Submission. Is that not possibly the most misunderstood word in all of Christianity?
There was a lively discussion on this topic recently on a message board that I frequent. This board is not focused on Christians, in fact I’d venture to say the majority aren’t. For this reason, it provides me a lot of opportunities to get broad reactions to a variety of subjects, and lots of opportunities to discuss (OK, perhaps debate is sometimes a better word) my beliefs with others. It all started with a posting of a recent news article about the Duggar family. For those living under a rock, this is the family who just added their 17th child, and say they aren’t necessarily done. While I can’t imagine wanting to be pregnant for nearly 13 years of my life, much less raising that many kids to adulthood, I have no beef with them and their family planning. Not my problem, and if they’re happy, then who cares? But that’s not even the point.
The point is that through their family site, www.duggarfamily.com, their beliefs are fairly apparent. They are Christians, fairly fundamentalist ones. Specifically, they pay a lot of heed to Ephesians 5:22, “Wives, submit to your husbands as to the Lord.” Needless to say, this concept is horrifying to nonbelievers, and some believers as well. The very idea, for a woman to submit to her husband! Decades of feminism down the drain!
But does this really have anything to do with feminism or lack thereof? I think not. I’m a fairly strong, independent woman. These are traits my husband likes, or at least that’s what he tells me. I’m generally nobody’s fool, and I’m certainly not lacking in opinions. And in my opinion, wifely submission doesn’t have anything to do with being a doormat. God clearly intends for the husband to be head of the household and for wives to submit to their husbands’ authority. To me, what this means is that if there is a difficult decision to be made and the couple is at a standstill in their discussion, the husband should make that decision.
What some people seem to think is that this means wives don’t get any input into family issues and decisions. Um, no. Who said that? A smart husband will consider his wife’s input (even if it’s ill-informed, as some of my input can be, especially if it relates to cars, Star Trek, or home networking). I would think that a couple following the principles of Ephesians 5 would communicate constantly about family decisions. It’s a partnership, not a dictatorship, but for some reason, people think that “submission” means “cower and let the jerk run over you.” They think that a submissive wife rushes to do her husband’s bidding without a question or a thought, and that a husband who is head of the household is someone who comes home every night and sits in front of the TV without a word except to demand his dinner and a beer. Hello?
And then there’s the “well, is a woman called to submit to a husband who is abusive?” Two things on that. First, well, a big NO. Submitting to the husband as head of household does not equal allowing him to be emotionally or physically abusive. And second, a husband who is also called to follow the principles of Ephesians 5 will be loving, not abusive. That’s the whole point of Ephesians 5, that husbands and wives follow the God-given roles and focus on their own behavior, not the other person’s. In my personal opinion, that’s what’s wrong with a lot of marriages now. Not necessarily that they don’t follow Biblical roles, or the wives don’t submit, or anything like that. Rather, that they are all about what “I” want, or what “I” think, or what “you” aren’t doing for me. I have always heard and believed that true love is when the other person’s needs surpass your own. Is this not true?
That brings me to the next passage, which conveniently gets left out of a lot of these discussions. Ephesians 5:25, “Husbands, love your wives as Christ loved the church and gave Himself up for her.” That means my husband ought to love me enough to die for me. And I know he would. Who could possibly say that a relationship like that is abusive or unfair or uneven? Personally, I think that I got the easier end of the deal. Submit to authority vs. loving to the point of death? While I certainly do love my husband that much, the point is that I think what he was called to do is a lot more difficult than what I was called to do.
I just don’t think people who don’t believe in these principles can understand what it is like to try to live them. Now, don’t misunderstand me. That is not a criticism of these people or of their marriages. It’s simply a fact. Some Biblical principles can be understood on some level by nonbelievers, even if they disagree with them. But this one, I truly feel is baffling to so many people. And many people think that it’s damaging to society as a whole. They think that if girls are taught that as wives they should submit to their husbands as to the Lord, that it will undo years of progress on the part of women. Now, mind you, I am not against feminism. Without it, I couldn’t vote, couldn’t own property, and certainly could have gotten the education I did or the job I have. What I am against is what I like to call femiNazis, which I’m sure I will rant about in a future post. But to my point, I think this fear that some people have is based on misunderstanding. They think that teaching women to submit will damage all mankind (or womankind). I think that is way off base.