John Piper On Submission In Abuse
## John Piper: “What should a wife’s submission to her husband look like if he’s an abuser. ”
Date: 2009-08-21
URL: https://mmoutreach.org/wim/2009/08/21/john-piper-on-submission-in-abuse/

John Piper: “What should a wife’s submission to her husband look like if he’s an abuser?”
On August 19, 2009, John Piper tackles a question on an abusive husband, and Piper’s answer directs women on how they should take abuse from their husbands. The answer is typical of a complementarian who sees the husband as king and priest and the wife as the follower of her priest-king.
My comments will be below the transcript. I recommend you listen carefully to what Piper says. I think there is a lot to discuss especially his Freudian slip calling the husband “lord.” An edited transcript of the audio is below. To hear John Piper’s actual audio or his video answer click here. It appears that the audio file from John Piper may be permanently removed. Here is a link to a copy of the audio file: Click here.
Here is the transcript:
Part of that answer is clearly going to depend on what kind of abuse we’re dealing with here, how serious this is. Is her life in danger? Or is this verbal unkindness? I’m not sure what the person who asked the question had in mind. So let me just talk about different kinds.
A woman’s submission to her husband is rooted in the word of God, calling her to be—for the Lord’s sake, for the Lord’s sake—submissive to him. Which means she always has a higher allegiance, namely to Christ.
Therefore Christ’s word governs her life. And Christ has many words besides “Be submissive.” “Be submissive” is not an absolute, because her Lord has other things to tell her, so that if the husband tells her something that contradicts what the Lord tells her, then she’s got a crisis of, “To whom do I submit now?” And clearly, she submits to Jesus above her husband. The reason she is submitting to her husband is because of her prior superior submission to the Lord.
So if this man, for example, is calling her to engage in abusive acts willingly (group sex or something really weird, bizarre, harmful, that clearly would be sin), then the way she submits—I really think this is possible, though it’s kind of paradoxical—is that she’s not going to go there. I’m saying, “No, she’s not going to do what Jesus would disapprove even though the husband is asking her to do it.”
She’s going to say, however, something like, “Honey, I want so much to follow you as my leader. God calls me to do that, and I would love to do that. It would be sweet to me if I could enjoy your leadership. But if you ask me to do this, require this of me, then I can’t go there.”
Now that’s one kind of situation. Just a word on the other kind. If it’s not requiring her to sin but simply hurting her, then I think she endures verbal abuse for a season, and she endures perhaps being smacked one night, and then she seeks help from the church.
Every time I deal with somebody in this, I find the ultimate solution under God in the church. In other words, this man should be disciplined, and she should have a safe place in a body of Christ where she goes and then the people in the church deal with him. She can’t deal with him by herself.
So the short answer, I think, is that the church is really crucial here to step in, be her strength, say to this man, “You can’t do this. You cannot do this! That’s not what we allow. That’s not what Christ calls you to be.”
I can’t go in to all the details, but I would say to the woman, “Come to a church that you feel safe in. Tell them the case. Let the leaders step in and help you navigate the difficulties.”
(Audio and video of this answer is found at John Piper’s site here.)
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My response:
My first thought was why does John Piper keep laughing at questions about women and submission? Might it be a nervous laughter because he is not really sure what to answer? I am not sure but I have listened to other John Piper answers on other subjects, and he wasn’t laughing about those questions.
John Piper qualifies his answer by saying that it would depend on what kind of “abuse” we are dealing with. At one point he calls verbal abuse as verbal “unkindness”. It is also interesting that he equates submission with “allegiance.” Is this the kind of allegiance of a subject to her king? Well, John Piper does say that her Lord has other words for her other than just submission. What if her subjection to the two that are above her conflict? He says that this would produce a crisis of “to whom do I submit now?” It sure sounds like competing lords to me. Then he says “clearly she submits to Jesus above the lord…I mean above Jes….above her husband.”
Then notice that John Piper gets really happy about a way that he has worked it out for a woman to still submit when her husbands asks her to be involved in “group sex.” She submits by answering “Honey, I want so much to follow you as my leader…it would be sweet to me if I could enjoy your leadership…but I can’t go there.” Honestly I found this answer to be really icky. I do believe in speaking respectfully and speaking the truth in love, but the look on John Piper’s face while he said this and these words which are to be given in response to an invitation to group sex just seemed really bizarre to me. I do not mean to be disrespectful, but for me watching this was kind of like watching a stepford wife rehearsal.
