Aron>"I think the case of Priscilla and Aquila does more to undercut the argument for 1 Tim 2:12 being universally and continually applied to prohibit women from teaching, than it does to give permission to ministers today (e.g., Nee & Lee & Kangas) to be hypocrites, and simultaneously forbid women from teaching while still quoting women authors as authoritative sources of church doctrine."
Aron,
In a way we agree, but in significant ways we don't.
No one really knows who the author of Hebrews was but if Priscilla did author the book, in fits the category of gifts to the Body (Ephesians 4:11-12).
Gifts to the Body listed in Ephesians could be men or women. The Giver decides. Yet, as you mention Priscilla was not independent or acting alone but in fellowship with at least her husband and to some obvious degree the Apostle Paul. Therefore, in Priscilla we see two matters converge: She was a gift to the Body given by Christ and she was under the covering of her husband in exercising her function in the ministry in collaboration with the Apostle Paul. Her helping Apollos would then be consistent and perfectly congruent to that of a gift to the Body and in the exercise of her function.
Drake