Saturday, June 21, 2008

a "thong" eye injury? this is NUTS!

This just popped up on my "AOL News". You've got to be kidding!!!!!! I don't usually like to waste blogging space - but what is this world coming to, I ask?

Thonged in the eye by dainties, she claims
By Bill Hutchinson Daily News Staff Writer
Tuesday, June 17th 2008, 11:48 PM

Now that's an eye-popping thong.

A 52-year-old California woman is suing lingerie giant Victoria's Secret, charging she was hit in the eye by a decorative metallic object that flew off a thong she was trying on.

Macrida Patterson, a traffic officer for the Los Angeles Department of Transportation, claims her cornea was severely damaged in the underwear mishap.

Patterson's lawyer, Jason Buccat, told thesmokinggun.com that a "design flaw" with the skimpy garment is to blame.

Patterson was hurt last May while trying on a "low-rise v-string," which is part of the Victoria's Secret "Sexy Little Thing" line, according to the suit filed in Los Angeles Superior Court.
She said the accident caused her to miss several days of work.

Buccat said the the injury Patterson suffered will affect her "the rest of her life."

The v-string is a variant to a G-string and is popular because it eliminates panty lines.

Victoria's Secret officials asked Patterson if they could examine the garment and the allegedly defective decorative piece that hit her, but she rejected their request on the advice of her attorney.

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Friday, June 20, 2008

Baby Steps - Day 8 - Becoming a Purposeful Home Keeper

This isn't what I was going to post today for Baby Steps - Day 8. I had some planning and big picture stuff in mind, but I know because of the emails I've gotten with THIS questions about THIS subject that THIS is what God wants me to address.

THIS subject has to do with your man's vision and how to get behind a man who seems as if he has no (clarified) vision. In addressing THIS subject, I'll do so by posting the (partial) response I gave to one darling wife. Her name, of course, is fictitious.

Hi lovely Darlene ~

Thanks so much for your tender email. You're not the first woman to ask THIS question and so I've decided to respond to you (via your email) and post my response here so that other women can be encouraged to do what you're doing.

What to does a wife do when a man seems as if he has no vision? Good question.

Since God wired the woman to be the queen of her home and to be the key influencer in the life of her husband and since he wired men to be visionaries, piercing the darkness, warriors, leaders, protectors and the king of the home - it stands to reason that God wants to use the good thing (he who finds a wife finds a good thing - Proverbs) - this man's wife - as a vessel and in partnership with Him - to stir up new passion - be the wind underneath her his wings - be the one who wipes the sweat off his brow and be his companion, complementer and lover like none other so that he can discover the vision that's deep in his masculine soul.

It's not that a man has NO vision - it's that he has to discover it. Often God will use the "thing" closest to the heart of a man (remember God took a rib of the man - and made woman and think about a rib as the thing that protects the heart) to build the man up so that he can discover, own and implement his God-vision. He has one - it's just deep down inside his shut down soul. He has to discover it - within Sanctuary.

Good stuff so far, right? :-)

Since every woman has a power of influence, the question then becomes how does she partner with God in using that power of influence so that her mighty man in the making can discover the vision of God that's deep in his soul and then clarify it and communicate it to his wife.

How do we use our power of influence to this mighty man in the making?

How does a woman get behind a man who seems to have lost a sense of direction and has no vision.

First - the woman prays - I've attached a gift copy of my book - Power Prayers for Your Mighty Man for you to use as a guide as you pray. And she asks God to specifically show her - what the stuck place IS in the soul of her man.

Men - good men - seem so drained of life, often appear passive and stuck today. But, God knows exactly what's going on in the masculine soul of this mighty man (of yours) in the making.

As you get quiet (and pray), God will show you - not so that you can bring it up to him in words - but so you can bring it up in prayer before a mighty God who is BIG in your husband!

There's something awfully powerful when a wife puts on her bridal combat boots, storms the heavens and communes with an Almighty God on behalf of his mighty man - her husband.

Next - begin to partner with God in prayer exactly over that stuck place. Make it a daily point of communion with God. Don't let up, be like the woman who begged for a crumb of bread.

Stuck places are generally those where he's discouraged and feels hopeless and for some reason he's measured himself with the yardstick against other men.

In the book I've gifted you - you will find some very specific prayers for these areas. Use that book, walk about in your house and cry out - before a God who wants your husband to discover and own and walk out his vision more than you do.

Then next - think about your husband and what a good man he is. Get out a sheet of paper and write down all the things that you are so thankful for him for. EVERYTHING you can think of - write it down. Write down those character qualities that are good - loyal, faithful, respectable, etc.