I also noticed the dismissal of her pain by Piper’s saying that if what the husband wants is not requiring her to sin but is “simply” hurting her, she should endure verbal abuse and endure being “smacked” for one night. The “ultimate” solution for the abused wife is in the church. What happened to Jesus and the law who can physically help her? Apparently she is supposed to put her trust in a complementarian church to protect her. He says that they will tell the husband to stop abusing her. But more often than not in a complementarian church, it is the wife who is counseled on how to stop the abuse, not the husband. It is the wife who is told to submit more and he will stop the abuse. How is that kind of complementarian church a safe church to run to for the abused wife? And what if the husband is not a believer? Piper gives no other solution other than the “ultimate” solution of going to the leaders of the church. They are the ones who should “discipline” the husband by telling him that he should not be doing the abuse.
Hmmm…. Thoughts?
Ladies, ladies, please relax, calm out, and enjoy some peace,
and let me be mad, annoyed, cross, vexed, irritated, indignant,
irked, furious, enraged, infuriated instead. { ; o )
Pastors? Hmmm? Do they really believe the Bible?
Or has “the traditions of men” made the word of God of non effect?
Can they even qualify as an elder/overseer? Blameless…. WOW!!!
These folks think they are “blameless,” without fault,
not open to censure, unrebukeable.
Yep. That’s what “blameless” means. You can look it up.
Complementarinism – Egalitarianism. Hmmm?
Can’t find those words in my KJV. Are they in modern versions?
Do you ever wonder; Is that the only two options?
What if there is another option?
What is popular is not always truth.
What is truth is not always popular.
Where in the NT does Jesus say that men are leaders in the church?
He told His disciples not to be called leaders, and none did.
Where does Jesus say that men have authority in the church?
Didn’t Jesus tell His disciples not to be called teacher or leader? Mat 23
Didn’t Jesus tell His disciples not to exercise authority like the gentiles?
Do they even know what the word “church” means?
They say, “my Church,” “my flock,” constantly. Hmmm?
“Out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaks.”
Where in the NT does it say Jesus shed His blood for;
a building, an organization, an institution,
a denomination, a business or a corporation.
No, Jesus purchased “The Church of God” with His blood.
It’s “His Church,” and “His flock” only.
People, you and me, brethren, called out one’s. { ; o )
No human leaders, He’s our leader. That’s what he said.
Pastors, elders, theologins, denominations, institutions.
Aren’t they the windmills that we joust with?
Mythical giants in a mythical land.
Isn’t Jesus the head of the body the church? Not man?
If you’re in a denominational system; is there male and female?
If you’re in Christ; is there male and female? Hmmm?
There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither bond nor free,
there is neither male nor female: for ye are all one in Christ Jesus.
Galatians 3:28 KJV
There can be neither Jew nor Greek, there can be neither bond nor free,
there can be no male and female; for ye all are one man in Christ Jesus.
Galatians 3:28 ASV
There is no longer Jew or Greek, there is no longer slave or free,
there is no longer male and female; for all of you are one in Christ Jesus.
Galatians 3:28 NRSV
Does this verse say male and female are equal?
Or does this verse say that male and female
have put down their “titles” and “identity”
with this world system.
And does this verse say male and female do not exist in Christ?
“for ye are all one in Christ Jesus.”
Is our new identity ”one?”
For as the body is “one,” and hath many members,
and all the members of that one body, being many,
are one body: so also is Christ.
1 Corinthians 12:12
That they all may be “one;” as thou, Father,
art in me, and I in thee, that they also may be one in us:
that the world may believe that thou hast sent me.
John 17:21
If you’re in Christ; is there male and female? Or is there “one?”
AsOnetarinism? Hmmm?
And other sheep I have, which are not of this fold:
them also I must bring, and they shall hear my voice;
and there shall be one fold, and one shepherd.
John 10:16
One Voice – One Fold – One Shepherd.
If Not Now, When?
There is no excuse for abuse.
Never? No, Never.
You might like one of the reactions on this verbal abuse forum to John Piper’s suggested Stepford Wives response to the husband asking the wife to participate in group sex.
http://www.drirene.com/catbox/index.php?showtopic=79202
The reaction was made by going4good and is #3 in the thread.
