
Marriage, as defined by Mr. Webster, has taken some interesting
turns over the years. Here are a few examples:
1828 A civil and religious contract, instituted
by God, binding a man and woman in marital fidelity until death. It is honorable
and the bed undefiled (Hebrews 13).
1975 The state of being married; wedlock; the institution
whereby men and women are joined in a special kind of social and legal dependence.
1992 The following was added to that definition
An intimate living arrangement without legal sanction; a trial marriage.
Any intimate association or union.
And thus speaks our culture about the evolving definition of
marriage. Wherever you turn today the picture of marriage in our society is
not pretty. Not when roughly half of all marriages end in divorce. Not when
Barna statistics indicate that cohabitation has increased by 443% since 1970.
And not when children in the 90s face at least an even chance of growing
up in a single-parent household.
Because of those amazing statistics we are now protecting ourselves
against what many in our society believe to be the inevitable failure of marriage
in the increasingly popular prenuptial agreement (a fancy term
for Im protecting my assets for when our marriage falls apart).
Before they say I DO more and more couples are negotiating
premarital contracts that spell out what they will and wont do, what
theyll share and wont share, and what theyll pay and wont
pay. Prenuptial agreements are now recognized in all fifty states in America
and matrimonial attorneys are preparing five times as many today as they were
just five years ago. Gail Koff, a partner in the law firm Jacoby & Myers
writes: These couples understand that their marriage is a BUSINESS PROPOSITION.
And so no decision is left undecided beforehand, including the New York City
couple who were so determined to divide their expenses equally that their
contract stipulated they would split the $3 toll when crossing the George
Washington Bridge. There was also the couple that signed on the dotted line
over who would take out the garbage and who would wash the dishes.
But business alone does not a marriage make. What our society
teaches about marriage is not what the Bible teaches about marriage. And the
truth is our culture has so altered our understanding of marriage that its
difficult at times for us to even read accurately what Gods Word says
about marriage. As a result we have tended to project the distortions of our
culture into our reading of the Bible, until today even Christian
marriage finds itself in a confused state.
We need a new definition of marriage beyond Mr. Webster. We
need Gods Word to renew and redirect our vision for Christian marriage.
What is Gods plan, Gods definition, Gods ideal
for Christian marriage? In Ephesians 5, the Apostle Paul provides us with
some guiding principles for Gods ideal. But before we can look at verse
21 we have to find out whats already been talked about in this passage.
Lets look at the sequence.
Paul begins chapter 5 with these words: Be imitators of
God . . . as dearly loved children and live a life of love (agape), just as
Christ loved (agape) us and gave himself up for us as a fragrant offering
and sacrifice to God.
Paul is wanting us to make clear that our goal as Christians
is to live a life of agape, as modeled in Jesus Christs self-giving,
sacrificial, serving ministry. The remainder of the epistle offers descriptive
ways to imitate Jesus Christ in every relationship of our lives.
We are to imitate Christ in the way we treat our brothers and
sisters in Christ in the way husbands treat their wives in the
way wives treat their husbands in how parents respond to their children
in how children respond to their parents and in Pauls
culture, even how slaves were to respond to their masters. Every relationship
in our lives is to come under the Lordship of Jesus Christ. Paul sums it up
by saying that the way we do that is by being Christlike to one another!
But Paul also knows that we cannot be imitators of Christ
by our own grit or determination. He knows we cant just decide one day:
You know, I think Ill love my wife like Christ would love her
today. We are unable to do that in our own power, because Jesus Christ
has to love them through us!
And thats why Paul says in verse 18: Be FILLED with
the Spirit. Whos Spirit? The Spirit of the living Lord Jesus loving
through us.
Paul goes on to describe what the Spirit-filled life looks like
in verse 19: Speaking to one another in grace-filled ways making
music in your heart to the Lord always giving thanks for everything
and SUBMITTING TO ONE ANOTHER out of reverence for Christ.
Now lets stop right there. What is Paul trying to say?
We are to be imitators of God by modeling Jesus self-giving love (agape).