Then, what I want you to do is to take that list and thank God for this man and those things.

This next part is going to challenge you, but it all has to do with you partnering with God so that your man can discover that hidden vision.

From this point on - don't tell him what to do OR how to do it. I really mean this. You probably don't realize how often you tell him what to do or how to do things. Become aware of the ways you do this and it's called mothering. He already has one of those and you want to be his lover - you can't be both.

So for the next three months - begin to do nothing but affirm your man. Affirm him up one side and down the other. Let him know what a good man he is. Thank him for choosing you. Tell him how proud you are of him. Let him know that you are so thankful that you get to do life with him.

Affirm him TONS in front of your children, brag about him in front of EVERYBODY. Make it a daily discipline.

Then add to your prayers - specifically that God would begin to show him clearly what his vision is for his family.

DO NOT - say anything about this to him. Just pray. Ask God to even put a fire in his belly as to vision. Ask God to put other Godly men in his life who talk about vision. Got it?

Ask God to show you how you've disrespected him. Repent of that.

Now ask your darling mighty man in the making to be honest with you and tell you the ways - big or little the ways in which he feels disrespected by you. Ouch...this will hurt. Because he's so shut down, he might just say - there are none. Let him know that you know there are and you really want to know - so you can change and grow and become the wife God knows he needs and that you don't want to get to the end of your life having regret in your marriage with him. Tell him to think about it and if he wants he can write it down and give you a list.

Do NOT . . . I repeat do NOT get defensive...which is our tendency when we feel the wound of truth. Take to heart each thing he says - thank him for the list - go to God with the list and then come back to him - when your heart is sincere and ask his forgiveness. Guess what? I've done this and it's a huge step of freedom for him and for you.

Then, ask him to nudge you in the moment when you do or say something that feels as if you are disrespecting him.

The whole point in this is that a man who seems to have no vision is a man who is shut down and walks around feeling worthless because he's not been affirmed in his masculinity by the woman he chose (or because some other woman criticized him) and, because there has been a pattern of disrespect on the home front - not your intent.

See, we're all going to answer to God on That Day (the Judgment Seat of Christ ) for how we lived our life here. As wives, we'll answer for how we followed, supported, submitted and respected. Now is the time to write a new ending.

Next - after a few weeks or a month of you practicing adoring him, affirming him, wiping his brow (I hope you know what I mean by this) and all the other things a wife can do to fill his love cup of RESPECT up (cook his favorite meals, put clean sheets on the bed weekly, be there mentally for him when he wants to embrace you sexually, bring order to your home, clean up the clutter, train the kids to respect him by modeling it, not make buying decisions that you know will add a burden on him, etc.) THEN....you can go to the next step.

The next step is - to tell him you want to get behind his vision for the family. Let him know you've been praying that God would show him clearly what his vision is and that you want to support him in this - mainly by praying and THEN ask him HOW YOU CAN PRAY. Don't ask him - yet - what his vision is. Just leave it at that.

Continue to be faithful in this . . . it's possibly a six month process before you get to this last next step.

Men need time to be open to even think about vision. But, when you partner with God in Creating Sanctuary with Simple Home principles - and by creating that platform of respect and affirmation - he'll begin to hear God. And - in time - probably sooner than you think - your might man - will let you know what the vision for his family is.

Write me in six months. OK? Blessings ~ Lylah

Here's Day 7 and Day 6 and Day 4 and Day 3.

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diffusing bombs in a marriage

This is an excerpt from a teaching I gave a number of years ago entitled:

Bombs in Your Marriage.

. . . Marriage is a God-given way for a man and a woman to face themselves. The challenges of marriage can make us into amazing people with God-like character – if we let it.

Marriage – requires hard work and maintenance so that emotional intimacy between a husband and a wife can be realized.

It’s those unresolved issues that rob us of sweet marital intimacy. When unresolved issues don’t get addressed and resolved – they become like a "bomb" in the marriage. Periodically these "bombs" blow up causing all sorts of destruction, wounds, walls and distance.

Each "bomb" has a fuse and when a husband and wife takes time to discover the fuses and work on getting rid of those fuses - a few less bombs would go off.

It’s ideal that a husband and wife would look together –but if that doesn’t happen – you as a wife - can take some prayerful time with the Lord - get understanding about the possible fuses in your marriage and get some God-given de-fuse the bomb in your marriage.

God looks for one willing spouse . . . is that you?

I'm taking a sabbath computer rest until Monday - see you then. In the mean time, I'd love to hear how this post has helped you!

