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The
following message was delivered at Grace Community Church in Panorama City,
California, by John MacArthur Jr. It
was transcribed from the tape, GC 60-31, titled "How to Win Your Unsaved
Spouse" A copy of the tape can be
obtained by writing, Word of Grace, P.O. Box 4000, Panorama City, CA 91412.
I have
made every effort to ensure that an accurate transcription of the original tape
was made. Please note that at times
sentence structure may appear to vary from accepted English conventions. This is due primarily to the techniques
involved in preaching and the obvious choices I had to make in placing the
correct punctuation in the article.
It is
my intent and prayer that the Holy Spirit will use this transcription of the
sermon, "How to Win Your Unsaved Spouse" to strengthen and encourage
the true Church of Jesus Christ.
Scriptures
quoted in this message are from the New American Standard Bible (NASB), unless
otherwise noted. For clarity, some of
the NASB verses were transcribed using the New International Version (NIV)
taken from the HOLY BIBLE: NEW INTERNATIONAL VERSION (C) 1978 by the New York
Bible Society, used by permission of Zondervan Bible Publishers.
How to Win Your Unsaved Spouse
Copyright 1990
by
John F. MacArthur, Jr.
I.
Introduction
Tonight,
in our study of the Word of God, we come to a very important subject and a very
important text. I want to encourage you
to open your Bible now to 1Peter 3. In
1Peter 3:1-7, we have the subject, "How to Win Your Unsaved Spouse; How to
Lead Your Partner to Christ; How to Witness or Give Testimony to Your
Mate." This is a very instructive
passage, a very important one. One that
applies to all of us, either directly or indirectly, because we are either
married to an unsaved person, or we know someone who is, and have the opportunity
to share these truths, I trust, with them.
Now as
we approach the passage, let me give you just a basic grasp on the flow of
thought in this epistle, because it is necessary for interpretation. One of the elements of Bible interpretation
is context. You cannot interpret any
given passage apart from the context of other passages in which it is set. Now Peter is writing to some
Christians. Christians who have been
scattered and are undergoing certain persecutions. In fact, those persecutions are, in some cases, quite
severe. So Peter is writing to
persecuted Christians with the goal in mind of encouraging them. Encouraging them on how to live in the midst
of a hostile society. How to conduct
yourselves in a world that is set against you.
Generally,
he tells them to sort of elevate themselves and turn towards their living hope
in Christ. In other words, "Get
out of the world mentally, emotionally, spiritually, and focus on what is
eternal and what is heavenly. Keep your
mind on the eternal Christ, keep your mind on His glorious future for you, on
His glorious resources. Don't get
caught up in the fuss down here, get your focus upward."
Now he
directs their attention in three ways.
In the first part of the book he says, "Now I want you to focus on
your living hope in Christ, first of all, by remembering your great
salvation." And in 1:1 through
2:11, he focuses on remembering our great salvation, which is the basis for our
future hope. Secondly, he moves from
the past to the present, and from 2:12 on, he basically says, "Remember
your example before men." In the
past remember the great salvation which provided your living hope, in the
present you remember your responsibility to be an example before men, and that
subject goes from 2:12 all the way through verse 4:6. And we are in the middle of that section.
And he
saying, "In the midst of hostility and persecutions, rejection, in a
society that doesn't believe the way you do and makes it difficult for you,
remember the necessity of your example before men." And then the final section of this great
epistle, from 4:7, says, "Look to the future and remember that Jesus is
Coming."
So you
have three perspectives in looking at your living hope; remember your past
salvation; remember your present witness; and remember in the future that Jesus
is coming. That's how we are to
live. Now we find ourselves, as I have
said, in this middle section. We are
discussing this whole matter of living in the world, in such a way, as to reach
the world for Jesus Christ. It is
important that we maintain our testimony.
Now the
bottom line is this, that if we are going to have an exemplary testimony in the
world, the hostile world, and if we are going to be used to win people to
Christ, then our lives have to be characterized by a certain basic
characteristic. What is it? Would you notice verse 13, the first word,
"Submit." Verse 18,
"Servants be submissive."
Chapter 3, verse 1, "Wives be submissive."
Now
what Peter says is this, you are going to be caught up in a hostile world, and
that hostile world will manifest itself in all social relationships, of which
there are three primary ones, the government, the workplace, and the family. Those are the three social environments in
which we live, going from the greater to the lesser.
The
biggest social environment in which we live here is the United States of
America, and we are therefore answerable to the government, and the government
of the state as well, and the city, and the local municipalities, and so
forth. The next arena of social
relationship in which we exist is our workplace. We have responsibility within our employment to submit ourselves
to those in authority over us. The
smallest location of our social involvement is in the family. And in each case he says submit.
