disruptive, elements were present. It is 
			obvious that there could be little sharing, because too many were 
			trying to talk at once; and much of what was being said required an 
			interpreter to make it meaningful. Paul insists that only two or 
			three may talk in tongues at any one meeting, and that they must 
			have an interpreter. He who lacks an interpreter must keep silence 
			(vs. 28). It is more desirable to build up the church through 
			prophecy, and two or three may take turns prophesying. The person 
			who holds the floor must keep silence (vs. 30) if someone else has a 
			new revelation to share. The prophets must control themselves and 
			respond to the group (vs. 32). For God is not the Lord of confused 
			tumult (as was Bacchus) but rather of peace (vs. 33). When the 
			Corinthians had been ’carried away’ (12:1f) in the cult of ’dumb 
			idols’ they had felt themselves powerless to resist their force and 
			fury, but Paul’s message here is one of self-control under the 
			influence of the Holy Spirit. If everyone feels impelled to speak at 
			once, it is not the work of God, ’who would have all things done 
			decently and in order (vs. 40)
 
 It is in this context of self-control that women are asked to subdue 
			themselves within the bounds of propriety (vs. 35). Although the 
			translations are rarely the same, the same Greek verb is used in 
			both verses 32 and 35. Hupotasso, meaning to arrange or place under, 
			is in the middle voice, indicating that the person does this to him 
			or herself. The concept of self-control is brought out in most 
			translations of verse 32.
 
 It is for prophets to control prophetic inspiration, for the God who 
			inspires them is not a God of disorder but of peace.
 
 New English Bible
 
 For the spirits of speakers (in tongues) are under their control 
			(and subject to being silenced as may be necessary). For He (Who is 
			the source of their prophesying) is not a God of confusion and 
			disorder but of peace and order. As (is the practice) in all the 
			churches of the saints (God’s people).
 
 Amplified New Testament
 
 
 The spirits of prophets are under their own control.
 
 Weymouth
 
 Prophets can always control their prophetic spirits since God is not 
			a God of disorder but of peace.
 
 Jerusalem Bible
 
 The spirit of a true preacher is under that preacher’s control, for 
			God is not a God of disorder but of harmony, as is plain in all the 
			churches.
 
 J.B. Phillips
 
 The gift of speaking God’s message should be under the speaker’s 
			control.
 
 Good News for Modern Man
 
 The spirits of prophets are subject to the prophets.
 
 Revised Standard Version
 
 Remember that a person who has a message from God has the power to 
			stop himself or wait his turn.
 
 Living Bible
 
 When the subject is so clearly self-control, how can the same verb 
			be translated so differently in the very same passage when it 
			applies to women? Quite literally, verse 35 reads, ’Let them [women] 
			control themselves, as the law also says.’ As women’s behavior 
			tended to be far wilder than that of men, such legislation had been 
			enacted in both Greek and Roman society. According to Plutarch’s
			Lives, Solon, in conjunction with Epimenides (an expert in ecstatic 
			religion), had established laws aimed at curbing the cultic excesses 
			of women. There was a special effort to restrain women at nocturnal 
			orgies with men - conditions which must have seemed to an unbeliever 
			not unlike those prevailing in the Corinthian worship service. 
			Cicero wrote in his Laws:
 
 Well, then, let us return to our laws, in which it is most 
			diligently ordained that the clear daylight should be the safeguard 
			of female virtue in the eyes of the multitude; and that they should 
			only be initiated in the mysteries of Ceres, according to the Roman 
			custom.
 
 In reference to this topic, we have an extraordinary instance of the 
			severity of our ancestors in the public prosecution and punishment 
			of the Bacchanals by the senate, supported by the consular armies. 
			And this severity of the Roman government is not singular, since 
			Diagonadas of Thebes, in the middle of Greece, suppressed all 
			nocturnal mysteries by a perpetual prohibition. (II, xv; tr. C.D. Yange)
 
 Before the Roman senate passed stringent legislation limiting 
			Bacchic participation, matters were explained by the consul:
 
				
				In the first place, then, women form the great majority, and this 
			was the source of all the mischief. Then there are males, the very 
			counterparts of the women, committing and submitting to foulest 
			uncleanness, frantic and frenzied, driven out of their senses by 
			sleepless nights, by wine, by nocturnal shouting and uproar 
				 
				(Livy, 
			XXXIX, xv; tr. in David Balch’s 1974 Yale PhD thesis Let Wives be 
			Submissive) 
			
			Phintys reported that the law of the city forbade any woman to 
			participate in the orgies of the Great Mother (Stobaeus, IV, 23.61), 
			in an attempt to control improprieties. While biblical scholars have 
			vainly searched for such a law in Jewish tradition, there is 
			considerable evidence that every legal effort was made to control 
			ecstatic feminine behavior in Greco-Roman society. There is even 
			more evidence that such efforts sometimes failed. It can be seen, 
			however, that it was important to the early church that the behavior 
			of their women should be above reproach and within the bounds of the 
			law, for the charge of Bacchic behavior was hurled at the Christians 
			by unbelievers (Origen, Contra Celsum, viii)
 We turn next to a consideration of silence and speech as it is 
			enjoined in 1 Corinthians 14:34. We have already noted that one who 
			speaks with tongues but has no interpreter is asked to keep silence, 
			as is the prophet when someone else desires to speak. It is not a 
			complete prohibition for these individuals to share their gifts, but 
			rather an instruction so that all may understand and all may profit. 
			Only one person at a time is to share his revelation and only if it 
			can be made meaningful to the congregation.
 
