Before I start this I want to point out that the word 'submit', as it is used in the New Testament, is a verb not a noun. It is something that woman does rather than something that is done to her. If a man wants to be forgiven for his failures to submit to Christ then he must forgive his wives for any failures to submit to him. (Matthew 6:15) With that said...
Disclaimer: I'm basing this on what the Bible actually says. If anyone has a problem with what the Bible says then take it up with the author not with me.
Ephesians 5:22-24 is a controversial passage. The feminists want us to believe that verse 21 is somehow relevant and thus marriage is supposed to be mutual submission. Many churches have been infected by this attitude. There are two ways that we can see the nonsense of that position. I will examine each of them in later paragraphs but right now in order to relate this to the OP I want to examine verses 32 and 33 of Ephesians 5.
Here Paul repeats the comparison from verse 23 between the marriage covenant and the Christ/church covenant. This is a recurring theme throughout the Bible occurring in the Old Testament in such places as Ezekiel 23 and in the New Testament in such places as Matthew 25:1-12 and 1 Corinthians 11:3.
But Paul is also talking about marriage, not just the Christ church covenant. This presents a problem. The problem is that the comparison does exist. So when feminists challenge the submission of a wife to her husband they are also challenging the submission of the church to Christ and vice versa.
From this we know that women were literally created
for men rather than with men. We also know that the husband is the "
head" of the wife because she was created for him. These two verses, even standing alone, would put an effective end to the feminist argument about mutual submission. The Greek word that is translated here as "
head" is "κεφαλή" (kephalē). In its literal sense it is a medical or veterinary term that refers to the head of a patient or animal. In its metaphorical sense in regard to human relations, which the sense that is applicable here, it is better translated as either "
master or "
lord". The metaphorical context is equivalent to the English metaphorical usage, "
head of state" (i.e. '
king' or '
lord') or "
head of the company" (i.e. the CEO, called '
master' in biblical times). In other words it is a metaphor for the boss.
The same phraseology is used for the relationship between Christ and men however so challenging the headship of the husband is effectively challenging the headship of Christ. This is one of the biggest problems we face today as more and more churches fall away from the teachings of Christ and the understanding that Christ is their leader and thus His word is law.
So that brings us to the feminist question "
Does Ephesians 5:21 make the concept of marital 'headship' refer to some kind of mutual submission?"
As I said above, there are two answers to that. They stand alone in that disproving one would not disprove the other but they also support each other in that they both come to the same result. The two answers are...
- Find me the word 'submit' in verse 23. It isn't there. It does not exist in that verse. Paul isn't talking about submission, mutual or otherwise, in verse 23. Paul has changed topics. The only thing left is to determine whether verses 22 and 24 go with the topic verse 23 or the topic in verse 21. The phraseology of both verses and the positioning of verse 24 (after verse 23) makes the answer rather obvious in my opinion.
- The concept of a wife submitting to her husband occurs in several places in the New Testament. The concept of mutual submission is only discussed near one of them. If mutual submission were an important issue in marriage then it would occur near each reference to marriage. It does not. Thus it is not relevant to marriage and is only incidentally discussed in the same letter to the Ephesians.
Examining both of those in detail, let's look at the first one.
Here we see the exact same phraseology that we see in 1 Corinthians 11:3. The ἀνήρ (man/husband) is the κεφαλὴ (head/lord/master) of the γυναικὸς (plural women) as Χριστὸς (Christ) is the κεφαλὴ (head/lord/master) of the ἐκκλησίας (church).
Should the word κεφαλὴ be translated as lord, master or king rather than as 'head'?
Well first off, Paul says that Christ is the κύριος (kyrios), or "
lord and master", of the church (Colossians 4:1) and Paul compares the husband/wife relationship to the Christ/church relationship. Secondly, Peter uses the same term, κύριος, for how a wife should address her husband in 1 Peter 3:6. The Greek word κύριος only has two possible English translations, "
master" or "
lord". So it would appear that Peter and Paul believe that a wife should address her husband as "
master" or "
lord".
Incidentally, if the husband is the lord and king of the wife then 1 Corinthians 11:3 and Ephesians 5:23 would make Christ the "
Lord of lords and King of kings" (Revelation 17:14 NIV)
Thus the above statement is true. Ephesians 5:23 is not speaking of submission mutual or otherwise. Ephesians 5:23 is echoing 1 Corinthians 11:3 in declaring the husband to be the head/lord/master of the wife. So Paul actually has changed subjects away from the mutual submission of Christian brothers.
Verse 24 comes after verse 23 so it obviously refers to the subject of verse 23 not the subject of verse 21. I will let the reader draw their own conclusions about verse 22. I know what I believe.
Now let's look at the second point.
How many places in the New Testament does it say that a wife should submit herself to her husband?
We have the infamous Ephesians 5:22-24
But we also have...
And...
And let's not forget The Apostle Peter...
The list goes on and on.
If mutual submission is relevant and important to marriage then why is not mentioned in regard to any of these passage. If we're going to look at what is written around these passages as the feminists seem to want to do with Ephesians 5:22-24 then we need to remember that 1 Peter 1:1 uses the words "
in the same way which seems to refer back to the reference to slaves submitting to masters in 1 Peter 2:18. That would seem to mean that wives are to submit to their husbands as slaves submit to masters.
So I'm really not sure how they come up with the idea that mutual submission is a relevant idea when we are discussing marriage.
It certainly isn't a relevant idea when we are discussing the Christ/church covenant. Christ does not submit to either the Pope or the Episcopalians.
That is a key point that we need to remember when discussing church doctrine.
- Christ isn't going to change the rules on homosexuality just because some churches want to include gays and lesbians in order to get more tithes. (gays: 1 Corinthians 6:9-10 and 1 Timothy 1:9-10; lesbians 1 Corinthians 11:9)
- He isn't going to change the rules on marriage just because the Pope and the Baptist Theological Seminary want to redefine marriage as solely monogamous. (1 Timothy 4:1-3)
- He isn't going to change the rules on legalism just so the Pope can prevent priests from marrying. (Matthew 15:7-9 and Mark 7:6-7)
And Christ isn't going to change any of the other rules just because we want them changed either.
The whole concept of watering down the submission of a wife to a husband then waters down the submission of the church to Christ due to the correlations between the two in the Bible.