Relationships | The path to a happy marriage
Series: EIFACH muetig – with Jesus as a role model | Bible text: Ephesians 5:21
«Submit yourselves one to another in the fear of Christ» (Ephesians 5:21). This sentence is the overture to the great passage on marriage in Ephesians 5, which actually contains everything we need for a happy and fulfilling marriage. It is simple and requires courage. Anyone who puts their personal happiness first and endeavours to be happy at all costs is well on the way to losing their last bit of happiness.
Unbroken is an exciting film about the American World War II hero Louie Zamperini. During a mission in 1943, his aeroplane crashed into the Pacific. Most of the crew members were killed. After 47 days in a rubber dinghy surrounded by sharks, Louie and another survivor were taken prisoner of war by the Japanese for two and a half years of beatings, humiliation and torture. Returning to the US after the war, he suffered from severe post-traumatic stress disorder and became an alcoholic. His wife, Cynthia, lost all hope for their marriage. Louie spent his time dreaming of returning to Japan to assassinate «the bird», a Japanese NCO who had repeatedly tortured him in the camps. One night he dreamt of the «bird» hovering over him. He leapt up to defend himself. A violent scream woke him up – he was sitting on his pregnant wife’s chest with his hands around her throat. Not long afterwards, Cynthia told him that she wanted a divorce. It was a shock, but he was too in the grip of his past and bitterness to change.
Then, in the autumn of 1949, Cynthia attended a tent crusade that a young preacher, Billy Graham, was holding in the city. She came back as a different woman, went straight to Louie and told him that she was withdrawing her divorce, that she had just met God and that he absolutely had to come with her. To make a long story short: Louie accepted Jesus Christ as his Lord and Saviour on the second evening. He was instantly free from his alcoholism. Not only that, but he felt the love of God flowing through his life. He realised that he could now forgive all those who had tortured and tormented him as a prisoner of war. His relationship with Cynthia was renewed; they became a happy couple. In October 1950, Louie was able to return to Japan and speak at the prison, where many of his former jailers were now serving time themselves. He spoke of the power of Christ’s grace to bring forgiveness, and then he embraced everyone with a loving smile.
Even if this story sounds a bit dramatic, it actually happened that way. God’s spirit does not always work so suddenly and directly, but the content of his work is always the same. What is the secret of marriage? It is so simple that Paul can summarise it in one sentence: «Submit yourselves one to another in the fear of Christ» (Ephesians 5:21 LUT).
Fullness instead of vacuum
This sentence is the beginning of the famous passage on marriage. Hidden in it are two factors that enable a person to live marriage out of abundance:
- Filling with the Holy Spirit. A Spirit-filled life and marriage are closely linked. In the Greek text, this verse is the last clause of the long preceding sentence, in which Paul mentions several characteristics of a person filled with the Spirit of God. The last characteristic is the giving up of pride and self-will, which leads us to serve others in humility. From this Spirit-induced submission, Paul then moves on to the duties of wives and husbands. Being filled with the Holy Spirit must happen again and again and is the prerequisite for a marriage as described by Paul. That is why Paul recommends: «Do not stop allowing yourselves to be filled with God’s Spirit» (Ephesians 5:18 verbatim). In a marriage, it sometimes feels like we are running on our last drop of petrol. But then it’s good to know where the petrol station is. The Holy Spirit writes the truths about Jesus (John 14:17, 26) into our hearts, creating an inner music, an inner rejoicing. «[…] sing and rejoice from the depths of your heart to the glory of the Lord, giving thanks to God the Father always and for everything in the name of Jesus Christ our Lord» (Ephesians 5:19–20 New Testament).
- The fear of the Lord. «Submit to each other in the fear of Christ» (Ephesians 5:21 LUT). Fear in the Bible means to be overwhelmed and moved by something or someone. To fear God means to be overwhelmed by His greatness and love. To fear God means to fall down before Him in adoring amazement at His glory and beauty.
Being filled with the Holy Spirit and the fear of the Lord are ultimately the same thing. Both formulations refer to an inner spiritual experience. Both lead people out of themselves into a selflessness created by the Spirit. The marvelling joy of Christ’s devotion and love is the motivation behind all calls to submission, love and service.
So it doesn’t work out well when two needy and insecure people look for their value and meaning in the arms of their partner. If you join two vacuums together, you get a bigger vacuum, a gigantic sucking sound is created. Paul assumes that each of the partners has already received an answer to the big questions of life and knows what God has created them for and who they are in Christ. Those who are filled with the Spirit of God and live in the fear of the Lord do not need a spouse for their happiness or to cover their shortcomings. It’s easy, but requires a lot of courage. You have to take the step before you know what will come back.
