Monthly Archives: January 2022

A Wife’s Submission to Christ First

To know the limitations of a wife’s obedience, and the manner how she ought to yield submission to her husband, two things must be considered, both the position of the husband and the position of the wife.

The husband’s position is noted in this phrase, “as unto the Lord” (Eph. 5:22) . . .

The wife’s position is implied in these words, “as the church is subject unto Christ, so let wives be to their own husbands” (v. 23) . . .

From the position of a husband, I deduce this general principle concerning a wife’s submission, that submission must be yielded to the husband as to Christ. Two conclusions will follow, one negative, which is the wife must yield no submission to her husband than what may stand with her submission to Christ.

The former is a necessary condition required of all subordinates in their submission, and obedience much more in a wife’s submission to her husband, because of all persons of different rank there is the least difference between husbands and wives.

Hence, for our present purpose, I deduce these two other more particular conclusions, the first of which is this, if God plainly commands the wife any duty, and her husband will not by any means give consent, but forbids her, she may and ought to do it without, or against his consent.

The other particular conclusion is this, that if a husband require his wife to do that which God has forbidden she should not do it.

Two cautions are to be observed about this point. First, that she be sure (being truly informed by God’s Word) that that which she refuses to do at her husband’s command is forbidden by God. Secondly, that she first labors with all meekness and by all good means that she can to persuade her husband to stop urging and pressing that upon her which with a good conscience she cannot do.

William Gouge, Building a Godly Home: A Holy Vision for a Happy Marriage, 156-157.

A Wife’s Contentment with Her Husband’s Present Estate

Contentment is also a part of obedience. It covers a man’s outward estate and ability, in and with which a wife must rest satisfied and contended, whether it be high or low, great or ordinary, wealthy or needy, and above, equal, or under that estate in which she was before marriage . . .

A wife’s contentment is a great comfort to her husband lying under a cross, and it makes the burden seem much lighter than otherwise it would, if at least he is a kind husband, and affected with his wife’s feelings, as he ought to be. For a loving husband in every distress is more perplexed for his wife than for himself.

William Gouge, Building a Godly Home: A Holy Vision for a Happy Marriage, 152-153.

A Wife’s Active Obedience to Her Husband

The first is, that a wife ought to be willing to dwell where her husband will have her dwell. The wives of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob manifested their wife-like obedience here . . .

These examples further show that if a husband has good reason to move from one country to another, or from place to place, his wife ought to yield to go with him . . .

Against this is the mind and practice of many wives, who being affected and addicted to one place more than another, such as the place where they were brought up, where most of their best friends dwell, refuse to go and dwell where their husband’s calling lies, though he requires and desires them never so much. Thus many husbands are forced to their great damage for the sake of peace to yield to their wives, either to relinquishing their calling or to have two houses . . . Some wives pretend that they cannot endure the smoke of the city, others that they cannot endure the air of the country. Indeed their own wills and conceit stuffs them more than either city smoke or country air.

William Gouge, Building a Godly Home: A Holy Vision for a Happy Marriage, 145-146.

Interpreting the 1000 Year Reign – Literal or Spiritual?

There have been two major ways of interpreting the thousand-year reign of Christ, the literal or realistic way and the spiritual way. The literal interpretation of the thousand-year millennium characterized many of the early fathers of the church (e.g., Justin, Irenaeus, Melito, Tertullian, Hippolytus, Methodius). Since the venue of the vision segment in 20:1–3 and the prophetic segment in 20:7–10 is apparently the earth, the author may be implying that the reign of the resurrected martyrs with Christ also occurs on the earth. This, however, is not made explicit. The verb ζᾶν, “to live,” is used here with the meaning “raised [from the dead], resurrected” (see v 5; 3 Kgdms 17:23; Matt 9:18; Acts 9:41); in 2:8 ζᾶν is used of the resurrection of Christ (see Comment on that passage). According to 2 Macc 7:9, 14 (based on Dan 12:2), those who have died for the laws of the king of the universe will be raised from the dead. Kellermann argues that this reflects the belief that immediately after death the martyr is transferred to the heavenly realm in a transformed mode of existence. A similar conception is found in Pistis Sophia 2.99 (tr. Schmidt-MacDermot), which (because of its late date) may be dependent on Revelation:

