Excerpted from John Dod and Robert Cleaver's A Plaine and Familiar Exposition of the Ten Commandements, a standard English Puritan treatment of the ten
commandments, first published in 1603 and not reprinted since 1635.
So much for their duties that be further off from equality in the family, as parents and children, masters and servants. Now those that are more equal are husband and wife, whose duties are either common to both, or more particular to either of them.
The common duties. First, they must love one another with a pure heart, fervently. This duty both husband and wife must
perform mutually one to another, which that they may the better strive for, let us consider of some excellent commodities that will proceed from this love. First, this benefit will certainly ensue: if there be fervent, and dear, and matrimonial love betwixt themselves, it will preserve and guard them from all unchaste actions and strange lusts, as appeareth, Prov. 5:19-20. Rejoice with the wife of thy youth, delight in her love continually. For why shouldest thou
delight in a strange woman, or embrace the bosom of a stranger? As if he had said: if thou do not love they wife, thou wilt look after harlots, or at least art in danger so to do, but if thou love thy wife truly, thou art strengthened against lusts and temptations to adultery.
And so it may be said of the wife concerning her husband. For it is not the having of a husband that makes a wife chaste, and keepeth her from filthiness, but the loving of her husband is it that will keep her. And likewise it is not the having of a wife that maketh a man honest and preserveth him from adultery, but it is the loving of his wife
that will do it. For many married men and women live filthily and impurely; but
if they did love one another, they were safe from this fault. This then is one
benefit; it is a most sure defence of one's chastity, to love each
other.
Another benefit that constant love will bring is that they shall
be very patient. Abundance of love brings abundance of patience, for love hopes
all things, and suffers all things, and love is not provoked. But where there is
little love, there is little bearing, and little hoping, and there they be
quickly provoked. Upon every light and small defect or fault, they grow to
brawls and chasing. And then, whoever was troubled with such a husband, or such
a wife? Nay, they might rather say, who ever had such an unloving and unkind
heart as I? For if there were that love that should be, and in that measure that
it ought, they would bear with patience, and with meekness such infirmities, and
would not be so quickly provoked to bitterness. As the mother that dearly loves
her little child, though it cry all night, and break her sleep, and disquiet her
very much; yet she will not throw it out of doors, nor lay it at the further end
of the house, but she useth it kindly, and will do what she can to still it when
it cries. And in the morning they will be as good friends as ever before, and
she feedeth it and tendeth it never a whit the less for all the night's trouble.
One that were not acquainted with the love of a mother would wonder at it. Did
it not disquiet her all night, and can she be so merry with it now? Yea, she
can, for she loveth it, and hath forgotten all the night's griefs in the
morning. And so indeed, could the husband and wife love one another with a pure
and Christian love, they would bear much, and endure much, and not suffer their
affections to be diminished. For love is alway a breastplate against distemper,
discord and bitterness.
A third profit that springs from love is that it
edifies, and seeks not his own things: therefore if they love one another, they
will in all things seek the good of one another. And then, if the husband see a
fault in his wife, he will admonish her of it meekly and gently, and labor to
bring her to amendment. And if she see any fault on his part, she will with all
reverence and humility tell him of it. But on the contrary, where there is not
love, they will regard their own ease more than the salvation of another. Then
if the husband see his wife in any fault, he thinketh, Indeed it is a sin, but
if I should tell her of it, she will be in a passion and chafe. And so the wife:
I confess this sin is dangerous to my husband's soul, but if I should speak of
it, he is so froward, that he would be bitter and furious against me presently.
But now here is a great want of love in either party. For, what though your wife
will be in a passion? He that loveth his wife had rather she should be in a
passion against him for a little time, than God be angry with her forever. And
the wife that loveth her husband would more willingly suffer her husband's
displeasure for a while, for well doing, than that he should suffer God's wrath,
for ill doing. But for want of this Christian and sincere love, they suffer
grievous sins to grow and break out one in another, which by wise and godly
admonition might have been stayed and cured.
A fourth fruit of love is
that it armeth us against jealousy and unjust suspicions. For all ill jealousy
and causeless suspicion ariseth of one of these two grounds: either that one is
or hath been wicked himself, and having been faulty and naught, he is ready to
judge others by himself, and to measure all with his own measure, or else from a
doting affection, that he maketh his wife a god, and would have her to do the
like to him, and this is not true love. So when the wife doteth foolishly upon
her husband, and maketh an idol of him, then is she quickly ready to be jealous,
whereas true and sound love would work the contrary effect in her. So for
matters of goods, he that trusteth in them will trust nobody with them, neither
wife, neither servants, neither children, nor any, but is always suspicious, not
because they would not deal faithfully, but because he maketh that his god, and
therefore is immoderately afraid to lose it. But where there is a pure and a
fervent love, that will cut off all needless misdeemings, and cause us to
believe and hope all good of others. This is the first duty that is common to
husband and wife.
