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<p>The apostle having treated of the duties of subjects to their sovereigns, and of servants to their masters, proceeds to explain the duty of husbands and wives.</p>
<p class="tab-1">I. Lest the Christian matrons should imagine that their conversion to Christ, and their interest in all Christian privileges, exempted them from subjection to their pagan or Jewish husbands, the apostle here tells them,</p>
<p class="tab-1">1. In what the duty of wives consists.</p>
<p class="tab-1">(1.) In <i>subjection</i>, or an affectionate submission to the will, and obedience to the just authority, of <i>their own husbands</i>, which obliging conduct would be the most likely way to win those disobedient and unbelieving husbands who had rejected the word, or who attended to no other evidence of the truth of it than what they saw in the prudent, peaceable, and exemplary <i>conversation of their wives</i>. Learn, [1.] Every distinct relation has its particular duties, which ministers ought to preach, and the people ought to understand. [2.] A cheerful <i>subjection</i>, and a loving, reverential respect, are duties which Christian women owe their husbands, whether they be good or bad; these were due from Eve to Adam before the fall, and are still required, though much more difficult now than they were before, <a class="bibleref" title="Gen.3.16,1Tim.2.11" href="/passage/?search=Gen.3.16,1Tim.2.11"><span class="bibleref" title="Gen.3.16">Gen. 3:16</span>; <span class="bibleref" title="1Tim.2.11">1 Tim. 2:11</span></a>. [3.] Though the design of the word of the gospel is to win and gain souls to Christ Jesus, yet there are many so obstinate that they will not be <i>won by the word</i>. [4.] There is nothing more powerful, next to the word of God, to win people, than a good conversation, and the careful discharge of relative duties. [5.] Irreligion and infidelity do not dissolve the bonds, nor dispense with the duties, of civil relations; <i>the wife</i> must discharge her duty <i>to her own husband</i>, though he <i>obey not the word</i>.</p>
<p class="tab-1">(2.) In <i>fear</i>, or reverence to their husbands, <a class="bibleref" title="Eph.5.33" href="/passage/?search=Eph.5.33">Eph. 5:33</a>.</p>
<p class="tab-1">(3.) In a <i>chaste conversation</i>, which their unbelieving husbands would accurately observe and attend to. [1.] Evil men are strict observers of the conversation of the professors of religion; their curiosity, envy, and jealousy, make them watch narrowly the ways and lives of good people. [2.] <i>A chaste conversation</i>, attended with due and proper respect to every one, is an excellent means to win them to the faith of the gospel and obedience to the word.</p>
<p class="tab-1">(4.) In preferring the ornaments of the mind to those of the body. [1.] He lays down a rule in regard to the dress of religious women, <a class="bibleref" title="1Pet.3.3" href="/passage/?search=1Pet.3.3">1 Pet. 3:3</a>. Here are three sorts of ornaments forbidden: <i>plaiting of hair</i>, which was commonly used in those times by lewd women; <i>wearing of gold</i>, or ornaments made of <i>gold</i>, was practised by Rebecca, and Esther, and other religious women, but afterwards became the attire chiefly of harlots and wicked people; <i>putting on of apparel</i>, which is not absolutely forbidden, but only too much nicety and costliness in it. Learn, <i>First</i>, Religious people should take care that all their external behaviour be answerable to their profession of Christianity: <i>They must be holy in all manner of conversation. Secondly</i>, The outward adorning of the body is very often sensual and excessive; for instance, when it is immoderate, and above your degree and station in the world, when you are proud of it and puffed up with it, when you dress with design to allure and tempt others, when your apparel is too rich, curious, or superfluous, when your fashions are fantastical, imitating the levity and vanity of the worst people, and when they are immodest and wanton. The attire of a harlot can never become a chaste Christian matron. [2.] Instead of the outward adorning of the body, he directs Christian wives to put on much more excellent and beautiful ornaments, <a class="bibleref" title="1Pet.3.4" href="/passage/?search=1Pet.3.4">1 Pet. 3:4</a>. Here note, <i>First</i>, The part to be adorned: <i>The hidden man of the heart</i>; that is, the soul; the hidden, the inner man. Take care to adorn and beautify your souls rather than your bodies. <i>Secondly</i>, The ornament prescribed. It must, in general, be something <i>not corruptible</i>, that beautifies the soul, that is, the graces and virtues of Gods Holy Spirit. The ornaments of the body are destroyed by the moth, and perish in the using; but the grace of God, the longer we wear it, the brighter and better it is. More especially, the finest ornament of Christian women is <i>a meek and quiet spirit</i>, a tractable easy temper of mind, void of passion, pride, and immoderate anger, discovering itself in a quiet obliging behaviour towards their husbands and families. If the husband be harsh, and averse to religion (which was the case of these good wives to whom the apostle gives this direction), there is no way so likely to win him as a prudent meek behaviour. At least, a quiet spirit will make a good woman easy to herself, which, being visible to others, becomes an amiable ornament to a person in the eyes of the world. <i>Thirdly</i>, The excellency of it. Meekness and calmness of spirit are, in the sight of God, of great price—amiable in the sight of men, and precious in the sight of God. Learn, 1. A true Christians chief care lies in the right ordering and commanding of his own spirit. Where the hypocrites work ends, there the true Christians work begins. 