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Thursday, June 19, 2008

Baby Steps - Day 7 to Being a Purposeful Home Keeper

I am loving the responses to this series along with great questions! Keep them coming!

There was great joy when each one of our five grandkiddos started to take those sweet little baby steps. Not one of them jumped up from the crawl and took off running. They would take those tiny steps, fall down, get up, and try again.

Of course, us older folk would be right there cheering them on, clapping for them and telling them, "Come on – you can do it!"

Baby steps are important. Every woman who learned how to be purposeful as a home keeper took them.

That’s the heart of this series is to encourage a willing woman to take baby steps forward to being on purpose as a home keeper so that she can create a home that is sanctuary.

The baby steps I’ve mentioned have been purposed to lay a foundation – almost like building a home. A home needs a good foundation. When you build a home you start with the foundation – not the walls – not the stuff inside.

Some of the foundational issues I’ve addressed are:
The need to make a heart attitude assessment.

Understanding that God gave the woman the role of bringing order and establishing peace in her home.

Understanding that home is to be that place of sanctuary and peace providing restoration of the soul for the family.

Considering those sanctuary robbers.

Understanding the need to manage time margins.

Character over convenience

Attitude is just about everything

Understanding the husband’s role as God’s authority in the home

Benefits to the marriage being a purposeful home keeper

This morning’s Baby Step topic is to address one more reason why a woman would want to become purposefully as a home keeper – reap reward as a home keeper and find joy as a home keeper so that sanctuary can be created.

This topic has to do with the Simple Home Principles that I wrote about here.

The two main principles – the first involves the external: de-clutter, minimize and organize the spaces in the home so as to have a sense of simple living - of peaceful living - one unencumbered by unnecessary "stuff" that only needs to be managed and the second has to do with "the internal: a woman's heart attitude toward her home.
If a woman doesn't like being home, there's a slim chance she'll like her home. If a woman spends much time away from home (granted many women work outside the home), she'll struggle finding out who she is within her home.
If a woman compares her home with another woman's home, she'll struggle with appreciating what she's been given to make a home with.
If a woman doesn't understand God's heart toward the home, her God-given ability to influence from her home and that she's the heart of the home, then it will be difficult for her to make her home that sanctuary of peace which IS the foundation of the Simple Home."

Today’s assignment is for you revisit your role – as a wife, mother, and home keeper. Think about your home being your realm of influence. Think of your role being like the heart of the home.

Ask yourself: is the way I function in my role a blessing or a burden to my husband?

Ask yourself: does the heart of my husband trust me? Is he confident that I will have him in mind during the day as I prepare my home to be sanctuary for him when he walks in the door? Or, will disaster (no dinner, dirty kids, un-done, overwhelmed, complaining and anxious wife) hit him the moment he walks in from the war of the world?

Ask yourself: what would peace look like in my home and then what is my role in establishing that peace?

As you ask yourself these questions – keep this in mind: the some of a husband’s role is to create and establish vision for his home, communicate that vision and lead his family forward in that vision. He’s to be the provider and protector and spiritual leader. How do you help or hinder that?

See ya tomorrow!

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Wednesday, June 18, 2008

character over convenience - in marriage

I spoke at a women's workshop back in March of 2006 and the following is a segment of my message entitled: Rebuilding the Home Front.

. . . I can remember the day that I had the awakening that marriage wasn’t about me getting my needs met – it was about me becoming like Jesus in His character – it was about growing and learning about God’s ways and discovering how putrid my own were.

See marriage is all about character – it’s about being refined and giving and dying and loving and serving.

It’s about a ministry of love to a mighty man in the making. It’s about being there for him, when he isn’t there for you. It’s about showing him respect when he’s not worthy of it.

It’s about learning to listen to the heart of a man who is afraid to reveal his continuing sense of insecurity and failure. It’s about following a man who isn’t really sure where he’s going and not too sure what it will look like when he arrives.

It’s about learning to build a man up and esteem him when you’re not wanting to. It's about making him a priority when you don't feel like it.

It’s about honoring your man as the king of your home so that one day…he’ll rise up to being the king. It’s about helping your husband when he needs help . . . not mothering, but helping . . .

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wordless

Daughter Jenni, posted these yummies on her blog.

here are more wordless and here are some with words

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attitude, attitude and more attitude

My mom's been following along with my Becoming an On-Purpose Home Keeper and in light of today's subject on our attitude, she sent me these clips. They are funny, but then again often a very real underlying attitude that we can have. What do ya think? If you're new to the Lylah Blog and want to catch up - start here.






