Many in the church believe in and teach the mutual submission of husbands
to wives. There is a very important scriptural command to the church that we are to, “Submit
to one another out of reverence for Christ” {Ephesians 5:21}. This verse for many becomes the cornerstone
of their theology for the marriage relationship. I love the concept of mutual submission, and Lori and I practice it as a big part of our marriage, but it is not all that God teaches as He has ordained husband leadership for the Christian marriage.
If we take just a brief overview of the issue of marriage submission in the scriptures we find 5-7 clear teachings on the subject which all ask the wife to specifically “submit to, be subject to, obey and respect” her husband. If mutual submission is intended for the marriage, why are wives specifically singled out 5-7 times to be submissive and men are told they are to be head of the wife as Christ is head of the church? Was this a typo?
Taking a closer look at Ephesians 5:21 one discovers that it comes just after admonitions to the church as a whole. It is an important principle that in the spirit of brotherly love we each submit to and defer to our brothers and sisters in the church, especially in areas of disagreement. But Paul goes on in the very next verses to further clarify what submission is to look like in a marriage:
Submitting to one another out of reverence for Christ. Wives, submit to your own husbands, as to the Lord. For the husband is the head of the wife even as Christ is the head of the church, his body, and is himself its Savior. Now as the church submits to Christ, so also wives should submit in everything to their husbands. {Ephesians 5:21-24}
If we take just a brief overview of the issue of marriage submission in the scriptures we find 5-7 clear teachings on the subject which all ask the wife to specifically “submit to, be subject to, obey and respect” her husband. If mutual submission is intended for the marriage, why are wives specifically singled out 5-7 times to be submissive and men are told they are to be head of the wife as Christ is head of the church? Was this a typo?
Taking a closer look at Ephesians 5:21 one discovers that it comes just after admonitions to the church as a whole. It is an important principle that in the spirit of brotherly love we each submit to and defer to our brothers and sisters in the church, especially in areas of disagreement. But Paul goes on in the very next verses to further clarify what submission is to look like in a marriage:
Submitting to one another out of reverence for Christ. Wives, submit to your own husbands, as to the Lord. For the husband is the head of the wife even as Christ is the head of the church, his body, and is himself its Savior. Now as the church submits to Christ, so also wives should submit in everything to their husbands. {Ephesians 5:21-24}
So the very next verse after the verse on mutual submission is a specific admonition to wives to submit to their husbands. Wives are to submit to their husbands “as the church submits to Christ… in everything.”
If mutual submission was intended for a marriage, then should we not by correlation assume that mutual submission is intended between Christ and His church? Is Christ to in any way submit to His church and can we read “as the church submits to Christ” any way other than Lordship? … in everything?
Go a step further and look up the other passages on the submission of the wife to the husband and you will see more clearly that to apply mutual submission to marriage makes these other passages of scripture impractical and worthless. For instance, look at Colossians 3:18-22 and tell me how one can reconcile children being obedient to parents and slaves to masters if mutual submission is the intent of the Word of God for all believers.
Are elders to be mutually submissive to their congregations, or are the members to obey and submit to their leaders? Why is it we have little trouble understanding the need for an ultimate leader and submissiveness in the church to our elders, to parents from their children, to citizens to their government, yet we struggle so badly with submission of wives to their husbands? It cannot be a question of “equality,” or “worth,” for few of us as parents believe our children to be less important than we are, but instead love and serve them, just as we expect our church leaders to love and serve us, while being our respected leaders.
No, it is not that the Word of God is unclear on the subject. I think it is pure fear that drives many away from teaching the important subject of submission exactly as the scriptures teach it. It is fear on the part of the preacher that his followers cannot buy into a hierarchy of leadership in marriage as the Christian wife will feel inferior, or worse yet, her husband may take advantage of her with his new found role of leader. And you know those Christian husbands out there. What wife can trust them to actually love her “as Christ loves the church and gave Himself for her?”
What a scary thought to actually trust God at His word and allow a husband to make mistakes in leadership, all the while becoming the man that the Spirit is leading him to be.
No, it is much easier to stay in control and to wait, patiently of course, for God to turn my husband into a great and loving leader who has earned my respect so that I can finally feel free to submit to him. I mean, shouldn’t my children wait for me to be a great parent before obeying, and my elders must become great leaders before I can follow them? Why is it that government gets leadership respect yet a husband somehow makes his wife not his equal if he is to be leader of the home?