In 2:13
he says, "Submit to the government."
In 2:18 he says, "Submit to your employer." And in 3:1, in regard to marriage, he says,
"Submit to your partner." The
bottom line in our testimony in this society in which we live, is
submission. That's the key word.
You
will notice also in verse 7, it says, "You husbands, likewise." And the "likewise" picks up the
same thought of submission. Now this is
a very basic and essential concept. If
we are to have an impact in our culture, then we must submit to the social
order, to the social structure, and the social patterns that God has
designed. We cannot be rebels. We cannot demand our rights. We cannot feel superior to social
order. Now let me review the problem
for you just briefly.
II. The Problem
A
person becomes a Christian, immediately because they are a child of God; and
because they now have a higher authority, namely the Lord Jesus Christ; and
because they now have a higher standard of living, the Bible; and because they
are now citizens of Heaven; and because there is a sense in which they have
been translated out of this world, they could easily feel, first of all, superior
to their society. As a result of that,
they could be indifferent to the dictates of that society.
They
could say, "Look I belong to God, I am a Christian, I am a citizen of
Heaven, I don't belong here, I am a stranger and an alien, as it says back in
verse 11, and I am really not interested in paying any attention to
governmental laws. I am not interested
in coming under the authority of any employer, and I am certainly not
interested in listening to some unsaved spouse, or deferring to them. I live on another plain."
You
could feel sovereign over the law, sovereign over your employer, you could feel
sovereign over your mate, and that is the very opposite of what you ought to
feel. You see, we have been left here
for one reason, and that is an evangelistic purpose. We are here to make Christ known to this society. We are here to make Christ known in the
workplace. We are here to make Christ known
in the family. Those are the three
environments of our existence. And the
principles of conduct are given here, that can lead to the most effective
Christian testimony.
If we
want to be effective in the society in which we live, if we want to be
effective in the state, then we must submit, verse 13 says, to every human
institution. In other words, we must
show that we are not rebels, we are not problematic, we are not superior, we
are not indifferent to society's order, we are submissive. We are model citizens.
In
verse 18, we are to be model employees, submissive to our masters, with all
respect, whether they are good and gentle, or whether they are
unreasonable.
III. The Question
And now
we come to this third and smallest area of social responsibility, the
family. And the question is, "What
does a wife do when she is married to an unsaved husband? What does a husband do when he is married to
an unsaved wife? Does he feel
superior? Does he lord it over
her? Does he treat her with
indifference because she is not a citizen of the Kingdom? And what does she do? Does she reject his authority who is a
non-Christian husband, because she has another authority, Christ? Does she demand her rights, both physical
and spiritual, because she has now been elevated? What is the proper responsibility of each partner when married to
an unbeliever?"
Now
please notice, these verses, in chapter 3, are not a discourse on male and
female status. They are not a discourse
on Christian marriage. This is not even
a discussion of Christian marriage.
This is a discussion of a mixed marriage, where you have a Christian
partner and a non-Christian partner.
That's the whole context here.
How does a Christian live in an Unchristian society? How does a Christian live in a non-Christian
place of employment? How does a
Christian live with a non-Christian partner?
That's the whole context of this passage.
How do
we relate in this most significant of human institutions, marriage, when we
have a partner who is not a Christian?
This is a very, very, important matter.
Now remember, we are to live a certain way in our society, why? "So that people will observe our
lives," says verse 12, "And glorify God in the day of
visitation." In other words, they
will be saved. We are also to be
submissive to our masters or our employers, for this will find favor with
God. How? By making gospel truth real, as people can see it through our
lives. And the same is true in the
family.
IV. Wives with Unsaved Husbands
Now we
begin with wives, and Peter, I want you to understand is not bias, but he gives
six verses to wives, and one verse to husbands. Now somebody might say, "That's a little out of
balance." But it isn't, and there
is every important reason why, and that is because when a wife became a
Christian, the potential for difficulty in the marriage was much greater than
when the husband became a Christian.
Because a husband was already in charge anyway. And in that society if a husband became a
Christian, the wife would dutifully accept that since she had no mind of her
own, at least she was not allowed to have one.
So the potential for conflict was greatly lessened.
A. The Roman View of Women
But
when a woman, who was viewed as a slave or an animal, and not much more, became
a Christian, independently of her husband, the potential for conflict and
embarrassment, and difficulty was much greater, and that is why Peter gives
much more attention to that particular problem. Becoming a Christian can pose some serious problems today, it
posed some serious problems then. A
woman becomes a Christian, and all of a sudden, she feels superior to her husband. She feels, now that she knows what the Bible
teaches and belongs to God, she knows so much more than he does, how can he be
the leader in the family?
