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Jerry Eicher of Anabaptist Theological Perspectives examines the practice of head veiling for women, tracing its near-2,000-year history, the 1960s feminist challenge, and how the issue shifted from mainstream to fringe. He unpacks the spiritual and cultural stakes behind a seemingly simple cloth.
This episode includes a close reading of 1 Corinthians 11—exploring Paul’s language about tradition/ordinances, representation (man/Christ/woman/God), nature’s covering (hair), and the role of angels—plus practical discussion of how the practice has been upheld (Amish, Mennonite, Catholic examples), critiques of “Sunday-only” observance, and the effects of modern grassroots and internet debates.
Key takeaways: why the veil has symbolic spiritual force, how consistency and representation shape its practice, and practical principles for understanding what “covering” aims to protect—the glory of the hair and the church’s witness.