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The
Role Of Husband And Wife

I do
not think that men should be lords over women or that any
person whatever his position is, should be lord over any other
person. I do not feel that God has given to any person the
right to dominate the life of any other person. He does not
even allow a God-called, God-ordained pastor over a
congregation to be lord over that congregation. (I Peter 5:3.)
God did not permit Christian masters to be lords over their
servants. (Colossians 4:1 and Ephesians 6:9.) Neither is a man
authorized by God to lord over or dominate the life of his
wife.
Let us
make no mistake at this point. When two people enter into
marriage, both are cast into a new role different from any
role they have ever been in before and their respective roles
are clearly defined and outlined in the Scriptures. Up to this
time they have been just a man and woman like all other men
and women. But now that man is no longer just a man but he is
a husband with certain fixed and clearly defined duties and
responsibilities toward that certain woman he has taken to be
his wife. That women is no longer just a woman but she is now
a wife with clearly defined duties and responsibilities toward
the man she has chosen to be her husband.
The
Bible does not require you to marry. It just requires certain
things of you if you do. If you do not want to come under
these regulations you are perfectly free to stay out of
marriage and that is what you should do. But the question has
to do with those who have already entered into marriage and
what the role of each partner is in that relationship. Once
you enter into marriage you are no longer free to determine
what you will or will not do. The terms are not optional but
are clearly defined and outlined in the Scriptures.
In I
Timothy 5:14 we read, "I will therefore that the younger women
marry, bear children, guide the house, give none occasion to
the adversary to speak reproachfully."
The
first thing mentioned here as a duty of a married woman (wife)
is to bear children. If a women does not want children and the
responsibility of taking care of them, teaching, and training
them, etc. she had better stay out of marriage because that is
the natural fruit of marriage. The next thing mentioned is
that she is to guide the house. Upon her is placed the
responsibility by God to teach, train, and guide the lives of
the children which God gives her and to manage her house and
family well so that there will be no occasion for the
adversary to speak reproachfully.
Titus
2:4-5 says, "That they may teach the young women to be sober,
to love their husbands, to love their children, To be
discreet, chaste, keepers at home, good, obedient to their own
husbands, that the word of God be not blasphemed." Here the
wife is commanded to love her husband. She must do this and in
so doing support, comfort, console, encourage and stand back
of him in his life's work, his burdens and all of his doings.
She is also commanded to love her children and in so doing she
will properly care for them, guide, teach, and train them. She
is also commanded to be a keeper at home and to be obedient to
her own husband. The wife is to be the homemaker and to keep
and maintain her house in a proper and attractive manner. If a
woman does not maintain her home and herself in a proper
manner and keep her house in order, her marriage is going to
suffer and not be what God ordained it to be.
This
text enjoins upon a wife to be obedient to her husband. If a
woman does not want to be subject to her husband and have a
man telling her what to do, she should leave marriage alone.
The Bible is quite explicit on this point in numbers of texts.
If a woman does not want to spend her time in her own home
taking care of her house, she should not marry because the
Bible is explicit on this point also. This is the course God
set for women in the marriage relation and she cannot expect
God's blessings upon her life, home, and marriage if she comes
short of her obligations on these lines.
I said
in the beginning of this discussion that I did not believe
that a man (husband) should lord over a woman (his wife). I
say the same again. Let us not be mistaken or overlook the
fact that God's Word requires a wife to be in subjection and
obedient to her husband. Ephesians 5:22-24 says, "Wives,
submit yourselves unto your own husbands, as unto the Lord.
For the husband is the head of the wife, even as Christ is the
head of the church: and he is the Saviour of the body.
Therefore as the church is subject unto Christ, so let wives
be to their own husbands in every thing." Colossians 3:18
says, "Wives, submit yourselves unto your own husbands, as it
is fit in the Lord." I Peter 3:1 says, "Likewise, ye wives, be
in subjection to your own husbands;..." It is unmistakably
clear that a wife is to be in subjection to her own husband
and obey him. There is a big difference between a wife being
in subjection to her husband and being lorded over by him.
