War is Peace!
Slavery is Freedom!
Ignorance is Strength!
Love is Rule!
Okay, so maybe Orwell didn't give us that last one, but I have an issue with bible explanations that purport to explain a passage (especially when they supposedly "clearly" explain it) that just explain it away, ignoring the central and obvious meaning of the words in the passage and importing understandings from other passages that say something else. At best, it's just sloppy; at worst, it's misleading and distorts the otherwise 'clear' meaning of scripture.
Let's take a look:
2. Christ also "gave Himself for it" (the church). It's not crystal clear what the relationship is between "loved" and "gave", since sometimes Paul sort of gets carried away with his subject, and the word "and" here is ambiguous, but let's just stipulate that we're supposed to love our wives "as Christ also loved the church and gave Himself for it". We know that Christ emptied Himself of what was rightfully His to take on Himself the punishment that was rightfully ours, so let's go with that. A husband should be prepared to intercede for his wife and even take her punishment for her sake. The least we can do is forgive her as Christ did ("Father forgive them..."), or like Job, we could remember her in our prayers "in case she has sinned". But at some point and in some ways, we may find ourselves bearing the consequences of her choices. That's what it means that Christ "gave Himself" for the church.
3. The reason Christ gave Himself for the church is so that he could blah blah blah so that he could blah blah blah. He did verse 25 so that he could do verse 26 so that he would get to do verse 27. That's just grammar.
4. Did I mention that sometimes Paul gets caught up in his subject? It's really cool that all this great stuff is going to happen because Christ "loved the church and gave himself for it", but all of that was consequence, and to the extent it was perceived in advance, motivation, but it is not what "loved and gave" is. It's what happens because Christ "loved and gave".
5. In fact, there's no logical necessity that any of that stuff even applies to the husband/wife relationship. Christ had his motivations and his purposes, but do our actions purify and perfect our wives? Really? Could we have other motivations and purposes (and other cool stuff to look forward to)?
6. So we are definitely supposed to love our wives and for now we can stipulate that we are definitely supposed to surrender ourselves for our wives. There are many ways in which a husband/father can actually be a real covering for his family, but you don't get that just for having a Y chromosome. You get it by "loving and giving", by sacrificing for your wife and family because you know it's the right thing to do.
7. Bookmark for another thread: Whatever 5:26 says about the rhema-word, to go from there to "a husband is supposed to lecture his wife from the scriptures until she gets her act together, beating her if necessary—for her own good, of course" is <cough> a stretch.
8. Having sort of exhausted himself praising the sufficiency of Christ's sacrifice, Paul shifts gears. A husband is supposed to love his wife "as his own body". He actually appeals to self-interest as well as an accurate understanding of what it means to be "one": By loving our wives we are actually loving our own selves.
9. Feeling that needs a bit of explanation, Paul goes on to state that OF COURSE we don't hate our own bodies, but we nourish and cherish them, which (circling back) Christ also does for the church. The implication there, by the way, is that if you're not nourishing and cherishing your wife, you must hate yourself.
10. Paul closes out by appealing to our oneness with Christ and its analogy to our oneness with our wives.
As we're trying to figure out what it means to love our wives "as Christ loved the church", the three things we know from this passage are that Christ gave Himself for us, he nourishes us, and he cherishes us. If there's something else that needs to be said about the husband/wife relationship from scripture, then we can look at that separately and see what that passage says, but let's not try to make this passage say something it doesn't. Paul's call to love our wives is a call to love. Period.
Slavery is Freedom!
Ignorance is Strength!
Love is Rule!
Okay, so maybe Orwell didn't give us that last one, but I have an issue with bible explanations that purport to explain a passage (especially when they supposedly "clearly" explain it) that just explain it away, ignoring the central and obvious meaning of the words in the passage and importing understandings from other passages that say something else. At best, it's just sloppy; at worst, it's misleading and distorts the otherwise 'clear' meaning of scripture.
Let's take a look:
1. We are to love our wives "as Christ loved the church".Paul said:Eph 5:25 Husbands, love your wives, even as Christ also loved the church, and gave himself for it;
Eph 5:26 That he might sanctify and cleanse it with the washing of water by the word,
Eph 5:27 That he might present it to himself a glorious church, not having spot, or wrinkle, or any such thing; but that it should be holy and without blemish.
Eph 5:28 So ought men to love their wives as their own bodies. He that loveth his wife loveth himself.
Eph 5:29 For no man ever yet hated his own flesh; but nourisheth and cherisheth it, even as the Lord the church:
Eph 5:30 For we are members of his body, of his flesh, and of his bones.
2. Christ also "gave Himself for it" (the church). It's not crystal clear what the relationship is between "loved" and "gave", since sometimes Paul sort of gets carried away with his subject, and the word "and" here is ambiguous, but let's just stipulate that we're supposed to love our wives "as Christ also loved the church and gave Himself for it". We know that Christ emptied Himself of what was rightfully His to take on Himself the punishment that was rightfully ours, so let's go with that. A husband should be prepared to intercede for his wife and even take her punishment for her sake. The least we can do is forgive her as Christ did ("Father forgive them..."), or like Job, we could remember her in our prayers "in case she has sinned". But at some point and in some ways, we may find ourselves bearing the consequences of her choices. That's what it means that Christ "gave Himself" for the church.
3. The reason Christ gave Himself for the church is so that he could blah blah blah so that he could blah blah blah. He did verse 25 so that he could do verse 26 so that he would get to do verse 27. That's just grammar.
4. Did I mention that sometimes Paul gets caught up in his subject? It's really cool that all this great stuff is going to happen because Christ "loved the church and gave himself for it", but all of that was consequence, and to the extent it was perceived in advance, motivation, but it is not what "loved and gave" is. It's what happens because Christ "loved and gave".
5. In fact, there's no logical necessity that any of that stuff even applies to the husband/wife relationship. Christ had his motivations and his purposes, but do our actions purify and perfect our wives? Really? Could we have other motivations and purposes (and other cool stuff to look forward to)?
6. So we are definitely supposed to love our wives and for now we can stipulate that we are definitely supposed to surrender ourselves for our wives. There are many ways in which a husband/father can actually be a real covering for his family, but you don't get that just for having a Y chromosome. You get it by "loving and giving", by sacrificing for your wife and family because you know it's the right thing to do.
7. Bookmark for another thread: Whatever 5:26 says about the rhema-word, to go from there to "a husband is supposed to lecture his wife from the scriptures until she gets her act together, beating her if necessary—for her own good, of course" is <cough> a stretch.
8. Having sort of exhausted himself praising the sufficiency of Christ's sacrifice, Paul shifts gears. A husband is supposed to love his wife "as his own body". He actually appeals to self-interest as well as an accurate understanding of what it means to be "one": By loving our wives we are actually loving our own selves.
9. Feeling that needs a bit of explanation, Paul goes on to state that OF COURSE we don't hate our own bodies, but we nourish and cherish them, which (circling back) Christ also does for the church. The implication there, by the way, is that if you're not nourishing and cherishing your wife, you must hate yourself.
10. Paul closes out by appealing to our oneness with Christ and its analogy to our oneness with our wives.
As we're trying to figure out what it means to love our wives "as Christ loved the church", the three things we know from this passage are that Christ gave Himself for us, he nourishes us, and he cherishes us. If there's something else that needs to be said about the husband/wife relationship from scripture, then we can look at that separately and see what that passage says, but let's not try to make this passage say something it doesn't. Paul's call to love our wives is a call to love. Period.