Not
only that, she keeps meeting these wonderful men at church, who are fine
outstanding Christians, and she becomes envious of them and she becomes
indifferent to her own husband, and much more attracted to other men who love
Christ, because she sees in that the potential for such a wonderful life. This can lead to great serious
problems.
In the
Greek culture, in which Peter lived, and the people of course to whom he wrote
were scattered in the Greek world, for a woman to change her religion, without
her husband doing it, was unthinkable.
Why? Because in Peter's day,
women were treated like sheep and goats.
Their opinion was considered irrelevant, immaterial, and unwanted. There was a basic principle called
"Patriis Protestis" [sp.] and what it meant was, while single and
living in her father's house, a woman was under her father's power. He could literally kill her if he
wanted. And when she became married,
she was under her husband's power and her could literally kill her if he
wanted, and in both cases there was no legal recourse.
So the
woman was thought of as merely as one who served the needs of the male
population. But all of a sudden a
woman, let's say, becomes a Christian.
And she understands the principle of Galatians 3:28 which says, "In
Christ there is neither male or female, we are all one in Christ." She realizes that, in Christ, she has
reached a level of living, that her unsaved husband knows nothing about. She is free in Christ; she has a new Lord
and a new master, and it would be easy for her to treat her husband with disdain,
with indifference, or even with rejection.
If she
is not careful, he can become very distasteful to her and even repulsive. But this is no different than the situation
of a worker, who has an ungodly employer, who feels the surge to put him in his
place, who feels superior because of conversion. The society, in which Peter lived, would say things like this,
this is an old quote, "Women must remain indoors and obey their
husbands." I mean, that is what
they thought of women. Women were often
abused, they were often killed.
So it
was important then to realize what life must have been for a woman who became a
Christian, independently of her husband.
The abuse could escalate. It
would be immensely embarrassing to the husband, because no woman ever did that
independently of her husband. So he
would be very embarrassed among his peers.
He would be very nonplussed about this mystical relationship she had
with this Jesus Christ. For her to be
bold enough and brave enough to do that could put her in a position where she
would suffer abuse.
In the
early church there were lots of secretive meetings, and some are prone to think
they were secrets not only to hide from the government but to hide from the
husbands, because there were many women who gave their lives to Christ. So the reason that Peter directs these six
verses at women is precisely because of this potentially difficult social
problem. And again I say that if a man
came to Christ, well the woman tacitly, at least outwardly, if not inwardly,
would affirm Christ. She really didn't
have an opinion in that culture anyway, so it wasn't of great consequence. He would still be in charge, he would still
be the authority, so there wouldn't be quite the difficulty. But for a woman to come to Christ would be
extremely problematic. So that's the
issue.
B. The Wife's Mission
How
then does a Christian wife relate to her unsaved husband? In such a way as to fulfill her
mission. And what is her mission? What's our mission? To win people to Christ. How is she to conduct herself to win that
unsaved husband to Jesus Christ? Lets
look at the answer here in our text.
Before we see what Peter tells her to do, let's see what Peter doesn't
tell her to do, all right?
C. What She is Not to Do
1. Don't Leave Him
He
doesn't tell the Christian wife, please note this, to leave her husband. He doesn't tell her that. He doesn't say, "Now that you are a
Christian, get out of there and find yourself a Christian man. Find somebody who thinks like you do, who
loves Christ like you do, have a happy union with that person. Shake that husband and get out!" No, he doesn't say that. And it is a good thing he doesn't say that
because it would be wrong. 1Corinthians
7:13, do you remember this, "A woman who has an unbelieving husband, and
he consents to live with her, let her not send her husband away." What does that word mean in the Greek, let
her not what? Divorce him. If you have an unsaved husband, don't
divorce him. Paul says that's forbidden
by God. In fact, the next verse,
1Corinthians 7:14 says, "The unbelieving husband is sanctified through his
wife."
In
other words, the Blessing of God will spill over on that man, just because God
is blessing you, he'll get the benefit. You see, a non-Christian man married to
a Christian, doesn't know how fortunate he is.
Because she is a child of God, and God is pouring out blessing on her,
because she is so blessed and she is so enriched, he benefits. It doesn't mean he gets salvation through
that means, it simply means outwardly, in this life, he is blessed. This is not inward sanctification but
outward grace, it spills over on him because of her.