This is God's Word. He wrote the Bible and set up this
arrangement and we will just have to fall in line with it, if
we want God's blessings on our marriage and in our lives.
A woman
said to me a while back that she did not think the women
should be slaves, and that is exactly right. I agree with that
statement one hundred percent and so do the holy Scriptures.
The teachings in the Scriptures on this subject do not mean
that, and do not give a man the right to reduce his wife to
the position of a virtual slave by taking away her inherent
rights as an individual and ruling over her with rigor. That
word rigor is defined as "Severity or strictness in conduct,
temperament or judgment: stiffness and rigidity." Rigid is
defined as "Not bending, stiff, inflexible, rigorous, harsh,
severe." It is hard to think of any man being this way with
the wife of his bosom. Yet some are and even plead the
Scriptures in support of their conduct.
I have
news for you. The Scriptures do not support you in this kind
of behavior toward your wife but rather condemn you. Any man
who stretches the Scripture to cover that ground will surely
miss the mark and cannot expect God's blessings on his
marriage or in his life. Neither does he have a right to
expect his wife to love, reverence, and respect him.
Have
you ever heard the saying "Every man is a king and his home is
his palace"? This may be true, but let us look at it a little.
History, both sacred and profane shows us the records of many
kings who have ruled over their kingdoms, some large and some
small. Among them have been some who have ruled in
righteousness, with justice and equity, and with consideration
for the welfare of their subjects. These have been much loved
and revered by their subjects and greatly mourned at their
death. This is the way Christ rules over His wife, the Church,
and this is the way the Scriptures teach a man to rule over
his wife. In I Peter 5:7 we read, "Casting all your care upon
him; for he careth for you." This is a great and glorious
truth picturing Christ as caring tenderly for His wife, the
Church, in all of her cares and burdens. This is the way and
attitude in which Christ rules over the Church and is the way
and attitude in which men are to rule over their wives.
In
Ephesians 5:23 we read, "For the husband is the head of the
wife, even as Christ is the head of the church: and he is the
saviour of the body." Saviour is defined as "A person who
rescues someone from dire circumstances." This is applied
principally to Christ; but in this text it is also applied to
the husband with his wife. The way the husband is the saviour
of his wife's body is by nourishing, strengthening, comforting
her, supporting and upholding her, bearing her burdens,
shouldering the long end of the burdens and responsibilities
of the home and family, and by always standing by her as a
present help in any time of trouble. This is the way Christ is
with His wife, the Church, and this is the attitude in which
He rules over her. In Ephesians 5:22-23, an analogy is drawn
between Christ and the Church and the husband and his wife and
the teaching here is that the husband is to be with his wife
in the same way Christ is with the Church, and is to rule over
her in the same way and attitude in which Christ rules over
the Church.
In
Matthew 11:28-29, Christ is seen making the Church's burden
light because she is yoked up with Him and He bears the big
end of the load. This is the way the husband is to be with his
wife and the attitude in which he is to rule over her.
In
Songs of Solomon 8:5 we read, "Who is this that cometh up from
the wilderness, leaning upon her beloved?..." Here in this
love affair between the shepherd and the Shulamite woman, we
have represented in a figure, Christ and the Church, His wife.
She is leaning on Him as her strength and support. A husband
is the symbol of strength and security for his wife.
In I
Peter 3:1-7 we see that the first six verses are teaching how
the wife would be submissive and obedient to her husband and
be in subjection to him and manifest a meek and quiet spirit
toward him, etc. God's ways are equal (Ezekiel 18:25) and His
instructions are well balanced. In verse seven He turns to the
husband and instructs him to dwell with his wife according to
knowledge and to give honor to her as unto the weaker vessel,
stating that they are heirs together of the grace of life. He
closes this verse by saying, "That your prayers be not
hindered." I know and you know also that many homes are not
godly nor what they should be. Many spiritual lives are
blighted and the prayers of many are weak and ineffectual.