“Nevertheless at the dissolution of the All, namely when the number of perfect souls is completed [cf. Rev 6:11], and the mystery, for the sake of which the All came into existence, is quite completed, I will spend 1000 years, according to years of light, as ruler (king) over all the emanations of light, and over the whole number of perfect souls which have received all the mysteries.”

The second line of interpretation may be called the spiritual view, maintained by both Clement of Alexandria and Origen. Augustine popularized the view, now called amillennialism, that the reign of the saints with Christ was not a future expectation but rather the present situation of Christians who had been “raised with Christ” and “enthroned in heavenly places with Christ” (Col 3:1; Eph 2:6; Augustine De civ. dei 20.6–20). According to Wikenhauser (RQ 40 [1932] 21), the millennial reign of Christ is primarily a means of indicating that the martyrs are worthy of a special reward.

Revelation 17-22, Volume 52C (Word Biblical Commentary), Loc. 1089

Roman Legal System and Death Penalty

The Roman legal system knew two forms of the death penalty: the summum supplicium was a more vindictive form involving burning alive, crucifixion, and exposure to wild animals, while the capite puniri involved a simple death by decapitation (Garnsey, Status, 124; A. Berger, Roman Law, 633). Further, two types of decollatio, “decapitation,” or capitis amputatio, “beheading,” were distinguished: that by the sword and that by the axe (Digest 48.19.8.1–2; Mommsen, Römisches Staatsrecht, 916–25). Provincial governors had the right to execute by sword only, not by the axe, javelin, club, or noose (Digest 48.19.8.1). Capital penalties were graded in accordance with degrees of extremity; the most extreme penalty was condemnation to the gallows, then burning alive, then beheading (Digest 48.19.28).

Roman legal practice exhibited a dual penalty system, which meant that punishments were meted out not only in accordance with the nature of the offense but also in accordance with the dignitas, “status,” of the offender (Garnsey, Status, 103–80; Gagé, Les classes, 283; Latte, RESup 7:1612; A. Berger, Roman Law, 633). Harsher punishments, including more violent forms of the death penalty, were inflicted on members of the lower classes (later designated humiliores), while the death penalty was rarely used for members of the upper classes (later called honestiores). For the upper classes various forms of exile or deportation were customarily used (see Comment on Rev 1:9). Decurions, for example, could not be executed (Digest 48.19.15; 48.19.27.1). Thus those who were beheaded with the axe referred to in [Rev. 20] v 4 in all probability belonged to the honestiores (the honestiores/humiliores distinction became more common in the second and third centuries, but the distinction in status that these terms describe did exist in the first century A.D. [Garnsey, Status, 221–76]).

 Revelation 17-22, Volume 52C (Word Biblical Commentary), Loc. 1086.

When Orthodoxy Reigned Supreme

So long as the intellect retained its legitimate place among the functions of the religious subject, so long as to know God was felt to be an essential part of glorifying God, the natural tendency was to make this knowledge as comprehensive and many-sided as possible — to have it mirror the full content of the divine nature, and not merely a single one of its perfections. Whatever may be charged against the intellectualism of the period when orthodoxy reigned supreme, it can claim credit at least for having been broad-minded and well-balanced in its appreciation of the infinite complexity and richness of the life of God. The music of that theology may not always please modern ears, because it seems lacking in sweetness; but it ranged over a wider scale and made better harmonics than the popular strains of to-day.

“The Scriptural Doctrine of the Love of God” by Geerhardus Vos in The Presbyterian and Reformed Review (No. 49 – January 1902), 1-2.