Submitting to God's Will in Marriage — 1 Pet. 3:1-7 (part 1)

I’m reproducing the outline from a lesson I gave for my small group, recently. I think 1 Peter 3:1-7 is a beautiful passage on marriage that often gets overlooked. Much can be gained from studying just these seven small verses.

Submitting to God’s Will in Marriage (1 Pet. 3:1-7) —
Part 1: The Wife

Introduction

The preceding section (the last half of chapter 2) focuses on the Christian’s call to submit to God in society. He is to submit to ordinances and rulers, kings and governors, and by so doing is to honer God. Chapter 3 verses 1 and 7 both tie in to that context with the words “Likewise”. In marriage both the wife and the husband are called on to honor God through submission to His roles for marriage. in this, they follow the example of Jesus Christ, Who submitted Himself to God and left us an example that we should follow in His steps (2:21). Whether with regards to civil government (2:13-17), employment (2:18-20), marriage (3:1-7), or the church (5:5), we are to be subject to God-ordained authorities “for the Lord’s sake” (2:13).

1. Beautiful Submission — The Wife (1 Pet. 3:1-6)

A. Definition of Submission.

The idea of submission is clearly defined by this text.

Vs. 1-2 — Being subject = husbands see “your respectful and pure conduct”.

Vs. 3-5 — The adornment of a godly woman is the internal “gentle and quiet spirit” which has unfading “beauty”. This internal adornment also involves “submitting to their husbands”.

Gentle means “meek”, “not insistent on one’s own rights”; “not pushy, not selfishly assertive,” or “not demanding one’s own way” (Grudem). “The word refers to the humble and gentle attitude that expresses itself in a patient submissiveness; it could be used in the context of a meek and quiet spirit as a response to slander (Balch, from Linguistic and Exegetical Key to the New Testament, by Cleon Rogers). The adjective form of “gentle” used here, occurs only 3 other times, two of them describing Christ’s gentleness (Matt. 11:20, 21:5, and also Matt. 5:5). The noun form is more frequently used (cf. Gal. 5:23).

Vs. 6 — “Submitting to their husbands” includes willing obedience and respect.

To summarize, submission is “respectful’, “pure”, has unfading “beauty”, involves a “gentle and quiet spirit”, is meek, does not demand one’s own way, and at the very least includes willing obedience and respect. Wayne Grudem defines submission as “an inner quality of gentleness that affirms the leadership of the husband”.

B. Benefits of Submission.

Vs. 1-2 — The conversion of a lost husband (even to a lost man, submission seems right and beautiful, and even compelling).

Vs. 4 — A strong personal beauty which does not fade.

Vs. 4-6 — Special favor from God. A submissive spirit is “of great worth” to God. Being known as “daughters of Sarah” means proving to be genuine Christians, and even more than that, proving worthy of the kind of special honor Sarah receives.

vs. 7 — Honor from a godly husband (and indirectly from all godly men).

C. Hindrances to Submission.

Vs. 1 — The difficulty of a lost (or even a backslidden / overbearing) husband. (Even such a difficult situation does not permit one to shirk the Biblical call to submission.)

Vs. 3 — The temptation to live for worldly status, sexy recognition, etc.

Vs. 6b — Fear of the consequences if she submits (fear of the unknown, worry over her well-being or sense of personhood, fear of other’s thoughts of her, fear of a disobedient or unbelieving husband).

D. Strength for Submission.

Vs. 3-4 — Focus on what God thinks (submission is to Him, “very precious”).

Vs. 5 — Hope in God. He is good, His way is right, His promises are true.

Vs. 6 — Be mindful of the Gospel, and your status as Sarah’s daughters (God’s people).

2:13, 21) — Remember Christ’s example, and that all of this is for the Lord’s sake (it pleases Him).

7 thoughts on “Submitting to God's Will in Marriage — 1 Pet. 3:1-7 (part 1)

  1. It is interesting how the word submission, even in a Christian household can bring out the militant feminism in so many women…For some weird reason the word submission is to many sinominous with doormat…*: ) Many times when entering this conversation with friends I have heard such statements as: “Well, I wasn’t born with that stamp on my forehead…born to serve.” Or,”Yeah, if my DH was as sweet as you make your DH out to be, It wouldn’t be hard to be submissive either.” Hmm…maybe this is a clue…

    The realization that you as a women in fact were created as a “born to serve” helpmate…and that you should be majoring on the things that your DH does sweetly and wonderfully instead of carrying a quarrelsome critical attitude might just set the stage for true submission to develop…*; )

  2. Great thoughts, Nancy. I had to put up part 2 quickly, as I don’t want to make it seem like us men have the easy part. Loving our wives as Christ loved the church is a daunting proposition!

  3. Why Bob,

    We are all such warm fuzzy sweethearts, I don’t see how that could possibly ever pose a problem…Nobly leading the softer weaker sex should just be a piece of cake… The mark of a good leader… watch which way the crowd is running and jump in front…The phrase “Whoa there Nellie” I’m sure has stopped many a stampede into disaster… Only fathers of totally female households need to REALLY look before they leap…*: )

  4. Nice presentation, Bob. And I say you should have taken your time to post part two, just to make a point. But now I’ll hasten to read it . . .

Comments are closed.