Verse explainer

What does 1 Corinthians 11:3 really mean?

Paul's chain of 'headship' includes Christ under God — which changes everything about what 'head' means here.

KJV

But I would have you know, that the head of every man is Christ; and the head of the woman is the man; and the head of Christ is God.

BSB

But I want you to understand that the head of every man is Christ, and the head of the woman is man, and the head of Christ is God.

Paul opens a section on worship conduct in Corinth by establishing a sequence: God is the head of Christ, Christ is the head of every man, and man is the head of woman. The sequence is the key. Because Christ is fully divine yet stands in a relationship of functional submission to the Father (John 14:28), the word 'head' here cannot simply mean 'superior being' — it describes a relational order that coexists with equality of nature. The Corinthian context matters: some women were setting aside the customary head-covering in corporate worship, apparently appealing to the freedom Christ brings. Paul doesn't deny that freedom; he grounds orderly conduct in a chain of relationships that reaches all the way up to the inner life of God. The argument is about ordered, honoring relationships — not a ranking of worth.

This verse proves women are inferior to men, just as men are inferior to God. The chain cuts against that reading at its very top. Paul places Christ under God as 'head' — and the rest of the New Testament insists Christ is fully God, not a lesser being (John 1:1, Colossians 2:9). If 'head' meant 'ontologically superior,' the chain would make Christ less than divine, which Paul never teaches. What the chain actually describes is a pattern of ordered, self-giving relationships: the Father sends the Son, the Son redeems humanity, and within that redeemed humanity relationships of loving order reflect that same pattern. JFB and Chrysostom, writing long before modern debates, saw the chain as evidence for Christ's full divinity, not his inferiority. The verse is about relational order in worship, not a verdict on the worth or nature of women. Galatians 3:28 — written by the same author — remains on the page: 'there is neither male nor female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus.'
Adam Clarkeearly 19th c. · PD

Clarke reads the sequence as describing distinct roles within a redeemed order: Christ is the Author and Lord of every believer, man exercises a headship patterned on that of Christ, and God the Father is the head of Christ as Mediator. He stresses that the passage concerns the ordinances of Christianity specifically, not an absolute metaphysical hierarchy, and finds no difficulty so long as each relationship is understood in its proper sphere.

Jamieson, Fausset & Brown19th c. · PD

JFB note that the Gospel genuinely elevated women — Galatians 3:28 stands — but that equality of standing in grace does not abolish ordered relationships of modesty and seemliness in public worship. They cite Chrysostom's inference that because the head shares the same essence as the body, and God is the head of the Son, the Son must be of the same essence as the Father — so the 'headship' chain actually argues for Christ's full divinity, not his inferiority.

John Gill18th c. · PD

Gill focuses on the practical worship issue: men praying or prophesying with covered heads dishonor their head (Christ), because the covered head signified bondage and shame in that culture, while appearing uncovered expressed the freedom and boldness Christ's intercession secures. The theological chain in v. 3 is the foundation for that practical instruction, not a freestanding statement about the worth of women.

κεφαλή kephalē

'Head.' In Greek it can mean the literal head of a body, or a source, or one who holds a position of authority in a relational order. Crucially, Paul applies it to Christ's relationship to God the Father — a relationship no one reads as implying inferiority of nature. That internal check shows 'head' here denotes ordered, relational authority, not ontological rank. Strong's G2776; Thayer's notes both the literal and figurative uses.