Women’s Issues
I’ve been looking for a way to express how I feel about some other facets of biblical manhood and womanhood. These quotes are right up my alley. The concept of “complementarianism” has been abused in many places by those who claim to be proponents of it. And sometimes the emphasis is so much on that touchy word submission, we forget about many other aspects of the biblical pattern. So here are some selections from an article that I wholeheartedly agree with.
There is no uniform for women in Scripture, and there is a lot of room for creativity and freedom within the commands to be modest, pure, and feminine. We cannot hold others to a man-made standard of dress. If we have personal convictions about clothing, they must be grounded in God’s Word, and we must treat others with charity and grace. Not everyone has reached the same conclusions that we have, and we don’t shun women based upon outward appearances. Jesus dined with prostitutes, calling them to holiness, so we can surely reach out to our neighbors with charity, even if we disagree with their standard of dress! There’s no such thing as a “Christian Taliban” when it comes to modest dress. (If you want to study this topic from Scripture, start with the following verses: Deut. 22:5, I Tim. 2:9, I Pet. 3:3-4, Proverbs 31:21-22, Gen. 24:22, and Isaiah 61:10.) Wearing dresses and being feminine cannot cover a haughty spirit and a holier-than-thou attitude.
Being a godly wife has nothing to do with being a doormat. Anyone who believes otherwise hasn’t been reading this site or the Scriptures. The godly wife is called to be a visionary steward; a thinker; a do-er of difficult things; a lover of excellence; a light to her children; and a shoulder-to-shoulder partner with her husband, walking the same path with zest and commitment. Gifts will vary, but a husband who values his wife will always see the incredible benefit of having a comrade-in-arms as his closest companion through life. With their complementary roles, the visionary husband and wife don’t walk in opposite directions with differing agendas. They unite their hearts and minds and work toward the same goals, each in their own God-ordained sphere. This isn’t a fairy tale, pie-in-the-sky idea; it’s what has driven successful marriages, families, and cultures for centuries. Doormats need not apply. A wife’s submission has nothing to do with being inferior or unintelligent. Every person on earth has to submit to someone or some thing. Try having everyone do otherwise, and you’ll get anarchy on a massive scale. Men submit to their authorities. Women submit to theirs. What’s the big deal? If you’re opposed to submission, then try disobeying all traffic lights tomorrow and see where it gets you. Biblical submission is not about tyrannical overlords forcing their underlings to kow-tow. It is all about Christ and His Bride, and that picture is one of beauty, love, tenderness, protection, and mutual honor.
Godly husbands do not treat their wives like children, browbeat them, or abuse them in any way. We’ve heard about websites whose authors claim it is a good thing to keep women in line by treating them as lesser beings. Scripture is clear: as you do to others, you are asking it to be done to you. Real men treat women like queens and co-heirs–not as chattel or children… End of story.
(source)
I’m not looking to start a debate about this… this is very simply an explanation of what I believe, in broader terms than I’ve used before.

Great quotes – I, too, agree with all of them.
Good stuff
These are some great quotes. I think that all too often we miss the whole point that husbands and wives are supposed to be working together and instead we think about them doing different things in different spheres. This is a recipe for disaster.
Why do we find that couples, after their children are grown, are still divorcing? Because they didn’t take time to build a relationship that works together toward a common purpose.
Great post – I especially loved the whole “modesty” paragraph. How very, very true!
Being a woman who is feeling more and more challenged in the area of modesty-but for myself…not to push my views on others…and as a wife, both these paragraphs drive home thoughts I can really identify with!
In regards to the modesty paragraph, I agree whole heartedly with you that there is freedom in this area and there is no clear one way(ex. long dresses) and one wrong way (ex. jeans and other “contemporary” clothing…excluding obviously immodest clothing items of course). I have read some blogs that suggest wearing items such as jeans is plain wrong and this kind of statement makes me very uncomfortable because it is a man made assumption and as your paragraph includes, no amount of long dresses and other similar attire can cover up a haughty, arrogant heart!:)