The second followeth, and that is faithfulness, that
both bend their wits and all their endeavors to the help each of other, and to
the common good of the family. The husband must not follow his private pleasure
and delight, nor the wife her own ease and pride. But though by nature they
could be content to seek themselves, yet they must strive both to build up the
house by diligence in their calling, and wise and frugal disposing of the
blessings of God bestowed upon them, and also to be helpful to the whole family,
because they stand in the place of Christ to those that are committed unto them,
both for their souls and bodies. First then, the husband and wife must be
faithful in their bodies one to another, else they break the covenant of God.
For marriage is not a covenant of man, but a covenant of God, wherein the
parties bind themselves to him, and they be in recognizance in heaven, to keep
themselves pure and chaste one to another. Then for other matters there must be
one purse, and one heart and hand, for the good of the family, and each of
other. But now, if the wife be wasteful and idle, then she (like a foolish
woman) pulleth down her house. And if the husband be an unthrift, and consume
and spend that idly and vainly (to serve his lusts, or pride, or any other sin)
that might help his wife and family to live plentifully and cheerfully, this
lavishing is a great unfaithfulness, and hereby he bringeth many inconveniences
upon himself and upon all that depend upon him. So much for general duties
belonging both to husband and wife. The particular follow.
And first, the
wife must fear her husband, as is commanded in Eph. 5:33. Let the wife see
that she fear her husband. And I Pet. 3:2, the apostle requires a
conversation with fear. So, if ever the wife will be comfortable, and
profitable to her husband, and do any good in the family, she must have a care
of her heart, and look that she carry an inward fear to her husband. For the
husband is the wife's head, even as Christ is the head of the church. And even
as the church must fear Christ Jesus, so must the wives also fear their
husbands. And this inward fear must be shewed by an outward meekness and
lowliness in her speeches and carriage to her husband. As in the place above
named out of Peter, he saith they must be attired with a meek and quiet spirit.
She must not be passionate and froward to him or any of the family, specially in
his sight, but she should have such a regard of his presence, as that she should
govern her tongue and countenance so, that it may not be offensive or
troublesome unto him. And for her speech, neither when they be kind and loving
together, must she grow into such gross terms, nor if any jar or offence come,
rush into tart and sour words, to ease herself upon her husband, whom she should
fear. Thus must she imitate Sarah and good women, as Peter saith, and in so
doing she shall prove herself to be a daughter of Sarah, a true Christian. But
contrarily, if she behave herself rudely and unmannerly in her husband's sight,
to grieve him and offend him, she faileth in the first and main duty of a good
wife, and so far shall surely come short of all the rest of the duties that God
requireth of her. For if there be not fear and reverence in the inferior, there
can be no sound nor constant honor yielded to the superior.
The second
duty of the wife is constant obedience and subjection. Now in what things and
after what manner this obedience is to be performed, the Holy Ghost doth
declare. For in general, there is no woman almost so rude, but she will yield
that she must obey her husband. But in the particular, and in the manner of it,
there is the failing. Therefore the apostle (to put all out of doubt) hath set
down both the matter and the manner, in Eph. 5:24. As the church is in
subjection to Christ, so let the wife be to her husband in all things. For
the things wherein she must obey, he saith in all things, meaning in all
lawful things. For the commandment of the husband is as it were the stamp of God
set upon the things commanded, and if she rebel against his commandment, she
rebels against God. The wife then must persuade herself that her husband's
charge is God's charge, and when he speaks, God speaks by him, and that which
was a thing indifferent before the husband required it, is now become a bounden
duty unto her, after the husband hath once enjoined it. And therefore she must
resolve to obey him in all things.
Then for the manner, he saith, As
the church obeyeth Christ. Now we know that the church obeyeth Christ
willingly and cheerfully, with a free heart. And though the things that Christ
commandeth be oftentimes contrary to our nature, and no whit at all delightful
to the flesh, yet the true church will more set by his Word than by her own
pleasure, and have a greater regard to please him than to serve the desires of
the flesh. Therefore the wife must obey her husband in all things cheerfully and
willingly, without gainsaying. These be the duties of a worthy woman, of a
daughter of Abraham, and a Christian wife, which so far as she is careful to
perform, so far she may look that her husband should do the duty of a good
husband unto her, and if he do not, yet God will reward her liberally. For such
a woman is much set by of God, and that not with an inward love that nobody can
see, but with such a working love as shall show itself by good effect in
plentiful blessings on her soul and body, if she can frame (for conscience sake
to God) to yield a willing and free obedience to her husband in lawful things,
and that with a meek and lowly carriage of herself, proceeding from an holy fear
and reverence of him, being to her in God's stead.