Subordination instead of playing boss
Now our tank is full of petrol and we can step on the gas. And only then, when I am filled with the Holy Spirit, do I have everything I need to submit to my spouse. In verses 22–24, Paul calls on wives to submit to their husbands. But immediately afterwards he calls on husbands to love their wives as Christ loves the church: «He laid down his life for them» (V. 25 NEW TESTAMENT). This is an even stronger call to selflessness. Whether husband or wife, both should not live for themselves, but for the other – and that is the most difficult and at the same time most important task we have as husband and wife in a marriage. EIFACH muetig – Jesus as a role model.
The term subordinate is often misunderstood or even perceived negatively, especially when we think of hierarchies and power structures. But in the biblical context, it is not about oppression or the loss of one’s own dignity. Subordination rather means that we voluntarily place ourselves at the service of others out of love for one another. It is a voluntary attitude that respects others more than oneself, that reaches out for the good of others.
Here Paul applies a general principle of behaviour towards fellow human beings to marriage. In Philippians 2:2–3 Paul says: «[…] be humble and respect others more than yourselves.» In Romans 15:1–3, Paul challenges us: «We should behave in such a way that it helps the other person and encourages them in their faith. For even Christ did not live for himself alone.» And in Galatians 5:13 he asks us to serve (word for slave) one another in love.
Selflessness instead of self-centredness
Mutual submission faces a great enemy – our self-centredness. This has been ingrained in us humans from birth and has its cause in the fallen creation and our sinful hearts. Although a successor has become a «new person», selfishness still shows through from time to time. On the other hand, the understanding of marriage has changed. For centuries, marriage was seen as an economic and social institution, and the emotional and intellectual needs of the partners were secondary to the survival of the marriage itself. Today, the focus is on the self-realisation of the individual. The idea of self-realisation assumes that marriage and family primarily serve our personal fulfilment and that we need them to be happy. It starts with looking for «just the right partner». Important criteria here are physical attractiveness and sexual chemistry. You also look for someone who is perfectly compatible, someone who accepts me as I am and doesn’t want to change me, someone who validates me, someone who helps me achieve my goals. The focus is on my personal fulfilment and no longer on the marriage. That is an absolute poison. Anyone who puts their personal happiness first and endeavours to be happy at all costs is well on the way to gambling away their last bit of happiness.
This assumption overlooks the fact that we always marry the wrong person. We never know who we’re going to marry; we only imagine it. And even if we get the «right one» – just wait a little while and he will start to change. The challenge is: How do I learn to love and be there for this stranger I married? My spouse is the person who can bring out the worst in me. But it also means that this is where the greatest potential for growth and change lies.
In Louie Zamperini’s case, the wounds he brought were obvious. Each of us brings our history of hurt into marriage: emotional or physical neglect or abuse, betrayal, traumatic experiences, rejection, words that hurt, etc. Injuries make us preoccupied with ourselves and thus reinforce our self-centredness. That is why it is important that we treat our wounds with pastoral care.
In Zamperini’s case, it was the gospel that made him a better husband. St Paul describes the effect of the gospel: «He died for all, so that those who receive his new life may no longer live for themselves. Rather, they should live for Christ, who died and rose again for them» (2 Corinthians 5:15 NLB). According to the Bible, this is the essence of sin: that we live for ourselves and not for God and our spouse. Where the Spirit of God can change us from the inside out, we experience this wonderful reorientation. HE causes us to love God and live for Him and to love our spouse and put their needs above our own. King Solomon writes: «I belong to my beloved and my beloved belongs to me» (Song of Songs 6:3 NLB) – here it becomes clear that love gives itself away and is not taken away.
A wide-ranging survey shows that there are many unhappy married couples. But if they stay together anyway, two thirds of these spouses say five years later that they are happy. That’s hope! Last Sunday, my wife and I had a real argument. In between, we said that certain patterns of behaviour are unlikely to change after 32 years of marriage. On Tuesday, I spoke to my Canadian mentor about my sadness and frustration – including the fact that I am supposed to preach a sermon on marriage today. He made it very clear to me that this incident does not disqualify me. On the contrary; if I was honest and transparent, the sermon could achieve a lot. I was also given new hope that a lot of change is still possible in our marriage. In the silence, the Holy Spirit gave me the promise: «I am the vine; you are the branches. He who abides in me, and I in him, will bear much fruit» (John 15:5 NLB).
Possible questions for the small groups
Read the Bible text: Ephesians 5:18–33
- What does being filled with the Holy Spirit have to do with managing relationships?
- What does the phrase «in the fear of the Lord» mean? What does this have to do with submission?
- What does it mean to submit to one another? What is Jesus» example in this regard? Talk to your spouse about how you could give each other selfless love.
- Where are you suffering in your marital relationship and would like to change? What could be the starting point for change?
- Where do your injuries play into your relationships? Have you worked through your history of hurt?