So the
unsaved husband may stay, and if he wants to stay, then that believing wife,
should let him stay. That's God's
plan. You say, "What if he wants
to leave?" Same text, 1Corinthians
7, it says, "If the unbelieving one leaves," verse 15, "let him
leave." The brother or sister is
not under bondage in such cases, but God has called us to peace." If he wants out, you got to let him go, you
are not in bondage. That is, the bond
is broken. For verse 16, "For how
do you know, oh wife, whether you will save your husband? Or husband, how do you know whether you will
save your wife?" In other words,
the point is this, if he wants to stay, let him stay. But, if he wants out, because he can't tolerate your Christian
testimony, then let him go. And then
you say, "Now wait a minute, I want him to stay so he will get
saved." And Paul says, "Now
look, you will have nothing but war in the house, and that is
counterproductive, and you don't really know whether he will get
saved
anyway. So don't try to hold that thing
together if it creates confusion and chaos.
That's the point.
So
Peter says basically the same thing by saying nothing. He doesn't tell the woman to leave. Don't rebel, don't leave. Stay, and do all you can to win that
husband, but if that husband wants out and leaves you, then you are not under
bondage anymore, the marriage is broken.
Don't fight "tooth and nail" to hold it together, thinking you
are going to lead him to Christ, in an uncomfortable, chaotic, confused,
warlike environment. That's not
productive.
2. Don't Preach at Him
Second
thing that he doesn't say. He doesn't
tell her to preach at him. He doesn't
tell her to argue with him. He doesn't
tell her to harangue about the gospel.
He doesn't tell her to put Bible verses on the bottom of his beer
cans. He doesn't tell her to put
evangelistic tracts under the pillow in his bed. He doesn't tell her to badger him about the gospel. He doesn't tell her to call her pastor, and
have the pastor come to the house some night when she knows that he is home
alone, loaded with all of his guns.
Peter doesn't tell her that. He
doesn't say glue Bible verses on the refrigerator.
He
doesn't say anything like that.
3. Don't Demand Your Rights
Thirdly,
he doesn't tell her, she is now equal to the man, so she should demand her
rights. He doesn't say that
either. She is equal, of course, to any
other believer, spiritually, but she still has a marital role to fulfill. In Christ, there is neither male nor female,
they are one. But in marriage there is
headship and there is submission.
D. What She is to Do
So you
say, "Well, what does he tell her?"
Well, let's find out. Verse 1,
"In the same way you wives, be submissive to your own husbands, so that
even if any of them are disobedient to the word," that is they are
unsaved, "they may be won without a word, by the behavior of their
wives." That's the basic
point. He says if you want to win that
husband to Christ, if you want to do all you can, and only God knows whether
that will happen, but if you want to make the maximum impact on the life on an
unsaved man, then be a "submissive wife."
That's
it! If you want to make a maximum
impact on the society in which you live, then be a model submissive
citizen. If you want to make the
maximum impact in your job, then be a model submissive employee. And if you want to make a maximum impact on
your unsaved husband, be a model submissive wife. It's the same principle.
1. Be Submissive
Three
specific duties are outlined here, let's look at them very briefly. Number 1, submission and its intention, and
that is verse 1, "In the same manner," he says, or it could be
translated, "likewise."
"In the same manner," as who, verse 13, the same manner as
citizens submitting, verse 18, the same manner as employees submitting. Here it says, "In the same
manner," or likewise you wives be submissive. "Hupotasso" means to be in subjection, to line up
under, it is used in military contexts, realize that you have to take your
place as subordinate to the leadership and the headship of your husband. This is God's design for marriage. Women are not inferior in character, they
are not inferior in intelligence, they are not inferior in virtue, they are not
inferior in spirituality, they are not inferior in giftedness, they are not
inferior in any way period. They have
been simply given a role that puts them in the place of submission to a
headship, which is residing in their husbands.
Please
note this, "Be submissive to your own husbands." And every time in the Bible when such an
injunction is made, always it says your own husband. Always the possessive pronoun is there, the intensive possessive
pronoun. "Be submissive to your
own husbands," which speaks of the intimacy and the bonding of
marriage. This is God's design. That's of course what 1Corinthians 11:5
says, Christ, of course is the head of man, and God is the head of Christ, the
man is the head of the woman. That's
what Paul wrote to Timothy, "I permit not women to teach, nor to be in
authority, not to take authority over men, they are to learn in all
subjection" 1Timothy 2:11-14.
Now,
the reason for this is so that, verse 1, "Even if any of them are
disobedient to the word." By the
way, it is a first class conditional in the Greek, which means that it is a
reality. It could be translated
"since they are disobedient to the word." It assumes that, that is the case, and "the word" here,
I think, means "the gospel," the word of reconciliation, and the word
of salvation. They are basically
unregenerate, disobedient to the gospel.