Now follow the special duties of an husband, for he hath not all these privileges for
nothing, and those consist in two major points, in governing her wisely (by
cohabitation and edification) and in performing all due benevolence. First, for
cohabitation. The first duty of the husband is to dwell with his wife, that sith
there is a near and dear society between them, and of all other the nearest (for
she is to him as the church is to Christ, flesh of his flesh, and bone of his
bone), therefore he must be willing constantly and kindly to converse with her,
to walk with her, to talk with her, and let her have a comfortable familiarity
with him, that she may see he delights in her company, and may well know that of
all others she is his most loved and welcome companion. And so in the Law it was
commanded that the first year wherein anyone is married, he must dwell at home,
and rejoice with his wife for that whole year. Whatever affairs of the
commonwealth, or wars were abroad, yet he was by God's Law freed, so that none
might command his service from home, but he must dwell with his wife, that she
might have experience of his love, and have comfort by him, that by long
continuance and society their hearts might be so nearly joined, as nothing might
rend them asunder afterwards.
This reproveth those foolish men (indeed
not worthy to carry the name of husbands) that can take more delight in any
vain, riotous and unthrifty company, and take more pleasure in any lewd
exercises, than in the society of the loving and kind wife, that are never so
merry as when the wife is absent, and never dumpish and churlish but with her.
Such also as dwell with hawks and hounds and drunkards and gamesters, not with
their wives: these shall carry the brand and name of fools, so long as
they have no more care to prevent so much ill, and to do so much good as (if
they had any godly wisdom, or love to their wives) they might. For what do they
but throw themselves into danger, and lay their wives open to Satan's
temptations? Yea, and give just occasion to them to think that they love them
not. But they will say, We must have our delights and follow our sports. And why
you more than the wife? Might not the wife say, I must have my delight also, and
part of the recreation as well as part of the trouble is mine? Yet this would
not be counted a good excuse for a woman to be ranging abroad all day long, and
part of the night, upon no just occasion. But they look that she should accept
their company, and be willing to be with them. And why should not they then be
as willing to dwell with their wives according to God's commandment? So that the
husband must dwell with his wife, and never depart from her but upon a lawful
and good calling and cause, and then also, so as that she may perceive that his
heart is still with her, and that he carrieth but a part of himself when he
goeth abroad, for still he leaveth his affection at home with his
wife.
Secondly, he must dwell with her as a man of knowledge, and edify
her, both by his good example, and also by good instructions. For his example:
first, he must carry himself so wisely, and so holily, as that she may see in
him a pattern and image of grace and wisdom. He must be a glass unto her, by
looking into which she may learn to attire herself in all holy discretion and
conversation.
Therefore he must neither be froward, testy, nor lumpish,
for then he shall be hated; nor light, vain, and foolish, for then he shall be
despised. He must not be base and niggardly, for then his base heart will breed
a base estimation of him. Neither must he be prodigal and unthrifty. For then he
shall so pinch himself with want and necessity, as that he shall not be able to
relieve and refresh his family, and so he much depriveth himself of his
reverence. For want of this wise and holy carriage, it cometh to pass that many
can speak much of the weakness of women, and make large discourses of the
impotence of that sex, when indeed it is long of themselves. As if the head
should lead the body among briars and thorns, and dash it against every wall,
and then complain of the hurt and frailty of it. So many foolish men, when they
should frame themselves in such sort as they might draw their wives to godliness
and reverence by their example, they (by rude and absurd behavior) draw
themselves into contempt, and put undutifulness upon their wives, as it were
perforce, and then are ready to complain and exclaim of them, when they should
rather cry out of their own folly and sin.
Next, the husband must edify
his wife by instruction: for so, I Cor. 14:25, the apostle saith, If women
will learn, they must ask their husbands at home. The husband then must be
so well furnished with sound knowledge, as that he must be able to teach his
wife, and sow the seed of godliness in her conscience. And one special and chief
part of wisdom in the husband, by which he must learn to frame his instruction,
is to observe those good things which he seeth in his wife, and to cherish them.