People are unable to maintain victorious lives all because
there is an improper relationship between the husband and
wife.
All of
the instructions in these verses give the husband the
advantage over his wife, but in verse seven the husband is
admonished to not take advantage of the natural advantage that
he has over his wife. I may not interpret the thought in this
verse regarding the wife being the weaker vessel according to
your thinking. Even though the woman is more delicately
constructed than a man and may be weaker physically in some
respects than men; I do not consider this text as referring to
that. I consider this text as applying to just exactly what is
being discussed in these verses and since God placed her in
subjection to her husband and commanded her to be obedient to
him, that weakens her vantage point in dealing with him and
gives her husband a natural advantage over her. Thus she is
referred to as "the weaker vessel" because of her natural
disadvantage in this respect; the husband is commanded to not
take advantage of this, but to give honor to her. And if the
husband will be with his wife as Christ is with the Church and
rule over her in the same spirit and way that Christ rules
over the Church, she will naturally honor and reverence him
and delight in submitting to him.
Also
let us not overlook the clause in I Peter 3:7, "And as being
heirs together of the grace of life." This makes it clear that
in God's sight the husband and his wife are equal heirs
together of God's blessings and of the grace of life. But for
the convenience of home management and family life, God placed
the wife in subjection to her husband. Therefore as he
exercises his authority, let him realize he is exercising
authority over an equal according to God's will, and not over
a person inferior to him. Take this woman out of the family
relationship and she would be equal with the man who is now
her husband and with anyone else and everyone else in the
whole world in God's sight. Galatians 3:28 says, "...there is
neither male nor female: for ye are all one in Christ Jesus."
To sum
up let us conclude in regard to the husband and wife role in
the home that "Home Making" is the grandest of all occupations
for women and a "Fine Art" that should be mastered by all
Christian women. I saw a sign in a restaurant once which read
"Keep your wife for a pet and eat here." Sounds romantic
indeed but the Bible does not teach that. To eat meals out is
fine on occasion and should be. A dutiful wife and mother
surely deserves a break occasionally. But in the overall
picture, the Bible teaches that a husband is to provide a home
and all the necessary things of life for his wife and children
through his gainful efforts along whatever line he may be
engaged. Then it teaches that the wife is to make that house a
home.
Edgar
A. Guest said, "It takes a heap of living in a house to make
it home." Someone else said, "What is home without a mother?"
This is very true and it is the duty and privilege of a wife
and mother to make the house a home, and the more attractive
she can make it for her husband and children, the better it
will be. The wife should seek to make the home and herself as
attractive as possible for her husband make him always feel
that he has a nice place to come and a nice person to come
home to when the day's work is done.
I do
not know why or where some women get the idea that they owe
their husbands nothing, but they are his responsibility and he
is to take care of them. A wife owes her husband just as much
as he owes her, but just in a different category and in a
different way, and he is her responsibility the same as she is
his. Marriage is a partnership and the wife is just as
obligated to fulfill her responsibilities as her husband is to
"bring home the bacon." Neither a husband or a wife has any
right to exact or expect more of the other than either he or
she is willing to give in return in their respective roles. A
wife has no right to require her husband to provide her with a
living and support and maintain her, if she is not willing to
properly maintain a nice home for him and take proper care of
his children. Neither does a husband have a right to expect
his wife to maintain his home and take care of his children if
he is not willing to at least do his best to properly support
her. The Bible does not teach any of us to expect something
for nothing but rather the contrary.
II
Thessalonians 3:10, I Timothy 5:8 & 14 combine to teach
clearly that if either partner in a marriage does not
creditably perform his or her part, it will bring discredit on
the Christian profession and the gospel and give occasion to
the enemy

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