The issue is, submit to them anyway, just as you submit to government,
just as you submit on the job, for the sake of their salvation.
Look at
the end of verse 1, "in order that, they may be won without a word, by the
behavior of their wives." Now
please note this, he is not saying that they will be saved without "the
word," not at all. Because, back
in 1Peter 1, do you remember what he said in verse 23? "You have been born again not of seed
which is perishable, but imperishable, that is through the living and abiding
Word of God.
Salvation
comes through "The Word."
What he is saying here is, "That they may be won without 'a word,'
not 'The Word.'" They can only be
won with "The Word," but from the wife's viewpoint, it is more
important, "what you are," than, "what you say." That's the whole point.
They
are lost because they obey not "The Word." But they might be saved without "a word." What do you mean by that? Without conversation; without harassment
from the wife, simply by the behavior of their wives. My, what a wonderful, wonderful insight. The lovely, gracious, gentle, submission of
a Christian woman to her unsaved husband, is the strongest evangelistic tool
she has. It is not what she says, it is
what she is.
The
woman is to submit to her husband's leadership. That is a God designed principle. "Wives submit to your husbands," Ephesians 5:22,
"Wives submit to your husbands," and in each case your own husband,
Colossians 3:18. The same thing comes
from Paul in Titus 2:4 and 5, "Young women are to be subject to their own
husbands." Again, that possessive
pronoun is there every time such a statement is made.
The
woman is to submit to the husband's leadership. This is her greatest tool of evangelism. The virtue of her wifely character. You might be interested to note too, that
this contributes to the happy marriage.
Obviously, the Bible wouldn't advocate it if it didn't. I was interested in reading a MaGill
University, Department of Psychiatry report, MaGill University is a great
Canadian University in the city of Montreal.
And in
the report from the Psychiatry Department of MaGill it said, "In the most successful
marriages, the husband is emotionally stronger than the wife. And there is a clear cut division of
authority and responsibility between them.
It was noted that in marriages where wives were emotionally dependent on
their husbands, almost always produced happier, better adjusted
children." Obviously, that's true,
because that's consistent with God's design.
2. Be Faithful
The
first duty of the wife then, is submission.
To put it another way, voluntary selflessness and dependence. There is a second responsibility in verse 2,
let's call this "faithfulness."
Number one is "submission," number two is
"faithfulness." Verse 2 says,
"As they observe your chaste and respectful behavior." Now that's a very basic spiritual truth for
a marriage. He's talking here about a
pure life.
What
does "chaste and respectful" behavior mean? Well, basically it means, irreproachable conduct. Faithful to her God, faithful to her
husband. Don't break trust. Do you want to win your unsaved
husband? One be submissive, two, be
faithful, that's what chaste, respectful behavior means. Chaste means pure, it means that you are not
"fooling around" with anybody else.
It means that you are pure.
Respectful, it means that you have respect for him. You demonstrate that respect. You never "get involved" with
anyone else, and you show him proper respect.
3. Be Modest
The
third principle, comes in verses 3-6, and it is modesty. You have submission and it's intention,
which is to bring him to Christ. You
have faithfulness, in verse 2, and then you have modesty. Please notice verse 3, 4, 5, and 6. In verse 3 it says, "Let not your
adornment be merely external, braiding the hair and wearing gold jewelry or
putting on dresses."
Now, he
comes to a very important matter, for the Christian wife, trying to win her
unsaved husband. He says, "Look,
the normal," I want to say this, knowing there is a risk involved, ".
. .the normal preoccupation of women is with the outside." And I think that we would all agree with
that, certainly in our society, the normal preoccupation of women is with the
outside adornment.
He
says, "Let not your adornment be merely external." You say, "Is he against combing
hair?" I don't think so. You say, "Is he against wearing gold
jewelry?" I don't think so. I don't think that he is against that, after
all, the beautiful woman, the bride in Song of Solomon, was bejeweled, and
wonderfully so. Is he against putting
on dresses? No, I don't think so. What he is saying is, "Let that not be
your incessant preoccupation, to the disregard to the character inside."
