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WHAT
SHOULD A WIFE'S PRIORITIES BE?
CAN SHE WORK OUTSIDE THE HOME?
Is
it okay for a wife to work outside the home, and what are a wife's
priorities?
The question of whether a wife should work outside the home cannot
be answered with a simple yes or no. It can only be addressed
in the context of a clear understanding of God's priorities for
women. A fundamental priority for every Christian woman is to
live sensibly. At its most basic level a sensible woman is one
who understands God's priorities for her life and lives a self-controlled
and an orderly life consistent with those priorities.
What
are God's priorities for women? Seven priorities of a godly wife
are spelled out in Titus 2:3-5 where Paul exhorts the older women
to teach "young women to love their husbands, to love their
children, to be discreet, chaste, homemakers, good, obedient to
their own husbands, that the word of God may not be blasphemed."
Failure
to live according to these seven priorities will cause the Word
of God to be dishonored. Conversely, a wife who orders her life
according to these priorities will honor God's Word.
Seven
Priorities of A Godly Wife
First, wives are to love their husbands. This command is
simple and unambiguous. There are no conditions or exceptions.
It is not simply that love of husbands is a virtue but that not
loving them is a sin. Paul is not referring to romantic or sexual
love, although that has an important and proper place in marriage.
He is speaking of committed love that godly wives choose to have
for their husbands, just as godly husbands choose to have for
their wives (Ephesians 5:25, 28). The term refers to willing,
determined love that is not based on a husband's worthiness but
on God's command and that is extended by a wife's affectionate
and obedient heart. Even unlovable, uncaring, unfaithful, and
ungrateful husbands are to be loved. This sort of love of husbands
and wives for each other involves unqualified devotedness and
is a friendship that is strong and deep. And when a wife does
not truly love her husband she must, in obedience to the Lord,
train herself to love him.
Second,
wives are to love their children. Whether the children are their
own offspring or adopted they are to be loved with a love that,
like the love of spouses for each other, should be selfless and
sacrificial. As with love for their husbands, love for their children
is not an option. It isn't based on the personality, intelligence,
attractiveness or worthiness but on their need. The most important
responsibility of love for believing parents is to lead their
children to a saving knowledge of Jesus Christ. But Paul's admonition
is inclusive. Mothers are to love their children in every way
- practical, physical, social, moral, and spiritual - with a love
that has no conditions and no limits. This kind of love, to be
fully expressed, is extremely demanding as the mother seeks to
fulfill her obligation to raise godly children (see 1 Timothy
2:15).
Third,
wives are to be sensible. This is the same quality that should
characterize elders (1:8), all older men (2:2), and, in fact,
all believers (2:12). Common sense and good judgment should improve
with age, but they should be evident even in early adulthood.
Fourth,
wives are to be pure. This refers primarily to moral purity, and,
especially in this context, to sexual purity and marital faithfulness.
Like older women, in fact like all Christian women, young wives
are "to adorn themselves with proper clothing, modestly and
discreetly, not with braided hair and gold or pearls or costly
garments; but rather by means of good works, as befits women making
a claim to godliness" (1 Tim. 2:9-10). "Modesty"
refers to a healthy sense of shame at saying anything, doing anything,
or dressing in any way that would cause a man to lust. "Discreetly"
refers to moral control, to keeping passions, especially sexual
passions, subdued. First Peter 3:3-6 gives similar instruction
to women.
Fifth,
wives are to be workers at home. One of the hardest things for
many contemporary wives to do is be satisfied with being a homemaker.
Part of the reason is that modern appliances and other conveniences
greatly simplify and reduce housework, and time that is not used
for something constructive inevitably produces boredom, dissatisfaction,
and often increased temptations.
Women
who have no children or whose children are grown obviously have
fewer obligations in the home and therefore much more time available,
and the point is not so much that a woman's place is in the home
as that her responsibility is for the home. She may have a reasonable
outside job or choose to work in the church or to minister in
a Christian organization, a hospital, a school, or many other
ways. But the home is a wife's special domain and always should
be her highest priority. That is where she is able to offer the
most encouragement and support to her husband and is the best
place for extending hospitality to Christian friends, to unbelieving
neighbors, and to visiting missionaries or other Christian workers.
In
regard to being workers at home, young Christian wives today must
take special care to be sensible, as they are admonished earlier
in this verse. In consultation with their husbands, they must
use good judgment in deciding how much time can justifiably and
wisely be spent in activities outside the home, whether at a paying
job or in some form of service. When they have a genuine desire
to obey and honor the Lord in all things and to conscientiously
seek guidance from His Word and in prayer, they can be assured
that He will provide the necessary wisdom and resolution.
Sixth,
wives are to be kind, the meaning of which is obvious. They are
to be gentle, considerate, amiable, congenial, and sympathetic,
even with those who are undeserving and unkind to them. To be
kind is to be godlike, "for [God] Himself," Jesus said,
"is kind to ungrateful and evil men" (Luke 6:35). Similarly,
Paul admonishes believers to "be kind to one another, tenderhearted,
forgiving each other, just as God in Christ also has forgiven
you" (Eph. 4:32).
Seventh
and finally, wives are to be subject to their own husbands. Like
all other Christian wives, they are to "be subject to [their]
own husbands, as to the Lord. For the husband is the head of the
wife, as Christ also is the head of the church, He Himself being
the Savior of the body. But as the church is subject to Christ,
so also the wives ought to be to their husbands in everything"
(Eph. 5:22-24; cf. 1 Tim. 2:11-14).
There
is nothing in Scripture that specifically forbids a woman from
working outside the home as long as she is fulfilling her priorities
in the home (Proverbs 31).
Whether
or not a woman works outside the home, God's primary calling is
for her to manage the home. That is the most exalted place for
a wife. The world is calling many modern women out of the home,
but not the Lord. His Word portrays the woman's role as one preoccupied
with domestic duties. It is a high calling, far more crucial to
the future of a woman's children than anything she might do in
an outside job.
The
ultimate decision is a personal one that each woman must make
in submission to her husband's authority. Obviously, a single
woman would be free to work and pursue outside employment. A married
woman with no children is perhaps a little more restricted in
the amount of time and energy she can devote to an outside job.
A woman who is a mother obviously has primary responsibility in
the home and would therefore not be free to pursue outside employment
to the detriment of the home. In fact, from a parental perspective
it is difficult to see how a mother could possibly do all that
needs to be done in the home with the upbringing of children,
hospitality, care of the needy, and work for the Lord (cf. 1 Timothy
5:3-14) and still work in an outside job. Indeed, any wife who
fulfills God's priorities in her life and home will be a busy
lady. However, her children and her husband will rise up and call
her blessed, and a woman who fears the LORD shall be praised (Proverbs
31:28,30).
Adapted
from The Fulfilled Family by John MacArthur, pp. 224-6, and Titus:
The MacArthur New Testament Commentary, pp.76-90.
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