Mara
Thanks for the referral.
“The way church ought to be?”
Bob Lund says some thoughtful things.
and the book has many quotes from other authors.
“Where in the New Testament do you find the same man – who
(1) preaches every Sunday,
(2) marries people,
(3) brings a message over a corpse,
(4) then buries it with a prayer,
(5) visits old ladies,
(6) says prayers over football games,
(7) CEO’s a church,
(8) presides over elders and deacons,
(9) is virtually always in a dress suit,
(10) speaks strangely and prays funny,
(11) baptizes new converts,
(12) and whose office and all the above practices are supposed to be based solidly on the Word of god and found in Scripture.”
“As the Church Fathers attempted to cope with the various pagan philosophies that threatened the church from without and the heresies that were popping up with within, they resorted to establishing a hierarchical structure as their solution. “Hierarchy” comes from two Greek words meaning, “rule by priest.” Thus, in doing this, Church Fathers neatly and permanently divided God’s people into two castes: laity and clergy. We have lived with this caste system ever since, even though the Bible teaches otherwise.”
Today, when I here The word “Church.” Oy vey!
Who knows what it means?
Making the word of God of none effect through your tradition…
Mark 7:13
Hmmm? A simple word, church?
What do most people understand the word “church” to mean?
Building with a steeple?
Is that in the Bible?
Pastor in a pulpit preaching to people in pews?
Is that in the Bible?
That’s what the world thinks,
the unbeliever, isn’t it?
Isn’t that what the so called “local church”
has accomplished with four buildings on
four corners in a lot of “local towns?”
Haven’t we deceived the people
we’re supposed to be reaching out to?
How many will know that “The Church of God?”
The ekklesia of God? The called out one’s of God?
Are the habitation of God? Where He dwells?
The redeemed of the Lord? By His blood.
The body of Christ? Purchased with His blood.
The Israel of God?
And Jesus is the head of the body the church?
Does God dwell in buildings made with
the hands of men? Or does He dwell in us?
Did Jesus shed His blood for;
a building, a denomination, an institution,
an organization, a corporation?
Should we call a corporation, The Church?
Will people know that “The Church of God?”
Are kings and priests unto God?
The bride of Christ?
The servants of Christ?
The sons of God?
Led by the spirit? Or led by man?
Disciples of Christ?
Learners and students of Christ?
Ambassadors for Christ?
How many will know, in the Bible,
no one ever went to church?
How many will know, in the Bible,
you become “the Church?”
And hear His voice? And follow Him?
Out of heaven he made thee to hear his voice,
that he might instruct thee.
Deuteronomy 4:36
Thanks again and – Be blessed.
Speaking of abuse…
Here’s a poem I found at another site.
“I have some of Frank Viola’s books but haven’t read them yet.”
You can’t mean former Twins pitcher Frank Viola, can you?
Vasily,
Welcome to my blog! Thanks for your comments and recommendation.
Sorry that I have been slow to approve new comments. I am on vacation this week and internet access has been almost impossible.
Hannah, welcome!
Those were my thoughts too. Ick!
Hi Pan.
The law allows for a certain level of “assault”, if you will, when it involves domestic parties. Parents can legally spank their children – to a degree – and a certain level of physical restraint and “correction” is allowed for older children as well. (Incidentally, the bible seems to indicate a similar acceptance.) I distinctly remember the sharp slap across the face I received from my mother as a 17 year old when I took the name of the Lord in vain in front of her. I can also remember an altercation between my wife and daughter which resulted in…well…let’s just say my wife is still the WWF champ in our family (mother and daughter get along fine, btw). Now, you may not be an advocate of such measures in the parent/child relationship, but the reality is that in some families, sometimes words alone can’t solve situations, especially when there is an authority/dependent dynamic. That reality, of course, is a result of our (both parent’s and children’s) sinful dispositions, as Cheryl points out. But there are many kinds of physical altercation that would not result in arrest.
This where complimentarians go wrong and why their perception of domestic violence gets so out of wack. In my experience, they believe two incorrect things. One, that the husband/wife relationship is such an authoritarian situation. As such, it is no different in their mind than a parent dealing with a child. That is almost exactly the argument Domestic Discipline advocates put forward to justify husbands spanking their wives. Two, that the nature of the physical “interaction” is as mild as spanking a child or slapping a teenager. As others have noted above, they really have no clue about the realities of domestic violence. They believe that husbands just give a little “smack” and all is well.