Fear has been causing the destruction of marriage after marriage in our modern female led Christian families. We claim mutual submission when many Christian marriages are led by the wife, all under the excuse that my husband will not lead the way I think he should. Yet, as Lori and others rightly point out, so much of marriage leadership is usurped by the wife who uses her body language, tone of voice, and withdrawal of sex to control her man, all the while pining for him to take some real leadership. Many wives long for a godly marriage yet want to stay in control out of fear that God can do all things, but I cannot trust Him to turn my husband into the man of my dreams. For this I must lead and control.
There is a simple principle of the Christian life that says, "If you do things God’s ways, no matter how different they are from the world, and no matter how hard they may be to understand, or accept, you will reap God’s blessings. Man’s blessings can be good, but they are nothing in comparison to the blessings God gives when we live life His way, and according to His commands: “Wives submit to your husbands in everything and husbands love your wife as Christ loves the church.” Both commands are the responsibility of each spouse independent of the other fulfilling their role. This is how Christ wins each one of us and His church. He gives us His all on the cross, and shows us the way to God, “even while we were yet sinners” winning us over, into the family of God.
Will you husband love your wife and serve her until she submits to the Word of God and allows you to lead? Will you wife test God by fully trusting Him to keep His promise that you “can win your man without a word,” just by your godly behavior of respect, obedience and joyfully walking in the Spirit?
May we all shine the life of Christ that is in us by being obedient to His Word, even if His promises are slow in coming, and without waiting for our spouse to first do their part. May we instead be like Christ who waited on no one to become the Servant of all so that He could create the family of God. May those who teach God's Word teach all of it, and find those special reasons why God's Word clearly teaches not only mutual submission, but the submission of the wife to her husband's imperfect leadership.
For God the Father and Son are equals in all things, yet, the Son says, "Not My will. but thine be done." Is this not the perfect model for marriage? Within mutual submission is found one amongst equals who is willing to allow the other to lead so that they may together make a glorious family.
Ken
Rebecca · 630 weeks ago
Emily · 630 weeks ago
jsr · 630 weeks ago
Cynthia Swenson · 630 weeks ago
Ken · 630 weeks ago
"mutual submission does NOT negate marital submission"
I just wish that pastors everywhere who teach mutual submission in marriage would add this at the end of their sermon:
"But ladies, there is something very special about a wife who will trust God enough to follow the Biblical admonitions in submitting to your husband. It is for the older women in our church to be training the younger women what this looks like in a marriage. Let us all be bold enough in our faith to test God in all of His Word and see if His promises do not come true in our lives and marriages. 'Wives, be subject to your husbands in everything. Now Lord show us how that is to be applied to our marriages so we may be pleasing to you.'"
Ken · 630 weeks ago
Yes, the husband’s responsibility for sacrificial living towards his wife appears even greater in the scriptures as “Husbands, love your wives, as Christ loved the church and gave himself up for her” (Eph. 5:25). A life of sacrifice and love is what God calls all believers to, but the question arises, “What to do when one or the other is not fulfilling their God ordained role in marriage?”
The answer is always the same from Jesus, “You still do your part my way, and my way is a life of sacrifice and love.” Many men submit to their wives to keep the peace, and to have a good relationship, but often both spouses never get to the deep abiding love that comes from doing marriage God’s way.
I don’t think I am letting the cat out of the bag by saying that I lived the first many years of my married life with a somewhat difficult wife. Lori has tremendous qualities as a person and is a fabulous mom, but her concept of marriage was all messed up. I sacrificially loved her and tried to please her, then started sneaking what I felt I needed out of life, and finally gave up being a Ken doll and took on my role as the man of the home. That did not go well at first, but in time, we were mainly at peace, but without any deep intimacy until Lori reached out and grasped God’s Word and His ways.
What Lori addresses so well with her blog is how wives can cross over out of their worldly thinking; out of their thinking that I can only have a great marriage if my husband does what I need from him; out of their malaise and discontent into a whole new world of action. Women are given far more actionable commands in God’s Word to create a great marriage than is the man. Women most often hold the keys to have the best marriages imaginable when they find not just their submissive role in marriage, but what that means from a changed heart of trying to go beyond submission to pleasing their man.
For Lori, as others, “submission in everything,” was a very difficult concept to grasp, mainly because of her strong personality, but also her underlying distrust of men. I went 20 years being disobedient to the word by not saying to my strong willed, terrific wife, “Lori, the Bible says you need to be submissive.”
