Saturday, May 9, 2026

shorter version - metonymy and synecdoche

 

God uses lots of ways to express Himself in Scripture. Two of those “figures of speech” are closely related: metonymy and synecdoche – naming a part of the whole to represent the larger reality.

Paul uses these devices in his letters.

In Romans 13:4, “the sword” isn’t merely the weapon, it represents the larger reality of the government’s authority to punish wrong-doers.

In 2 Corinthians 3:6, “the letter kills” isn’t mail; it’s the entire Old Covenantal system.

In Romans 12:1, “present your bodies” isn’t merely skin and bones – it’s the whole self, which Paul clarifies as “spiritual worship.”

In 1 Corinthians 10, the “cup of the Lord” and “the cup of demons” isn’t referring to a physical object – it’s the part of the whole system of worship and fellowship.

Because Paul uses this structure, I believe that “praying or prophesying” is too narrow for what is meant. I don’t think that Paul was isolating these two acts, as though a woman must cover *only* during these two exact points in time.

Just as “our daily bread” expands to God’s provision in our lives, “praying or prophesying” can function as the named part of the larger reality of gathered worship.

Prayer is our words directed toward God – prophesy is God’s Word directed toward His people. Together, they look like a picture of gathered worship.

“Praying or prophesying” is not merely a checklist of two specific activities. They are named parts of the spiritual reality of worship in the presence of God’s people, the angels, and Christ Himself.

This reality is so much larger than what can be named.

Saturday, May 2, 2026

Words of the Day: Metonymy and Synecdoche

 

Appendix: Metonymy and Synecdoche — When Scripture Says More Than It Names

After this book came back from the second editor, I listened to a podcast about head coverings and learned two new words: metonymy and synecdoche. I had already come to an understanding early on in my study that “prayer or prophesy” referred to a larger reality of the gathering of the saints – a view held by many of the men I listened to and read on this topic, and the one that made the most sense to me.

I was not convicted that “pray without ceasing” literally means “cover without ceasing.”

The pairing of “praying or prophesying” to mean worshiping together made sense to me, even without having a clear grammatical reason.

We know that Scripture is God-breathed and does not waste words. God speaks in poetry, parables, and songs. He uses metaphors and similes, symbolism and allegory.

And God uses metonymy and synecdoche.

Metonymy names one thing that represents a larger reality.  We recognize that “Moses” means the Law. “The altar” stands in for the larger sacrificial system. When Jesus prays, “Let this cup pass from me” (Matthew 26:39), He wasn’t talking about the object in His hand; He was speaking of the suffering and humiliation that awaited Him.

In 1 Corinthians 10, Paul wrote, “You cannot partake of the table of the Lord and the table of demons.” The word “table” doesn’t mean furniture – it signifies participation, alignment, a sharing of what that table represents.

Synecdoche names a part to represent the whole. When Jesus taught the disciples to pray, “bread” didn’t only refer to a loaf, it pointed to the whole of daily sustenance. In Romans 13:4, “sword” refers to the whole of the government’s responsibility to have authority over its people.

Faith and love are not a checklist – they are named parts of the whole of Christ-like living. Life and death are not two moments in time; they speak of the entirety of a life lived.

The visible act (eating the bread) reflects a deeper reality of participation. The specific example of meat sacrificed to idols expands into a call to care for the conscience of others. The warning of idolatry is a named part of the larger whole of misplaced worship.

This matters when we come to 1 Corinthians 11.

When Paul writes, “every man who prays or prophesies… every woman who prays or prophesies…,” we need to look back to earlier in the letter (chapter 10.)

We need to ask if Paul is really writing about two specific and isolated practices, or if he is naming two parts of a larger, weightier whole.

Prayer is our speech directed to God. Prophesying is God’s Word directed toward us.

Together, these two named, visible acts reflect a larger reality of participation, forming a fullness – a way of speaking about the whole range of worship, without naming each act.

If we read 1 Corinthians 11 as speaking of two isolated activities, we risk missing the larger reality.

If we read “prayer or prophesying” as a synecdoche, we listen for the larger reality behind the words, not just the words themselves. We look at not merely what is happening in those moments, but what they represent; lives visibly oriented toward God; His people engaging with Him in ways that reflect His honor and glory.

A woman worshipping with a covered head is not tied to a checklist of two acts as if the passage depends on what she is doing at any given moment. She is situated within the larger reality of something profound – the honoring of God’s created order in the presence of angels, the perfected saints and Christ Himself.

What is named is not all that is meant. And what is meant is not less, but more.

 

 

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