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Baby Steps – Day 6 to Becoming an On-Purpose Home Keeper

Today is Day 6 in my series on Baby Steps and one of the things that I love about being a writer is not only the opportunity I have to encourage so many women (I've been so jazzed about with all the emails and notes yesterday - scroll down to see one), but more so what it does for me.

See, I am in no way perfect. I have not arrived. I am in process. And, when I write what I know is true, what I know is Biblical, what I know works and what I know honors God - I get reminded. I get to be challenged all over again. I don't know about you, but I need that. I need the kick in the pants - as I run this race . . . as God develops character (His) in me - for the sake of the Kingdom and That Day (2 Corinthians 5:7-11).

So, before I move on to some practical how to stuff, I want to address (again) how vital a woman’s attitude is toward her home and her husband and toward her role.

Unfortunately, so many women have had NOTHING biblical modeled. It was my generation (sorry girls) who left the home in mass. We were a bunch of angry women who left our homes to pursue something we thought would actually be more fulfilling. What we left was a mess. I'll write more about the mess we left on another day.

A woman’s attitude toward her home front is just about everything. What you think about what your role is and what God says about it matters.

About eighteen years ago, I realized that I'd torn my house down. Yup, I did. I disrespected Michael, tried to make him and our daughters perfect - because if they were all perfect, then everyone would think that I was perfect and then I'd be OK. It was foolish and destructive. My expectations were ridiculous. I didn't understand my role. I didn't understand how to Create Sanctuary or any of the Simple Home Principles. Today I do. I am passionate about them - ask the girls I face to face disciple.

God's grace and truth got a hold of my heart and He directed my steps to be on-purpose to rebuild my home front. I did these three things:

A – I Assessed my home front (marriage, parenting, home keeping skills)
B – I Become Biblical
C
– I recognized God’s heart for Character over Convenience

I know from the letters that I receive that many of my readers are in the same boat that I was eighteen years ago. Whether or not that's you, here's your Lylah Assignment for the Day :-)

Your Becoming and On-Purpose Home Keeper Assignment (I am a teacher, ya know.) is to journal. Do the best you can. I know you are ALL very, very busy moms. At least read through the questions and hear God's heart toward you about them.

Assess your home front. Where are you doing well and where do you need to grow in those three main areas?

Journal your answers to these questions:
What is the condition of my home? Is it a mess - clutter every where? Is there peace, unity, harmony?

Are there unresolved conflicts? Am I bitter about unresolved hurts from the past? Do I with hold sex from my husband or use it to manipulate him? Do I have a list of excuses as to why I can’t/don’t want to make love? More on this one later.

Are kind words the norm or is the tone more sarcastic or harsh? If so, why? Do my words edify and build up? Do I complain? Do I manipulate? Do I nag, grumble?

Do I have an attitude of submission and do I show my husband respect? Do I understand that he is God's authority in the home and do I understand what my husband's vision is and do I follow it?

Is communication surface or on a more intimate level? Does my husband’s heart trust me?

Do I wisely manage my time?

Am I content and does it show with joy? Am I always wanting more? Do I compare myself to other women?

Do I prepare nutrition meals for my family?

Am I a busy body?

Do I say things about my husband to others that uncovers his weaknesses…those character areas that God is working on? Do I correct his story in public . . . thus shaming him?

Do I place my children’s needs over that of my husbands? Do I serve my children and train my husband?

Is what I’m about to do going to help my husband? How am I affirming his leadership? Do I know what it means to express my femininity through supporting his leadership? How do I minister to my husband? How do I show him that I am fond of him?

Do I fully understand my biblical job description? Do I fully understand my husband’s biblical job description?

Do I see my husband in light of how God sees him? Or, do I have my husband locked in to patterns of the past? Do the choices I make serve me or my husband? Do I have a love for my home?

Is the God-designed creative nurture expressed within my home?

I have so appreciated your personal emails to me. It’s encouraging to know that I’m hitting the mark. Email with questions or comments at Lylahl@aol.com or leave them here.

I’ll see you back here tommorrow.

Here’s one I received last night (with permission to share):

Hi Lylah,
My name is Faith. I heard about your site and book from Stephanie @ keeperofthehome.


First, I'd like to say that I have been really touched by what I've read on your site so far. The areas you write about: journaling, making your home a sanctuary, loving our husbands, prayer, and more are close to my heart. However, they are all definitely areas I need and want to grow in. As I read your site, continually I said to myself, "Yes! That's what I've been thinking about...or Yes! I want to be that person. (Side note: I've tried many times to explain to my husband or a friend why journaling is important to me, but never seem to be able to convey exactly what I mean. I think from now on I'll just read them some excerpts from your site on journaling! That is my heart!)