Boy,
they got really carried away, and I don't have time to give you all the
insight, but in the Greek and Roman world there was an immense preoccupation
with the outside. Cosmetics were
big. Have you ever seen the "punk
rockers" with the purple hair, and the green hair and all that? Nothing new, they had it in Greece. In the Roman time, women dyed their hair
purple, and they dyed their hair red, and green, and yellow, and all kind of
colors. They waved it. They braided it elaborately. They piled it higher, and higher, and
higher, and higher, in one of those "beehive" things. They wore wigs, and they were especially
fond of wigs made of blond hair, taken from people outside of their particular
part of the world. They wore hairbands,
they wore pins, they wore combs, they wore ivory Tortoise shell jewelry in
their hair. They wore gold and pearls,
silk, and emeralds, and diamonds, and all that kind of stuff. They really "laid it on." It wasn't any different than the
"fashion plate" mentality of today.
People literally tied fortunes up in their clothing. And since they were pretty well decked from
neck to feet in a garment, most of it showed up on their face and their head,
where it could be seen, and where their wealth and their pride could manifest
itself most visibly.
This
isn't anything new, listen to the Lord's indictment of Israel, in Isaiah 3,
listen to this, "In that day," verse 18, "the Lord will snatch
away their finery: the bangles and headbands and crescent necklaces, the
earrings and bracelets and veils, the headdresses and ankle chains and sashes,
the perfume bottles and charms, the signet rings and nose rings, the fine robes
and the capes and cloaks, the purses and mirrors, and the linen garments and
tiaras and shawls. Instead of fragrance
there will be a stench; instead of a sash, a rope; instead of well-dressed
hair, baldness; instead of fine clothing, sackcloth; instead of beauty,
branding" (NIV). Pretty straight
forward stuff, right?
Women
have always tended, fallen women, to be preoccupied with the outside. But that's not the true beauty. And I will promise you ladies, that external
beauty does not capture the heart of the husband, if there is nothing on the
inside. Peter doesn't condemn all
outward adornment, but what does he say?
Verse 4, "Let your adornment be the hidden person of the
heart." That's where the true
beauty is. Hey, when you got married,
it wasn't long before you really weren't too conscious of what she looked
liked. But you became very conscious of
what she was like inside. That's the
true beauty.
Christianity
has always existed in a world of luxury and a world of decadence, and Peter
says, "Don't you spend your time and money adorning your body." And you know that is a temptation. Here is a woman, she's got an unsaved
husband, she doesn't have much of a happy relationship with him, and so she
simply turns the other direction and spends her life indulging herself to make
her external beauty all that it could possibly be and more.
Peter
says, "Don't do that. That's not
how you win him to Christ." If you
are going to be preoccupied, let it be with the hidden person of the heart. What do you mean? I mean the inner person, the inner person, character,
virtue. "I also want women to
dress modestly, with decency and propriety, not with braided hair or gold or
pearls or expensive clothes, but with
good deeds, appropriate for women who profess to worship God" (NIV), 1Timothy
2:9-10. Work on the virtue of your
life, work on your character, that will make you far more beautiful. By the way, the most beautiful women on the
inside tend to be very beautiful on the outside, have you noticed?
Have
you ever noticed how makeup can't change an ugly disposition? And have you noticed how makeup can't
enhance a beautiful disposition? What
is it that we are to do in adorning the inner person? Look again at verse 4, "You are to adorn the inner person
with the imperishable quality of a gentle and quiet spirit." Gentle means meek, quiet means just that,
peaceful, calm, in control. The word
spirit means disposition.
The
most beautiful kind of woman is the woman with a meek, gentle, peaceful, calm,
quiet disposition. That is the inner
virtue that a woman is to pursue, and that is what wins the heart of a
man. Not only that, would you please
notice, "It is precious in the sight of," whom? "Of God." It is highly valued by God (1Peter
3:4). Now again, he is not forbidding
all outward adornment. He is saying
that you must work on the inside. Don't
confuse spirituality with tackiness or sloppiness. That calls attention to the outside and betrays a heart that is
unconcerned to reflect the beauty that God has given to a woman.
But the
fact is, you are to be modest and to work on the inside. Look at verse 5, he gives an illustration,
"For this is the way the holy women of the past who put their hope in God
used to make themselves beautiful. They were submissive to their own husbands"
(NIV). Who are the "holy
women?" Old Testament saints, they
hoped in God." What does that
mean? That they were true
believers. He says, "I am not
telling you anything new, but in Old Testament times, those women set apart
unto God, who put their hope in God, used to adorn themselves. In what way? In submissiveness to their husbands. That's the proper adornment.
They are the models to follow.
I think
about that when I think about all of the magazines. Patricia and I were walking through a market the other night and
I walked by the magazine rack and saw all those magazines and she commented on
them. All those magazines with women on
the front of them, I can't even tell you the names of them. I remember "Self" was one of them,
"Mademoiselle" was another one, and "Something Woman," and
"Something Woman," and "This Woman," and whatever. I didn't see the picture of a man on any
magazine. Everyone of them had a
picture of a woman.