For nothing is more forcible to encourage a woman in any good thing, than that
she perceiveth that her husband doth mark and approve those good things which
are in her, as well as the faults, to reprove them. And for want of this
encouragement, that men are continually chiding, and never go about to nourish
any good thing, it falls out that many women, which by good usage might be
brought to godliness, grow to great distemper and passion. And as he must labor
to increase the good things that are in her, so also he must seek to amend and
cure those things that are faulty, wherein she doth amiss. And for ordinary
infirmities, he must pass by them, only praying to God for her. But if her soul
be sick of a disease that needeth physic, and must have medicine, a wise
governor will choose his fittest time, and consider the nature and disposition
of his wife: that if she be of a gentle spirit, he may use gentle means, which
will then do most good, but if she be of a more hard nature, stronger means must
be used, and she must be dealt withal after a more round manner. But always
provided, that it never be done in passion, and before others, but with a quiet
and merciful heart, that she may see that he seeketh her salvation, and not
disgrace, nor to ease himself upon her, but to convert her soul unto God. But if
the husband be violent in company to reprove, of bad he will make her worse, and
more alienate her from him, because she seeth that she hath a foolish head, that
is not a saviour, but a destroyer.
And for want of this diligent care in
choosing time and place, and observing the nature of the party, it cometh to
pass that rebukes, which in themselves are good and ought to be performed, do
more hurt than good, because he observeth not where he doth it, but reproves her
before company, to which he should not disclose his own and her shame, and them
also most unseasonably and untimely. For when she is out of temper, and passion
hath already overcome her, then he falleth to administer his physic, as it were
upon a full stomach, whereas he should patiently have waited for a fit time, and
not be so foolish, as when she is gone, and anger hath overcome her, then to
look that she should upon a word's warning, return and come again into her right
mind, and upon the sudden reform all that is amiss. But what? Shall one let his
wife go away so, and take her course? No, he must at that instant speak to God
for her, when she is not fit to be spoken to. And after, when she is come again
to herself, and all is quiet, then with a loving heart and good countenance (and
yet with plain and evident proofs and reproofs out of God's Word), he must show
her fault, that godly sorrow may bring her to repentance and amendment. And by
these measures he may govern well.
Another duty of the husband consists
in giving her all honor and due benevolence, which stands in two things. First,
in giving and allowing her all maintenance and meet helps, both for necessity,
and also for honest and Christian recreation and delight, so far as his estate
and hers require, and their abilities do afford. And he must do this willingly,
liberally and freely, not tarrying till it be begged or gotten from him by
importunate entreaty, as if one should wring it out of Nabal's hand, like as if
it were water out of a flint stone. For this giveth cause of great suspicion of
want of love, for love is alway bountiful. And besides, it lesseneth the benefit
by the one half, when it must be wrested (as it were by main strength) from him.
Therefore he must consider, and before he be asked, provide what he seeth
necessary for her, and what may be (after a Christian sort) delightful unto her,
and prevent her with the gift. Even as a father that loves his child will not
tarry till the child come and beg apparel, or meat, but he doth cast beforehand
how to help him, and unrequested gives him things that be needful, much more
then must he do thus to his wife, which is the one part of himself, and nearer,
and should be also dearer unto him than any other.
A second work wherein
this due benevolence must show itself is in giving her due employment; he must
mark and observe the gifts of wisdom and government, or whatever else God hath
graced her with, that he may set them on work and employ them. And hereby he
shall show his love unto her, and the confidence he puts in her. For it is said
of a good wife in the Proverbs, chap. 32, that the heart of her husband
trusts in her. And this is a means also to keep her from discouragement and
idleness: and besides, it will turn to the great good and profit of the
family.
Which reproves the practice of many foolish husbands, that be
busy-bodies, and will have all come through their own hands, and then indeed
nothing goeth well through any hand, because of this disordered confusion. As if
the pilot would both hold the stern, and hoist up the sail, and be upon the
hatches, and labor at the pump, and do all himself, it must needs go ill with
the ship. Even so in the family, when the husband taketh all upon himself, it is
the next way to overthrow all. Therefore those gifts that God hath given the
wife, the husband must see them put to the best use, and then she shall be a
fellow helper to him, and bring a blessing upon the family by her labor.
And so much for the duties of the husband and wife, which I do not so
speak of as though it were in the power or nature of any man or woman to perform
them; nay, by nature we be all inclined to the contrary. The wife is naturally
disobedient and stubborn, prone to condemn and despise her husband; and he is
ready either to be out of her company without cause, or, being with her, to be
light and foolish, or else sour and churlish, and to do her hurt by his example,
and make her worse rather than better. And both of them naturally are destitute
of all true and spiritual love one to another. But God showeth these duties in
his Word, to the end that we, seeing our sins and our weakness, might bewail our
wants before God, and beseech him that requires these things at our hands to
work these graces in our hearts, and as he hath given us these good
commandments, so to give us good hearts to keep the commandments. But if any be
so blind and so unacquainted with the wickedness of his own heart, as that he
dreams of some strength in himself to do these duties, it is certain he never
performed any of them in truth, nor shall ever, till he do lament his wants with
unfeigned grief before God, and desire him to make him obedient, as well as to
give him a charge of obedience.