Photo by Bart LaRue on Unsplash
COMPELLED by the Holy Spirit, very imperfect as a human, very indicative of a man, I report this for husbands, for their reflection; for wives too, for their hope. The only thing that makes me worthy to write this is I have failed so much, and still do; but I have had enough success to see it work.
The one Bible verse undoubtedly
designed to guide husbands most in their relationships with their wives is as
follows, from the pen of the apostle Paul:
Husbands, love your wives,
just as Christ loved the church
and gave himself up for her…
— Ephesians 5:25 (NRSV)
just as Christ loved the church
and gave himself up for her…
— Ephesians 5:25 (NRSV)
This is a biblical
present imperative, which is interesting. The Greek
verb agapāte for ‘love’ in “Husbands,
love your wives” is in the present tense, active voice, imperative mood;
meaning it is a command for Christian husbands to love their wives, and
with continual and ongoing effect, meaning it is never complete, and, with the
following part of the verse above, means their love rises to the standard of
Christ.
A husband’s love is to be visible and sustained, and not so much
of Christlike standard in the realm of holiness, but of Christlike standard in
the realm of sacrifice. Sacrifice is achievable.
Here is my own raw experience, even
as it stands as two incidents on the very same day. Both incidents I was, as
husbands can be, harsh of word and demeanour, through a lack of discernment
based in a lack of care. At least I was initially. Within seconds, however, I could feel God convicting me. I know
this feeling well and it is always awful, because my mindset is so prideful in
these moments. But there was sufficient humility on these two occasions to pour
contempt on that pride.
I approached my wife, but not in a
noisy, authoritarian sort of way. I was careful to be silent, ready to accept
her resistance and do nothing threatening nor distancing in response. My attitude took responsibility for the
conflicts we had had, and I let my actions speak from this attitude. This
attitude completely disregarded any of what could be termed ‘her fault’ as if
it were irrelevant — because it was. Even as I trusted the Holy Spirit, not
knowing what I would do or say, or commit to, I found myself saying sorry, endeavouring
to convey understanding, offering and making restitution, repenting of my
actions, and seeking forgiveness, whilst at the same time forgiving her.
As husbands, and this is just the
same as wives, we expect our partner
to change — we make demands, then judge and punish them if our demands are not
met — when our prerogative as a husband is to lead in the marriage. Now, biblical leading is upside down, or the
other way around, compared to how the world sees what leading is. Biblically, leading is serving. It is
taking the lower place; bottom if possible. It is washing feet as an example of
what ought to be done. Biblical leadership is pure example, never taking the
high ground, trusting the Holy Spirit for change in others much as we trust the
Holy Spirit to exhort change into us.
Husbands are to desist from requiring
change from their wives. But more.
They are to become the change their
wives seek for. What seems logical — a ‘worldly wisdom’ — is utter madness. It
never works. It only causes marital derision. Only the upside down,
other-worldly truth works — to give our lives away that we might save another’s
life, much like as Jesus saved us. That way, through the change wrought through
the Holy Spirit’s power in husbands, they save their marriages, not least their
wives, who, because they’re not tested to frustration, can be ‘holy and without
blemish’ (Ephesians 5:27) on his account. Husbands are not to exasperate their
wives. They are not to be the cause of her distress.
The practical outworking in a
husband’s working on himself is
something transformative in what the wife sees.
No longer does she feel unworthy
and unsafe, not to mention frustrated and alone and without hope. She begins to
feel the freedom to observe and
quietly celebrate change in her marriage. She is empowered even as she sees
that change unfold within her family. She is encouraged, because this change
came seemingly out of nowhere, as all things of God seem to do. She is
comforted, because finally her husband is equipping the family.
Here is an encouraging truth for
husbands. Wives, often being spiritually and emotionally deeper than their
husbands, watch for and notice nuances of change. Small changes are not lost on
most wives when they have an appreciative mindset. The little things are the
big things for them. And while she watches her husband lose his life to save
hers — making the kind of sacrifices for her that Christ would make for His
church — the Holy Spirit begins doing wonderful things in her. The Spirit has
her implicit permission. The only blocker, ever before, was her husband. He,
alone, stood in the way. Now that he no longer does, she is free to become that
impossible version of herself both she and he wish to experience. His heart has
been changed, and this has produced a brand-new mindset. Praise the Lord, the
husband cannot return to who he once was. The husband has truly let go to let
God change her, according solely to His will and timeframe. Both husband, as he
leads, and wife, as she reciprocates, cease to have demands on the other.
The husband now has no claim on her
to change; his change of mindset is so sweepingly vast he wishes her to stay
exactly as she is. From this relational locale, both husband and wife can only
be further blessed. They have learned to appreciate and accept each other.
When a husband accepts his wife for who she is, suddenly she accepts
he is who God anointed for her.
***
I usually hate reading these types
of articles, by some guy who thinks he’s the ‘guy of all guys’ with such a
sweet marriage, who has life all worked out. Well, thankfully, I have none of
those qualities, because I’d be conceited if I did. Just take this for what
it’s worth — words on a screen or piece of paper — for that’s all this is…
until the concept is taken, buried deep in the heart, a seed germinating into a
transformed husband, who is not one iota better than the momentary second
allows.
The final comment is for wives. If your husband is genuinely trying to love
you as Christ loved the church — trying and
failing — admire his intent. When
we stand away a distance to really see what’s going on, there is nothing
sweeter in marriage than a husband with potential. Your instinct for grace will
inspire within him the confidence to succeed more often.
In the marriage context, when husbands love their wives as
Christ loved the church, men are being men in allowing women to be women.