And we
call those women "models" don't we?
Models of what? For mercy
sakes! Models of virtue? No.
Models of character? No. Models of purity? No. Models of inner
beauty? No. Models of modesty?
No. Models of
submissiveness? No. Models of what? They are mannequins.
Whatever there is, is hanging on the outside and there is nothing on the
inside, that you would want to follow, in most cases. So if you want a model, don't buy "Mademoiselle." Get your Bible and look for the holy women
who are submissive to their own husbands.
They are the models that you are to pattern your life after.
And he
names one in verse 6, "Sarah."
Sarah is a model. She is a model
that you ought to look like. She is a
model that you ought to pattern your life after. Why? Because she obeyed
Abraham. She is a model of obedience. She called him "lord." That wouldn't be real popular today. "Yes lord, what do you want?" Do you see how far you women have
drifted? It's Biblical. "Sarah obeyed Abraham, calling him
lord." By the way, "calling
him" is in the present participle, the present tense, constantly calling
him lord, constantly in submission to him.
Why does he chose Sarah here?
Because of the next statement, "You have become her children if you
do what is right without being frightened by any fear" 1Peter 3:6.
He
knows that if you are a believer, you are a child of Abraham by faith,
right? You remember that don't
you? Very clearly outlined in Romans
4:11-12 and Galatians 3. We are the
children of Abraham by faith, and so he's just kind of tagging on to that, and
saying you will not only be the children of Abraham, by faith, but you will be
the children of Sarah, Abraham's wife, by following her.
So he
is saying, "Christian women who follow the pattern of Sarah, can be called
Sarah's children as well as Abraham's children." You are not only children of faith, but you are children of
submission. You not only follow the
faith of Abraham, but the submission of Sarah, if you do what is right. That's what it says in verse 6, if you do
what is right. "Without being
frightened by any fear," what do you think that means? Intimidated.
I
believe every single society since the "fall" has tried to intimidate
a woman who wanted to be submissive to her husband. I don't think that is new.
There are fears in being submissive, potential fears. If you are a Christian wife and you had an
unsaved husband, you might be afraid to totally submit, for fear where it might
lead you. Into what sin it might
result. We have to stop short of
that.
But
Peter says, "Don't be intimidated.
Don't be frightened. Don't be
fearful. Just do what's right, and what
is right, is to submit to your husband.
That's the principle. Its the
principle of submission. Its the
principle of purity. Its the principle
of modesty. That's how you win your husband
without a word.
You
want to win that unsaved spouse; be submissive; follow the beautiful pattern of
Sarah, calling him lord, doing what is right; be pure and faithful to him, in
the physical and the emotional area; be modest, decorate the inner beauty that
may manifest itself on the outside, and don't get preoccupied with trying to
fix the outside, when the inside isn't what it ought to be. That's how you live as an alien and a
stranger in a marriage, with the hope of influencing your husband for Christ.
V. Husbands with Unsaved Wives
A. What He is to Do
1. Be Submissive
Finally,
verse 7, "turn the tables."
How does a husband win an unsaved wife?
That's less frequent but does happen.
"You husbands likewise..."
What do you mean "likewise" Peter? "You submit too!"
There is a submission on our part.
Go back and read Ephesians 5:21, "Be subject to one another,"
wives to the husbands, husbands to the wives.
We don't submit to the authority of the wife. We don't submit to the leadership of the wife, to the headship of
the wife, but we do submit, listen to this, to the needs of the wife.
We
subordinate our own little world and our own little agenda to meet the needs of
the woman who is our wife. Even if she
is not a Christian. Verse 7 says,
"You husbands likewise," you have to submit just like the wife, just
like the employee, just like the citizen.
He is talking to Christian husbands, "You husbands," which
means he is writing to the scattered believers. "You are the Christians, and you have got to take care of
your wife. By the way, in that culture,
a man could just kill his wife, as I pointed out.
According
to Roman law [at that time], "If you were to catch your wife in an act of
infidelity, you could kill her without a trial. But if she were to catch you, she wouldn't venture to touch you
with her finger, she has no such right."
So you could just kill your wife if you wanted to get rid of her.
But
what is the responsibility of a Christian husband when he has an unsaved
wife? Should he bolt the situation
saying, "I'm going to find me a Christian girl, you're outta
here?" What should be his
attitude?
2. Be Considerate
Three
things, number one, very briefly, consideration. "Live with your wives in an understanding way" (v.