2. The endowments of the inner man are the chief ornaments of a Christian; but especially a composed, calm, and quiet spirit, renders either man or woman beautiful and lovely.</p>
<p class="tab-1">2. The duties of Christian wives being in their nature difficult, the apostle enforces them by the example, (1.) Of the holy women of old, who trusted in God, <a class="bibleref" title="1Pet.3.5" href="/passage/?search=1Pet.3.5">1 Pet. 3:5</a>. “You can pretend nothing of excuse from the weakness of your sex, but what they might. They lived <i>in old time</i>, and had less knowledge to inform them and fewer examples to encourage them; yet in all ages they practised this duty; they were <i>holy women</i>, and therefore their example is obligatory; they <i>trusted in God</i>, and yet did not neglect their duty to man: the duties imposed upon you, of a quiet spirit and of subjection to your own husbands, are not new, but what have ever been practised by the greatest and best women in the world.” (2.) Of Sara, who obeyed her husband, and followed him when he went from Ur of the Chaldeans, <i>not knowing whither he went</i>, and <i>called him lord</i>, thereby showing him reverence and acknowledging his superiority over her; and all this though she was declared a princess by God from heaven, by the change of her name, “<i>Whose daughters you are</i> if you imitate her in faith and good works, and do not, through fear of your husbands, either quit the truth you profess or neglect your duty to them, but readily perform it, without either fear or force, out of conscience towards God and sense of duty to them.” Learn, [1.] God takes exact notice, and keeps an exact record, of the actions of all men and women in the world. [2.] The subjection of wives to their husbands is a duty which has been practised universally by holy women in all ages. [3.] The greatest honour of any man or woman lies in a humble and faithful deportment of themselves in the relation or condition in which Providence has placed them. [4.] God takes notice of the good that is in his servants, to their honour and benefit, but covers a multitude of failings; Saras infidelity and derision are overlooked, when her virtues are celebrated. [5.] Christians ought to do their duty to one another, not out of fear, nor from force, but from a willing mind, and in obedience to the command of God. Wives should be in subjection to their churlish husbands, not from dread and amazement, but from a desire to do well and to please God.</p>
<p class="tab-1">II. The husbands duty to the wife comes next to be considered.</p>
<p class="tab-1">1. The particulars are, (1.) <i>Cohabitation</i>, which forbids unnecessary separation, and implies a mutual communication of goods and persons one to another, with delight and concord. (2.) <i>Dwelling with the wife according to knowledge</i>; not according to lust, as brutes; nor according to passion, as devils; but according to knowledge, as wise and sober men, who know the word of God and their own duty. (3.) <i>Giving honour to the wife</i>—giving due respect to her, and maintaining her authority, protecting her person, supporting her credit, delighting in her conversation, affording her a handsome maintenance, and placing a due trust and confidence in her.</p>
<p class="tab-1">2. The reasons are, Because she is <i>the weaker vessel</i> by nature and constitution, and so ought to be defended: but then the wife is, in other and higher respects, equal to her husband; they are <i>heirs together of the grace of life</i>, of all the blessings of this life and another, and therefore should live peaceably and quietly one with another, and, if they do not, their prayers one with another and one for another will be hindered, so that often “you will not pray at all, or, if you do, you will pray with a discomposed ruffled mind, and so without success.” Learn, (1.) The weakness of the female sex is no just reason either for separation or contempt, but on the contrary it is a reason for honour and respect: <i>Giving honour to the wife as unto the weaker vessel</i>. (2.) There is an honour due to all who are heirs of the grace of life. (3.) All married people should take care to behave themselves so lovingly and peaceably one to another that they may not by their broils hinder the success of their prayers.</p>