In case you've missed one - here's Day 5, Day 4, Day 3, Day 2, Day 2, Day 1 and my intro. This works for me!

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Tuesday, June 17, 2008

baby steps to becoming ...

Today is day FIVE of my series - Becoming an On-Purpose Home Keeper and I've got a special for you - just for the next 48 hours.

Instead of writing the next post, I want to give you - a copy of my e-book Becoming an On-Purpose Woman.

So, email me at Lylahl@aol.com and through Thursday night at 7 pm - it's yours.

I'll be back tommorrow with more great stuff to help you take those baby steps forward, but today I'm tackling packing as I head to the Basque Country! Start here to catch up!

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weddings - from the nations

It's a wedding month for us! Mitch and Andi got engaged and Vidya is marrying Ravi and then a few weeks ago a young couple asked our friend (Mitch) who in America, could sign their marriage license. Well, lo and behold, hubs can.

So, we joined with our friends, John and Linda and their friends at their home in front of a back yard lake and Michael officiated a simple but sweet American wedding with the vows of life long commitment to love and to cherish.

Just today Vidya, one of our daughters from India, sent us this:




She's getting married! We love weddings! So long to be there . . . but . . . will be in my heart.

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Monday, June 16, 2008

cupcake crazy

My friend Pami knows that I'm crazy about cupcakes. I have to be. My grandkids are so that means I have to be too. Just this past Friday Zane, Ivana and I made the best...yup, the best chocholate cupcakes. I confess. They were from a mix. Pamela's Gluten Free Chocholate Cake mix to be exact.

Well, being the friend that Pami is - she sent me this bloggers cupcake site: le cupcake. I can't believe I' JUST NOW getting to it (not like I've been busy or anything).

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serving a little chinese and eating a little indian (food)

How can American's NOT get to know people of other nations? I just don't get it. This past Saturday I spent a good junk of time with two of my daughters from India - Sowmya and Ambika (both are masters students at Arizona State University).

We ate Indian food, laughed and talked about all kinds of subjects: religion, politics, the trouble the world is in, being women and I'm sure there were a few other topics mixed in there.

One thing that struck me and I'll never forget. They said that when they came to America they'd hoped for an American friend. Unfortunately, their classes seemed to be full of Indian students and didn't seem that their be an opportunity for that American friendship.

Well, as God and Life would have it - Michael and I joined Friendship Partners so that we could make friendships with students of other countries AND the super cool thing is that these beautiful young women along with two of their roommates AND two of their guy friends from India got to be our "friends." Not only that, but we've adopted them as our daughters and sons and now they not only have "American" parents, but they have sisters (Candace and Jenni and Breanna) and brothers (Mark, Gerald, Griffin) and they are aunties and uncles to a bunch of little ones!

The coolest thing was what Vidya said, "Your family is not a typical American family."
So, I ask you - how can you NOT build a bridge - make a connection - open your home - feed your neighbor - because when you do - they in turn feed you too.

This was our Chinese feast at from here at Jing and HuiYang's home.

I told you Linda was smacking her lips.

Zane, one of our picky eaters, did a pretty good job enjoying his Chinese dumplings!

The cute couple!

Now, I ask you another question: How blessed are we?

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cookin' a little chinese

Last Monday, Michael and I, and our friend Linda along with two of our grandkiddos were invited to Jing and HuiYang's home to make Chinese dumplings. Yum.
We made Chinese dumplings and we built bridges. What a combo

Ivana's game at trying. Hey, it's like playing with play doh!

Jing shows Ivana and Linda the trick to making pretty looking dumplings, filled with Linda's favorite foods - shrimp and pork!

At one point I had to ask Linda to please stop smacking her lips!


Yeah, Ivana's getting the hang of it. What fun for a three and half year old!


You pat the meat mixture into the circle, wet the outside of the dough and the fold it in half - pinching the edges.

Oh, No! Ivana - Don't eat that! It's NOT cooked yet. I won't post what she did with the raw dumpling!

My turn.

Great girl talk in the mean time. Meeting new friends too.


The lovely hostess boiling - twice boiling these Chineese favorites.



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the myth of mutual submission

There's a bit of tension when it comes to understanding what Paul wrote in Ephesians 5:21.

Is mutual submission possible in marriage? Is that what the text is really saying? Does a man submit mutually to his wife in his marriage like the wife submits to him?

To answer and clarify the confusion, I'm quoting something my husband wrote a few years back and then I'm including the well written article by Wayne Grudem entitled, The Myth of Mutal Submission.