In general then, they seem blind to the dynamics of husband/wife relationships (compared to parent/child) and how very easy it is for them to spin out of control. In particular, they seem to be blissfully ignorant of the sin condition of husbands, at least when it comes to dealing with their wives. They buy the lie that “rule over” is a command from Genesis 3 and seem to feel that “Love your wife” from Ephesians 5 is a pronouncement of the default male condition rather than a command to rise out of the real depraved condition we husbands are actually in – one that causes us to “rule over”. In other words, they can’t imagine that any act of “ruling” is anything else but “loving”. They really have got it all completely backwards.
Pan, I also want to welcome you.
Your choice to walk away is understandable.
Your input and point of view are appreciated.
Well it seems I have upset some of at his ministry over the post I wrote on your post. I can’t help that. I also stand by what I said.
I have had talks and email and been involved because of my own ministry, with many abused Christian women and some men. I would love John Piper to read my book ‘Not a Victim’ when it is published as it is for those Christians who are in abusive marriages and does look at things from a scriptural point of view.
The following advice though well intended does not go far enough. This will not stop an abusive marriage.
“and she endures perhaps being smacked one night, and then she seeks help from the church.”
This is very unhelpful. No woman should be told to endure being smacked just one night. She should have help immediately both from church AND police.
ALL women and all men in whatever church should be clear that physical violence needs to be dealt with by an immeditate response involving calling police.
It does NOT just happen ‘that one nigh’t and bringing in the church is likely to make it worse in many cases. The advice is useless if the abuser does not go to church and actually most of the people I counsel are wives of Christians – all too often in leadership positions!
John Piper may not ever have experienced an abusive marriage. It is understandable that he gives the advice he does; but the whole issue of abuse tends to be very badly dealt with by those who have little understanding of the dynamics. It is hard to understand those dynamics.
I often get emails from women as a result of my own ministry. Usually the women have been given the sort of advice John Piper gives. Unfortunately, things tend to go from bad to worse and abusers are excellent at convincing Pastors and the like that they are no longer abusing while continuing to abuse.
I do not doubt John Piper’s love for Jesus. I have no doubt he wanted to help and gave the best advice he could. However, it just does not work.
If an abused wife said anything like John Piper suggests to an abusive husband it would actually be likely to increase abuse. This is a problem many who seek counselling for abuse come accross – they are told to do things that seem absolutely fine but are not wise in the context of the relationship. There are seemingly normal things you can say to an abusive person which make them worse.
Abusers get angry and do things many of us would not believe. An ordinary comment can be taken, twisted and used in ways the ordinary mind cannot envision.
The difficulty is that those who are not abusive assume an abuser will have a ‘normal’ response. They unfortunately, do not.
The only sensible advice on abuse is to leave and get counselling and return as and when and if the abuser is ever truly repentant and showing evidence of a changed life. That does not happen overnight.
At least John Piper goes further than those misguided churches that suggest a woman continues to submit to a violent man ‘because it is scriptural – it happens…..
Please read these stories to understand quite how an abusive marriage can be for Christian women. Not all the women writing are perfect themselves but you will see how it can be
http://jesusheals.informe.com/forum/my-story-f31/
Jesus heals has a fair amount of information and I post what I can there. I hope moderators are ok with me posting the links but my main aim is to be helpful not in competition.
http://jesusheals.informe.com/forum/jesus-heals-abuse-f23
Minister Jacky
It just worked but no idea how to delete the above.
I have had talks and email and been involved because of my own ministry, with many abused Christian women and some men. I would love John Piper to read my book ‘Not a Victim’ when it is published as it is for those Christians who are in abusive marriages and does look at things from a scriptural point of view.
The following advice though well intended does not go far enough. This will not stop an abusive marriage.
“and she endures perhaps being smacked one night, and then she seeks help from the church.”
This is very unhelpful. No woman should be told to endure being smacked just one night. She should have help immediately both from church AND police.
ALL women and all men in whatever church should be clear that physical violence needs to be dealt with by an immeditate response involving calling police.