7). Present tense, constantly be
continuing to live with your wife in an understanding way, that's
"gnosis" again, that's knowledge.
Deep, experiential knowledge.
What do you mean? Sensitive to
her needs, sensitive to her feelings.
And I believe it includes the sexual aspect as well. It includes intimacy, because knowing
someone means having an intimate relationship, remember that? "Cain knew his wife and she bore a
child."
You are
to live with your wife in the most intimate way possible, sexually,
emotionally. That doesn't change. "Live" is the word
"sunoikountes", it means to be together with someone in the house. Stay intimate, stay close. By the way that same word,
"sunoikountes" is used in the Septuagint for intercourse. So he is definitely talking with sexual
overtones. You are to live with your
wife in a deeply intimate way. Don't cut
yourself off from her deepest, physical, emotional needs, just because she is
not a Christian.
You
fulfill that dimension, far from abusing her or ignoring her or being
indifferent to her. You are to be
sacrificially sensitive to that unsaved woman.
You are to be thoughtful. You
are to be respectful. That would
frankly be kind of a revolutionary thing in that culture. For a man to become a Christian, and all of
a sudden become totally respectful, and sensitive, and feeling towards his wife
who didn't want anything to do with Christ, would really be cross-grained.
But
that's exactly what it says. "You
are to nourish her," in the words of Ephesians 5, cherish her, protect
her, insulate her, maintain that deep, deep, sensitive intimacy.
3. Chivalry
Secondly,
not only is there to be consideration, but there is to be chivalry. That's a good old word, isn't it? What does he say in verse 7? You have to live with her, "as with a
weaker vessel, since she is a woman."
She is a weaker vessel. What do
you mean by that? Well, first of all
"weaker" is a comparative. What's
it compared too? Weak, so just keep
that in mind. She's weaker, but you're,
what? Weak! So don't get over confident about your great ability. You're weak, she's weaker.
What
does it refer to? Physical, emotional,
natural weakness. A woman is physically
weaker. She must be protected, she must
be provided for, she must be nourished, she must be cherished. So husbands, if you have an unsaved wife? Maintain deep intimacy with her. Sensitivity to all of her needs, and
understand that she needs your protection, she needs your provision.
4. Be a Companion
Third
word, companionship. Consideration,
Chivalry, Companionship. I love this,
"Grant her honor as a fellow heir of the grace of life." What's the "grace of life?" It's not eternal life, it's not saving
grace. Grace simply means a gift. What's the best gift that life has to
offer? Marriage. That's God's grace gift to everybody. You are heirs together.
That's
a very important statement, he is not speaking spiritually here, he's speaking
martially. We know that he is talking
about an unsaved wife because he says, "You husbands likewise," and
he ties it into 3:1, where you have a Christian in an unsaved environment,
2:18, where you have a Christian in an unsaved environment, 2:12 and 13, where
you have a Christian in an unsaved environment.
So he
is saying, "Look, you must live with her as a fellow heir of the grace of
life. Cultivate companionship,
friendship. Respect her as heirs
together of the grace of life, the best that life has to offer, the topping on
life." This calls for fellowship,
partnership, friendship, companionship, communion. That too was foreign in Peter's day when women were not allowed
at all to associate as friends, even of their own husbands. They were at best to clean the house and to
bear children.
So he
says husbands, "Do that". And
if you are not considerate, and if you are not chivalrous, and if you are not a
companion, look at the end of verse 7.
"your prayers will be hindered." What do you think he's praying for? He's praying for what?
The salvation of his wife, but that prayer is going to be hindered, if
he is not treating her in this way.
However, with deep intimacy.
With great protection, provision, and with friendship,
companionship. Then his prayers won't
be hindered.
VI. Conclusion
So how
do you win an unsaved partner? By
living an exemplary Christian life.
Just that simple, just that simple.
Whether you are in the government, seeing yourself as a citizen. On the job as an employee. In the home as a marriage partner. The role is always the same, you submit to
God's ordained pattern for that social relationship, and you live it out to the
maximum to please God. And God will
honor you as a testimony wherever you are.
Let's bow together
in prayer. "Lord, thank you for
such straightforward and encouraging advice and truth. Lord, we understand that there are some even
gathered with us in this wonderful service tonight, who are in the situation
outlined right here. So Father we pray,
not so much for the salvation of the partner, as we pray for the virtue of the
Christian in that marriage. Bless those
wives who have unsaved husbands, make them all that you want them to be. Bless those husbands who have unsaved wives,
make them all that a husband should be, in order that they might win that
partner. In order that their prayers
for the salvation of their mate might not be hindered. For Jesus' sake. Amen."
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