From Michael Ledner:
Yes, mutual submission is possible with 2 people who are equal in position or rank - for example, if you and another General Manager were working on a project together, or if two Generals were working together in the field. But, in the context of Ephesians 5:21, Paul lays out God's order of different ranks and each person's appropriate part in their role.

I believe the most accurate interpretation of Ephesians 5:21 "Submit to one another out of reverence for Christ." And what follows is this:

Submit = "hupotasso" in the Greek; a compound word which means to rank under or to place under. Use of submit always implies a relationship of submission to a God-ordained authority, having God-ordained responsibility to one another = "some to others" (this article below explains some other passages in which this phrase "to one another" is clearly understood as "some to others") .

Then, what follows Ephesians 5:21 (5:21 - 6:9) explains who are the "some to others".....
wives to husbands (and husbands - you must love your wives...rather than "submit to"
your wives) children to fathers (and fathers- don't exasperate your kids, nurture, instruct...rather than "submit to" your kids), and slaves to masters (and masters - remember who your Master is -- so, don't threaten them... rather than "submit to" your employees)

Husbands, fathers and masters can be and ought to be very understanding, compassionate, kind, merciful, fair and loving without being submissive to those under them in rank.

I believe that this passage need to be interpreted correctly because if it's not - if it's understood as "mutual submission" - then ~
- it brings in much confusion to the home the church and the workplace, and
- the picture of "Christ and the Church" is distorted rather than being clearly displayed to the world.

THE MYTH OF MUTUAL SUBMISSION

by Wayne Grudem, Ph.D.Dr. Grudem holds degrees from Harvard, Westminster Theological Seminary, and Cambridge University. Prof. of Biblical and Systematic TheologyTrinity International University, Deerfield, ILThe Council on Biblical Manhood and Womanhood847-573-8210, office@cbmw.org,http://www.cbmw.org

How do egalitarians avoid the force of Ephesians 5:22, Wives, be subject to your husbands, as to the Lord ? Easy: they just look at verse 21, which says, Be subject to one another out of reverence for Christ. Then they say, Of course wives are to be subject to their husbands, but husbands are also to be subject to their wives.

The result is what they call mutual submission, and in their view that means that there is no unique authority or leadership role for the husband in a marriage. They redefine 'submission to mean something like considerateness, thoughtfulness, an attitude of love toward one another, putting the other person's interests above your own.

Of course no one can object to the ideas of mutual considerateness, thoughtfulness, and love! These are clearly taught in the New Testament. But are these ideas what this verse, Ephesians 5:21, really means? I do not think so. In fact, I think that the whole idea of mutual submission as an interpretation of be subject to one another in Ephesians 5:21 is a terribly mistaken idea.
It can be advocated only by failing to appreciate the precise meanings of the Greek words for be subject to and one another. Once these terms are understood correctly, I think the idea of mutual submission in marriage will be seen to be a myth without foundation in Scripture at all.
1. The meaning of be subject to -
The first reason I think some to others is a better understanding of Ephesians 5:21 is the meaning of the Greek word hypotasso ( be subject to, submit to ). Although some have claimed that the word can mean be thoughtful and considerate; act in love (toward another), there is no hard evidence to show that any first-century Greek speaker would have understood it that way, for the term always implies a relationship of submission to an authority.

Look at how this word is used elsewhere in the New Testament:
Jesus is subject to the authority of his parents (Luke 2:51)
demons are subject to the disciples (Luke 10:17: clearly the meaning act in love, be considerate cannot fit here!)
citizens are to be subject to government authorities (Rom. 13:1,5; Tit. 3:1, 1 Pet. 2:13)
the universe is subject to Christ (1 Cor. 15:27; Eph. 1:22)
unseen spiritual powers are subject to Christ (1 Pet. 3:22)
Christ is subject to God the Father (1 Cor. 15:28)
church members are to be subject to church leaders (1 Cor. 16:15-16 [cf. 1 Clement 42:4]; 1 Pet. 5:5)
wives are to be subject to their husbands (Col. 3:18; Tit. 2:5; 1 Pet. 3:5; compare Eph. 5:22,24) the church is subject to Christ (Eph. 5:24)
servants are to be subject to their masters (Tit. 2:9; 1 Pet. 2:18)Christians are subject to God (Heb. 12:9; Jas. 4:7)

Here is the point: None of these relationships are ever reversed. Husbands are never told to be subject (hypotasso) to wives, nor the government to citizens, nor masters to servants, nor the disciples to demons. Clearly parents are never told to be subject to their children! In fact, the term hypotasso is used outside the NT to describe the submission and obedience of soldiers in an army to those of superior rank (see, for example, Josephus, War 2.566, 578; 5.309; compare the adverb in 1 Clement 37:2). The Liddell-Scott-Jones Lexicon even defines hypotasso [passive] to mean be obedient (p. 1897).

