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Husbands Love Your Wives PDF Print E-mail
Written by Rey   
Wednesday, 06 October 2004

People are often pictorial in their thinking. We may not be very good with amorphous concepts which consist only of words, but when we attach the words to an image the words make sense. For instance, the idea of a “singularity in space and time whose escape velocity exceeds the speed of light” makes more sense when described as a “black hole”. The mind went from a mathematical construction right to an image of a swirling mass of darkness with maybe a little spaceship being pulled into the vortex.

God often employs illustrations to get us to understand what he’s talking about…be it inanimate objects (the tabernacle) or living advertisements (Pharoah). One particular illustration in the New Testament has an incredible double-edge. The word-picture paints a mural of love for husbands to learn from and at the same time forms part of the greater canvas of Christ’s love for the Church.
I speak, of course, of Ephesians 5:25-32…probably one of the most read passages of scripture next to 1 Corinthians 13. So often read, in fact, that it is possible to miss some of the intimate details of the passage. Some have taken these verses and applied them to men’s dark moods (especially after work) and have pointed out that men should be kind to their wives.
Husbands, love your wives, just as Christ also loved the church and gave Himself up for her, so that He might sanctify her, having cleansed her by the washing of water with the word, that He might present to Himself the church in all her glory, having no spot or wrinkle or any such thing; but that she would be holy and blameless. So husbands ought also to love their own wives as their own bodies. He who loves his own wife loves himself; for no one ever hated his own flesh, but nourishes and cherishes it, just as Christ also does the church, because we are members of His body. FOR THIS REASON A MAN SHALL LEAVE HIS FATHER AND MOTHER AND SHALL BE JOINED TO HIS WIFE, AND THE TWO SHALL BECOME ONE FLESH. This mystery is great; but I am speaking with reference to Christ and the church. (Ephesians 5:25-32)

“Husbands, love your wives…” seems to imply the idea of men being friendly, but this is only the tip of the major iceberg these four small words are saying. Husbands, specifically being addressed, are called to perform their duty as the head of the household (Ephesians 5:23). Not to be confused with the idea of head as teacher or spiritual leader (although both are implied) the thrust is as a sacrificial deliverer. In this duty of sacrificial deliverer where the man is to lay down of himself for the woman, a man may find his commitment waning. Therefore the commandment to love, not in the brotherly-and-kind-love sense (although that is included) but specifically the ]moral imperative of constant active love based not on the recipient to receive or continue that love but on the constancy of the giver of that love] (agape).

Some have taken agape to mean unconditional and that is not the thrust of the verb. Philein love is that love which finds warmth by the warmth emanating from the other person. It is reciprocal. Eros love is that love which finds fire in the physical depths of a person…it doesn’t consider the warmth of friendliness but the fire of the passion. Agape is not based on the worth of the recipient…it is grounded in the mind and unified with action.

The warmth of the love of friendship within the husband and wife is then an imperative which springs forth from this self-less love. The passion of eros (never used in the Bible) is one which springs forth from this self-less love, seeking not ones own eros but the other’s eros.

Paul draws a parallel to another head and another body, Christ and the Church. Christ gave Himself entirely for the Church, no concern for Himself and with a specific purpose. “To sanctify the Church,” says Paul and this should resonate within husbands for he doesn’t end there with what this sanctifying mean. It was the washing of the Church with the water of the word so that she may be spotless and presented to Him without spot or blemish.

Although the idea of being a spiritual head is implied, the focus is on the man’s imperative to have a self-less love. Not by pulling out every speck from her eye or picking out her faults, but sacrificing of self to the point that she finds herself rejoicing in submitting to his lead. Not presented in mere words but in everyday, constant, selfless action. Not puffing himself up because he is so self-less and self-sacrificing but in complete unadulterated humility and meekness.

She wants to go to a woman’s conference? Take her. The family needs to be led in prayer every evening? Do it. She needs to go to the doctor? Take off of work and take her. There are dishes in the sink and you’ve done them for twelve nights? Do them again. Erase the idea of roles with limits, as if the dishes is woman’s work and the trash is man’s work. Once men realize the upper heights of what it is to have agape towards one’s wife, there should inevitably be fear because of the grandness of this concept.

Men are to nourish their wives in every single conceivable and inconceivable way. The idea that the God of heaven would presence Himself here on earth and die for rebellious men, for the very people at the foot of the cross who taunted Him and scorned Him should make men shudder at the profundity of what they’re being called to do. It is to cherish and nourish in ways we haven’t thought of and to seek out new ways to do this. If the men can’t find the way, they are to ask—either their wives or other spiritual men but above all the Lord in Heaven.

In light of doing this, men can become the very imitators of God which Paul is addressing in the beginning of the chapter (Eph 5:1-2). An action that renders a sweet smelling aroma so that others around may turn at the beauty of the fragrance and see a man in his proper role as head and husband, giving himself for his wife.

-r-


Comments (3)Add Comment
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written by Robert, June 04, 2005
I feel i\'ve completely fallen out of love with my wife. I feel our differenes have gone too far apart to reconcile or ever attract again.
My friend a few hour ago just taught me from the bible that the husband\'s love for his wife is simple his leadership in the family.
No leadership, no love.
Love = LEADER.
Therefore, the many thing s i blame my wife for are because i\'m NOT providing leadership to her as my wife. And that that\'s where the love has been lost.

Kindly comment on this.
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written by Rey, June 04, 2005
I've commented here:http://www.biblearchive.com/ma...ew/399/86/
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written by Teresa, August 07, 2007
I think many times men and women think and hear differently and listening and understanding each other is the key. Everyone wants to be accepted and validated, respected and loved. Both are trying so hard to get their point across they are not listening to each other. I too feel despiar, don't feel loved the way I need to. My husband thinks I blow everything out of proportion, he isn't listening. I don't know if he is blind, doesn't want to acknowledge we are both at fault, or just wants to blame me because it is easier to do that? I keep praying that God will make him see, what I need. I am unable at this point to convey it to him. I don't know if this has helped, but you are not alone. God bless
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