And how are we to do that? By being filled with the Spirit which expresses
itself by being people of grace, living a life of gratitude to God, and SUBMITTING
to one another out of reverence for Christ.
You say: What does that have to do with a Christian definition
of marriage? Paul seems to think it has everything to do with it, because
flowing out of that context he says: Based on everything I have just
said about being imitators of God, modeling the servant heart of Jesus, and
being filled with the Spirit, THIS IS THE WAY YOU ARE TO LIVE IN EVERY RELATIONSHIP
OF YOUR LIFE! Starting with Christian marriage.
Notice exactly what he writes. Verse 22 says: Wives submit
to your husbands as you would to the Lord.
This is the verse where all the men usually say Amen
and all the ladies give an elbow. Submit is an alien word in our
vocabulary today, and men and women often understand that word in different
ways.
When men hear the word submit, the first thing that
comes to their mind is obedience: Kind of like Youll do what I
say and like it! (Its funny, thats never worked with Christi).
But when women hear the word submit, they tend to think more in
terms of having no rights, or say in the matter.
But neither one of those descriptions fits the biblical understanding
of submission. Submission is not obedience. Paul uses the word for obedience
in 6:1, but thats in the context of children with their parents. Children
OBEY your parents in the Lord, for thats the right thing to do.
In other words, when your parents tell you to do something, you are to do
it, because youre a Christian and youre doing it as a way to serve
the Lord. But theres no word here about wives obeying their husbands.
There is also no word here about having no rights, or being
in captivity. There is a word for that in the New Testament (its called
slavery) but its not found in this passage either.
What is found in this passage is submission.
Submission is serving another person.
Submission is putting anothers needs ahead of your own.
Submission is putting your agenda aside, to look out for the
good of the other person.
Submission is an act of unselfish, giving love.
I guess you could say submission is an expression of agape.
One of the reasons these verses have been misunderstood is because
of where people start and stop the passage. The most interesting thing about
verse 22 is that in the Greek translation there is no verb to be found here.
Most Bible translations supply a verb, as they should. Thats why many
translations have the word submit in italics. It means that the
word does not appear in the original language.
The verse literally reads: Wives, to your husbands, as
to the Lord. The verb submit is not there. But our translations
fill in the word, because its what we call a transitional phrase, which
means that what is being said is directly connected to what has previously
been said, AND is directly connected to what is going to come after it.
Now if you didnt understand anything I just said, let
me be very clear: Verse 22 cannot exist without verse 21. Wives submit
to your husbands cannot exist without Submit to ONE ANOTHER out
of reverence to Christ. They are not two sentences; they are one, with
a comma in between. They are intricately connected and each supports the other.
Paul does not want us to miss that the foundation of a Christian home is agape,
and therefore the genius of a Christian marriage is mutual submission.
A wife must serve her husband, in a spirit of agape looking
to his good. And likewise, a husband must serve his wife, in a spirit of agape,
putting her needs above his own, and loving her as Christ loved the church.
Jesus Christ laid down his life in absolute service for His
Church. Jesus humbled himself, set aside his rights as God, poured himself
out in agape fashion, and submitted even to death for the good of His church.
Therefore, if we are to be imitators of God, and if our marriages are to model
the relationship between Christ and his church, then we are also called to
give ourselves to each other in mutual submission and become one flesh.
But somehow we have forgotten that marriage is to be mutual:
mutual submission, mutual giving, and mutual loving. In fact, if a person
wanted to say that wives are to submit to their husbands, but men are not
to submit to their wives, then you would also have to say that husbands have
to love their wives, but wives dont have to love their husbands.
You say: Why would you assume that? Because just
a few verses later Paul will say: Husbands love your wives as Christ
loved the church, but you wont find a verse that says women ought
to love their husbands. You say: Dont you believe God wants wives
to love their husbands? Well, of course I do. I believe in mutual love,
and so do you. But for the very same reasons, we must also believe that Paul
is advocating mutual submission.
Thats also why Paul will begin verse 28 by saying: In
this same way, husbands ought to love their wives. In what same way,
Paul? In the same way Ive just talked about wives submitting to
their husbands. The entire crux of Christian marriage is founded on
verse 21: Submit to ONE ANOTHER out of reverence for Christ.