Of course, the exact form submission takes, the way it works out in practice, will vary greatly as it applies to soldiers, to children, to servants, to the church, and to wives. Within a healthy Christian marriage, there will be large elements of mutual consultation and seeking of wisdom, and most decisions will come by consensus between husband and wife.

For a wife to be submissive to her husband will probably not often involve obeying actual commands or directives (though it will sometimes include this), for a husband may rather give requests and seek advice and discussion about the course of action to be followed (compare Phlm. 8-9). This is probably why Paul used the broader term be subject to when speaking to wives, rather than the specific word obey (hypakouo) , which he used for children (6:1) and for servants (6:5).

Nevertheless, a wife's attitude of submission to her husband's authority will be reflected in numerous words and actions each day which reflect deference to his leadership and an acknowledgment of his final responsibility-after discussion has occurred, where possible-to make decisions affecting the whole family.

But in spite of all these different forms of submission, one thing remains constant in every use of the word: it is never mutual in its force; it is always one-directional in its reference to submission to an authority.

So my question is this: Why should we give hypotasso a meaning in Ephesians 5:21 which it is nowhere else shown to have? But if hypotasso always means be subject to an authority, then it is certainly a misunderstanding of Ephesians 5:21 to say it implies mutual submission.

2. The rest of the context
The mutual submission interpretation also fails to adequately take account of the context. In Ephesians 5:22-24, wives are not told to be subject to everyone else, or to all husbands, or to other wives, or to their neighbors or children, for the Greek text clearly specifies a restriction, Wives, be subject to your own husbands (idiois andrasin).
Therefore what Paul has in mind is not a vague kind of mutual submission where everybody is considerate and thoughtful to everybody else, but a specific kind of submission to an authority: the wife is subject to the authority of her own husband.

Similarly, parents and children aren't told to practice mutual submission, but children are to be subject to ( obey ) their parents (Eph. 6:1-3), and servants are told to be subject to ( obey ) their masters (Eph. 6:5-8).
In each case, the person in authority is not told to be subject to the one under authority, but Paul wisely gives guidelines to regulate the use of authority by husbands (who are to love their wives, Eph. 5:25-33), by parents (who are not to provoke their children to anger, Eph. 6:4), and by masters (who are to give up threatening their servants and remember that they too serve Christ, Eph. 6:9). In no case is there mutual submission ; in each case there is submission to authority and regulated use of that authority.

This clear evidence in the context is why people didn't see mutual submission in Ephesians 5:21 until feminist pressures in our culture led people to look for a way to avoid the force of Ephesians 5:22, Wives, be subject to your husbands, as to the Lord.
For centuries, no one thought mutual submission was there in Ephesians 5:21, for they recognized that the verse teaches that we should all be subject to those whom God has put in authority over us-such as husbands, parents, or employers. In this way, Ephesians 5:21 was rightly understood to mean, being subject to one another (that is, some to others), in the fear of Christ.

3. The absence of any command for husbands to submit to wives:
There is one more fact that egalitarians cannot explain well when they propose mutual submission as an understanding of this verse. They fail to account for the fact that, while wives are several times in the New Testament told to be subject to their husbands (Eph. 5:22-24; Col. 3:18; Tit. 2:5; 1 Pet. 3:1-6), the situation is never reversed: husbands are never told to be subject to their wives. Why is this, if Paul wanted to teach mutual submission ?

The command that a husband should be subject to his wife would have been startling in an ancient male-dominated culture. Therefore, if the New Testament writers thought that Christian marriage required husbands to submit to their wives, they would have had to say that very clearly in their writings-otherwise, no early Christians would have ever known that that was what they should do!
But nowhere do we find such a command. It is surprising that evangelical feminists can claim that the New Testament teaches this when it is nowhere explicitly stated.

4. The meaning of one another:
So what reason can people give to argue for the mutual submission interpretation in Ephesians 5:21? Their argument is based on the expression, one another (the Greek pronoun allelous ). Here interpreters say that the pronoun must mean everyone to everyone (that is, that it must be exhaustively reciprocal, which means that it refers to something that every single person does to every single other person). To support this view, they quote a number of verses where allelous does take that sense: we are all to love one another (John 13:34) and be servants of one another (Gal. 5:13).