WOW! You can imagine how well that went over! Yet she was already trying to please of in every area of her life, and the last holdout was with trying to please her husband.
Those who know me know that I am far from being a difficult, bossy or controlling person. I came to the conclusion, in large part because of what Lori was teaching me, that to get to where we needed to go for a deep, abiding intimacy, Lori would have to go to a place she had never gone before… trust and vulnerability to her Savior, Jesus, as she trusted and became vulnerable to the leadership of her husband.
Yes, it is a high calling of women to be submissive to their man, especially if he is not a believer, or if he is a disobedient believer. But would we expect much different from God’s economy than to turn all on its head… the first to be last, the leader to be the servant of all?
If Christian women have not figured it out by now, they will when they get to heaven, that God has called them to lead their family and home with their chaste and godly behavior, and without a word. It is remarkable to watch Lori mentor and see husband after husband finding not only joy and peace in his marriage, but a deeper walk with Jesus because his wife has won him over.
Servant, selfless love… “Not my will but thine be done.” It is God’s way to win the world, by living out the life of Christ. Should this sacrificial living not start with our spouse and the one we say we love the most in the whole wide world? To throw our selfishness away with no more demands for them to do their part first. To just honor them for Christ’s sake, and perhaps not because they deserve it; Honor them because we vowed to do so in marriage; Serve them because we choose to love them and because we love Him and trust Him.
Liz · 630 weeks ago
For the first few months I read this blog I understood the concept of submission but didn't want to do it. It seemed demeaning and silly. But slowly I came around and started seeing it as a good thing. Then came the hard part: putting it into practice in my life. My husband and I butt heads a lot because I am hard-headed and was ultimately scared to let him lead because I thought I was better than him at everything. (No wonder he got so frustrated!)
So this morning I took God at His word and tried submission and used the Bible verse about anger stirring up quarrels but being kind stops them. (Can't remember the verse off the top of my head. Sorry!) Anyway, here's my story:
I get up with my husband at 5am to bring him to work because we share a car. I am *not* a morning person and my husband's alarm was really irritating me because of the way it goes off every 5 minutes for about 30 minutes before we have to get up. I huffed and puffed and got angry, which set my husband off. At that point he was irritated, too. In that moment I thought to try the submission thing and the quietness thing I had put off for so long. I was in the kitchen and decided to pack lunch for my husband, giving up the leftovers from last night that were *sooooo* delicious and that I wanted to eat for lunch. I didn't try to argue with him while he was irritated. I simply gathered my things and waited in the car. While we were driving I held his hand and never engaged an argument. He decided to stop and get himself some breakfast and instead of fussing at him for that decision I just let him make the decision. We got to his work and I kissed him and told him to have a good day. When I got home, this is the text message I got from him: "I love you and wanted to thank you for being a lovely wife this morning. You are awesome. I love you and wanted to wish you a wonderful day. Write me a message when you get home so I know you made it home ok. I will reset my alarm times in a way that isn't so hard on you." And he had already packed his lunch and told me to keep the leftovers. :-)
Thanks Lori/Ken for writing this blog!
Lori Alexander 122p · 630 weeks ago
Frances · 630 weeks ago
tara · 630 weeks ago
I'm here from Edie's blog...and I love this post. I'm strong willed and have been known to be mistrusting of men due to parts of my story, but I also love God and want to honor him with my life....which means I've had to surrender to the hard work of him showing me and teaching me how to love, serve and submit to my husband. Whew~ It has been a HARD work. There's still more to be done. I am so grateful that his work in me will be carried out to completion upon his return for us.
You've been honest and it is refreshing...it's not a popular belief to make known in our "strong willed-women seeking power and control" world.
Ken · 630 weeks ago
In married Lori for her strength of character and so many other great qualities that many strong willed women have... like you. We love our wives to be strong when it comes to tackling a lot of the raising of our kids and taking care o the home. We love them to be strong in the Lord, and strong with helping us get things done. There is nothing wrong with strength when used unselfishly for the right purposes.
I think though that strong women often secretly long for their husbands to be stronger than they are. They want to know that they do not have all the weight of the family and decision making on their shoulders.
Harnessing strengths is a wonderful thing in any person, but strengths left unchecked and carried to an extreme become our greatest weaknesses. It is excellent that you are on a great journey to a wonderful marriage. My life if full of joy because of Lori's hard work to be a great wife and allow me to lead. It makes me love her even more than the day I married her and I am sure you man feels the same way!
Thanks for your comments! ken