 The second important emphasis in the chapter is on meaning. Paul 
			himself would rather speak five comprehensible words than thousands 
			which could not be understood (vs. 19). He asks that those elements 
			which are disruptive or meaningless be silenced. In this was we may 
			understand his dictum:
 
				
				The women should keep silence in the churches. For they are not 
			permitted to speak (Greek: lalein)  
				(1 Corinthians 14:34, RSV) 
			
			It cannot mean that women are not to speak at all, for they have 
			been given permission to pray and prophesy in 11:5 - provided they 
			observe due decorum. Nor can the directive be a prohibition against 
			speaking in tongues (14:39). Some other type of disruption must thus 
			be under discussion.
 It may help us to understand that the Greek word lelein refers 
			primarily to utterance rather than to meaningful conversation. The 
			term is used repeatedly in chapter 14 to describe speaking in 
			tongues. Phrynichus, the ancient dictionarian, defined the term as 
			’to talk nonsense’. The word is used of gossip, prattling, babbling, 
			animal sounds, and musical instruments. During the classical period, 
			it usually was employed in a contemptuous sense. Debrunner, writing 
			in the Kittle-Friedrich Theological Dictionary of the New Testament, 
			states ’Lalein can also be used quite objectively of speech when 
			there is reference to sound rather than than meaning. ’To what kind 
			of utterance can St. Paul refer? There were many types of 
			vocalization in ecstatic rites.
 
 They have been heard to utter (different voices of equal strength, 
			or with great diversity and inequality) in tones that alternated 
			with silence; and again in other cases harmonious crescendo or dimenuendo of tone, and in still other cases other kinds of 
			utterance. (Iamblichus, On the Mysteries, III, 4-6)
 
 We have already mentioned heathen rituals in which frenzied shouting 
			was expected from women and considered a necessary ingredient of the 
			worship. Rogers translates this hymn from Aristophanes’ Lysistrata:
 
				
					
					Call upon Bacchus, afire with his Maenades [mad women];Call upon Zeus in the lightning arrayed; Call on his queen, ever 
			blessed, adorable;
 Call on the holy, infallible Witnesses,
 Call them to witness the peace and the harmony,
 This which divine Aphrodite has made.
 
 Allala! Lalla! Lallala! Lallala!
 Whoop for victory, Lallalalae!
 Evoi! Evoi! Lallala, Lallala!
 Evae! Evae! Lallalalae.
 
			
			The word lelein is fundamentally an onomatopoetic one, meaning, as 
			Thayer’s Lexicon puts it, to go ’la-la’. The Greeks shouted ’alala’ 
			both in worship and in war, and personified Alala as a deity 
			(Pindar, Fr. 208 [78]; Plutarch 2.3496). It was this same repetitive 
			and meaningless syllabification in pagan prayers which Jesus 
			described: ’for they think they shall be heard for their much 
			speaking’ (Matthew 6:7)
 New patterns of Christian worship appear to have been more difficult 
			for women to adopt than men, as they had not known the dignified 
			rite of Apollo or Zeus. For the most part, their religious 
			expression had been accompanied by extravagances of every sort. We 
			may quote Iamblichus again:
 
				
				We affirm, accordingly, not only that the shoutings and choric songs 
			are sacred to the gods, each and all of them, as being peculiarly 
			their own, but likewise that there is a kindred relationship between 
			them in their proper order... and the peculiar usages of Sabazian 
			worship make ready for the Bacchic enthusiasm, the purifying of 
			souls, and deliverances from old incriminations, their respective 
			inspirations are, accordingly, different in every important 
			particular.
 Thou seemest to think that those who are enrapt by the Mother of the 
			gods are males, for thou callest them, accordingly, ’Metrizontes’ 
			yet that is not true, for the ’Metrizontesae’ are chiefly women
 
				(op 
			cit., pp. 121-123) 
			
			It was important that the service of worship become meaningful. 
			Women were encouraged to question their husbands at home, since the 
			women had usually been denied an opportunity for education while the 
			men participated vigorously in all manner of theological and 
			philosophical debates. The questions should be asked at home so that 
			the conversation would not disrupt the service. Neither was a woman 
			to gossip or chatter with the other women during the service - 
			surely a great temptation, for Greek women were closely confined to 
			their homes. (On the rare occasions when they were allowed to leave, 
			they were liable to kick over all the traces). 
			  
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