But here is the crucial mistake:
Interpreters assume that because allelous means everyone to everyone in some verses, it must mean that in all verses. When they assume that, they simply have not done their homework-they have not checked out the way the word is used in many other contexts, where it doesn't mean everyone to everyone, but some to others.

For example, in Revelation 6:4, so that men should slay one another means so that some would kill others (not so that every person would kill every other person, or so that every persons being killed would 'mutually' kill those who were killing them, which would make no sense!).
In Galatians 6:2, Bear one another's burdens means not everyone should exchange burdens with everyone else, but some who are more able should help bear the burdens of others who are less able. In 1 Corinthians 11:33, when you come together to eat, wait for one another means some who are ready early should wait for others who are late.

There are many other examples where the word simply cannot mean that everyone does something to everyone else, because the sense of the context simply won't allow that meaning (see Matt. 24:10; Luke 2:15; 12:1; 24:32; etc.). In these verses allelous means, some to others. (The KJV often translated these passages, one to another or one for another, as in 1 Corinthians 11:33, When ye come together to eat, tarry one for another. Following this pattern, the KJV translated Ephesians 5:21, submitting yourselves one to another. )

5. Conclusion:
What then does one another mean in Ephesians 5:21? It means some to others, not everyone to everyone. The meaning of hypotasso , which always indicates one-directional submission to an authority, prevents the sense everyone to everyone in this verse. And the following context (wives to husbands, children to parents, servants to masters) shows this understanding to be true.

Therefore, it is not mutual submission, but submission to appropriate authorities, which Paul is commanding in Ephesians 5:21. The idea of mutual submission in this passage is just a myth-widely believed, perhaps, but still a myth.

Is this important? Just ask yourself how important the idea of submission to authority is in the New Testament. If hypotasso can be emptied of any idea of submission to authority, the New Testament's ability to speak to our lives will be significantly impeded. This egalitarian misunderstanding of Ephesians 5:21 carries with it a very large price.

Council on Biblical Manhood and Womanhood - Board of Reference includes:John MacArthur Jr., D.D., President of The Master's College and SeminaryCharles Kelley, Ph.D. President New Orleans Baptist Theological SeminaryD. James, Kennedy, D.D., Ph.D., Pastor Coral Ridge Presbyterian ChurchR. Albert Mohler, Jr. Ph.D. President of Southern Baptist Theological SeminaryJ.I. Packer, Ph.D. Author, internationally recognized Biblical scholarPaige Patterson, Ph.D. President of the Southern Baptist Convention (SBC),and of Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary (SEBTS)Dennis Rainey, President Family Life MinistriesAdrian Rogers, Pastor Bellevue Baptist Church, & past president of the SBCR.C. Sproul, Ph.D., Author, Apologetic Philosopher, Ligonier's Ministries

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women helping women - cookin' for the man

I've been delighted to come along side Breanna and share parenting helps, marriage encouragements, and talk to her about how to begin to Create Sanctuary in her new apartment. Breanna's a mom of three little munchkins all under the age of three.

The third little munchkin, Cole Ledner, will be welcomed into the family the end of October. What's fun is that Michael and I get to be Poppi and Nana to these little people too. So, that will make nine little people that we get to directly leave a legacy for!Yahoo!

Michael and Breanna's husband, Griffin are (half) brothers and about thirty three years apart! What's fun is that both men LOVE Italian! Before Michael and I married,I asked him what was his favorite thing to eat. He did NOT hesitate - Italian. Anything Italian. So, I asked an Italian woman to give me some of her secrets. I wanted to cook for my man.

What's sweet is that Breanna does too. She knows that this is one of the secrets to Create Sanctuary on her home front. So, last Thursday I spent a little kitchen time with Breanna - making my Italian sauce in her new kitchen.


To make Lylah's Italian sauce - start with chopping an onion and 3 - 4 cloves of garlic. I often use more - cause we LOVE garlic.

Once the onions and garlic are chopped add them to an already heated pot - with about 6 Tablespoons of extra virgin olive oil. Keep the olive oil on a low heat. For a primer on the world of oils, visit Lindsay's blog. Great info on oils.

When the onion and garlic are translucent I add a can of Progresso tomato paste and stir it in with the onion and garlic. Chop fresh or dried rosemary, oregano, and basil and add this to the pot. Mix it up.

Then add your cans of tomatoe (I use Trader Joe's) diced tomatoes and a few of their cans of marinara sauce. Add about 1 Tablespoon of salt and stir it together. Simple and yum!


Not bad for having ONLY moved in the day before! I'm thankful for my friends that came to help bring the home front together.

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