Out of reverence to Christ. Did you know that our
mutual submission in marriage is ultimately about obedience to God? Paul is
introducing a concept here that was a radical reorientation of relationships.
In Pauls day women were regarded as inferior to men. That
was true not only in the pagan world, but in the Jewish world as well. Women
were primarily viewed as subordinate to men. All the rights were for men,
and all the duties were for women.
But Paul knew the Gospel of Jesus Christ was turning the entire cultural system on its ear. He was saying: Women are not to be abused and taken advantage of. In Christian relationships husbands are to be mutual in their love and mutual in their submission.
Thats what makes them Christlike.
But Paul was even going beyond that. He was also saying that now, in Christ,
women are to WILLINGLY choose to submit not because theyre forced
to; not because theyre bound by their culture but because they
belong to Christ, and theyre motivated to follow in his serving footsteps
and self-giving love.
And likewise husbands are to see their wives in a different
way. The husband is to become the head of his wife, as Christ is the head
of the church. The question is what does he mean here by head?
Does he mean the boss? Does he mean the one in charge? The one who calls all
the shots?
As Christ is the head of the church is the key to understanding
the meaning. The word for head means headwaters. Headwaters
are the fresh pure springs that come bubbling out of the ground. They are
the source of rivers. Paul is inviting husbands to become the life-giving
streams that refresh and purify and nurtures his family.
This is so intriguing to me because Paul is urging husbands
to see their wives in a far different way than his culture. It was expected
that husbands would love their wives in sexual ways, but up until now nobody
had ever suggested husbands should love their wives in agape ways loving
them in selfless, nurturing, serving love. Paul says: Christian husbands
do not TAKE life from their homes they GIVE life to their homes.
Some will say to that: Paul, you need to wake up and smell
the coffee. Thats a nice picture of marriage, but thats not reality.
At the very least, most people today would think that a marriage ought to
be 50/50. Ill meet him half way if he meets me half way. Ill
do my part, if he does his part. Ill go 50, but I wont go 51!
The problem with that kind of marriage is that we end up playing
it by the numbers. We start keeping score. And whenever we come to the point
that we say: Ive given all Im going to give until I get
a little in return, then our marriage is being directed by something
other than agape.
There are times when a wife cannot give her 50%, and her husband
needs to give more than shes capable of giving in that moment. And there
are times when a husband needs to receive and his wife needs to give. Thats
called laying down your rights and giving yourself to each other in mutual
love. That is also called as Christ loved the church. Cant
you just see Jesus saying: You know, Ive given this church about
all I can give. And unless I start getting a little in return they can forget
it.
A mutual marriage is Gods design. Mutually loving. Mutually giving.
Mutually serving. Mutually filled with the Spirit.
I must admit to you that when my wife and I exchanged our wedding
vows, I had some pretty unrealistic expectations of what married life would
be like. I wasnt too far off from the young man who ran an ad in the
newspaper that read: If you look like Bo Derek, cook like Julia Child,
sing like Dolly Parton, play tennis like Chris Evert, and can make me laugh
like Phyllis Diller, then I may be the man for you.
One creative young woman wrote back: It must be fate.
How else could you describe me so perfectly? I cook like Bo Derek, sing like
Julia Child, play tennis like Dolly Parton, am as funny as Chris Evert, and
my friends say I look just like Phyllis Diller.
I wasnt much different. I assumed my wife had been given
to make life easier and more comfortable. But after living with a Christian
woman over these past years, I have learned that our marriage is most Christlike
when we are living together in mutual love, mutual submission, and mutual
care.
There are times when we do experience Gods ideal for our
marriage, and there are times when we do not. But inevitably whenever our
marriage falls short of Gods dream for it, it is when one of us has
put our personal agenda ahead of the other person.
I am learning, with the Apostle Paul, that a Christian marriage is a daily commitment that realizes that the vows made at a flower-lined altar are only as good as those vows made at the altars of everyday life.