It does NOT just happen ‘that one nigh’t and bringing in the church is likely to make it worse in many cases. The advice is useless if the abuser does not go to church and actually most of the people I counsel are wives of Christians – all too often in leadership positions!
John Piper may not ever have experienced an abusive marriage. It is understandable that he gives the advice he does; but the whole issue of abuse tends to be very badly dealt with by those who have little understanding of the dynamics. It is hard to understand those dynamics.
I often get emails from women as a result of my own ministry. Usually the women have been given the sort of advice John Piper gives. Unfortunately, things tend to go from bad to worse and abusers are excellent at convincing Pastors and the like that they are no longer abusing while continuing to abuse.
I do not doubt John Piper’s love for Jesus. I have no doubt he wanted to help and gave the best advice he could. However, it just does not work.
If an abused wife said anything like John Piper suggests to an abusive husband it would actually be likely to increase abuse. This is a problem many who seek counselling for abuse come accross – they are told to do things that seem absolutely fine but are not wise in the context of the relationship. There are seemingly normal things you can say to an abusive person which make them worse.
Abusers get angry and do things many of us would not believe. An ordinary comment can be taken, twisted and used in ways the ordinary mind cannot envision.
The difficulty is that those who are not abusive assume an abuser will have a ‘normal’ response. They unfortunately, do not.
The only sensible advice on abuse is to leave and get counselling and return as and when and if the abuser is ever truly repentant and showing evidence of a changed life. That does not happen overnight.
At least John Piper goes further than those misguided churches that suggest a woman continues to submit to a violent man ‘because it is scriptural – it happens…..
Please read these stories to understand quite how an abusive marriage can be for Christian women. Not all the women writing are perfect themselves but you will see how it can be
http://jesusheals.informe.com/forum/my-story-f31/
Jesus heals has a fair amount of information and I post what I can there. I hope moderators are ok with me posting the links but my main aim is to be helpful not in competition.
http://jesusheals.informe.com/forum/jesus-heals-abuse-f23
Minister Jacky
What if “the whole religious system” for 1700 years,
is totally corrupt?
Hmmm?
Did Piper even cover verbal abuse? Is verbal “unkindness” the same thing as verbal “abuse”?
Since I do a lot of community theater work, I have a particular concept of what a “role” is. I find it very difficult to translate that concept into marriage, especially in light of scriptural teaching on the marriage relationship. That isn’t to say that scripture never defines roles. “Priest” is a role in the Jewish religious system, “Judge” is a role in the ancient Israelite governmental structure, even “Parent” is a role in the family structure. The bible has plenty to say about those roles and the behaviors, activities, and responsibilities that define them. I don’t see the same type of division of labor and responsibility when it comes to marriage. The only “role” in Genesis 1 and 2 is for all humans – to subdue the earth. When that role is exercised by married people – they do it as a couple. In other words, it is not the husband’s or wife’s unilateral or universal role to subdue the earth, they do it as a pair of humans that are have now become “one flesh”. Indeed, the one flesh relationship unique to marriage entirely eliminates, in my mind, the possibility of unique “roles”.
The other directive (some would say, blessing) outlined in the creation account is “to be fruitful and multiply”. Again, this is directed at the married couple – as we all know, it takes two to….well, you get the point. Inherent in that directive, I believe, is the “role” of parent. But neither that “role” nor the activities related to it are gender specific (other than breast feeding, I suppose). “Parenting” and everything encompassed in it is gender neutral.
Now, to be sure, different people go about fulfilling these couple based roles in different ways. I would argue that there are even some gender specific, physiologically based, differences in how males and females fulfill these joint “roles”. I may even argue that one gender or the other is better suited for specific tasks related to a “role”. But neither gender is unilaterally charged with any tasks or, maybe more importantly, relieved from any tasks. None of that changes the fact that the “role” itself is couple based and therefore gender neutral.
Now, the argument related to marriage that is usually presented is that “head” is a role. (Incidentally, that would naturally make “body” a role as well???) But my response to such a claim is “well, what does that mean for me as a husband?” In other words, what does the “head” do? Where is the job description? How do I know I am being a good head? How do I know I am being a head at all?
The typical reply brings us to Ephesians 5. “Just do what Christ did”. That is all well and good, and I would not disagree that agapeo type love is certainly Christlike, but is that type of love and service unilaterally the husband’s responsibility? Is the wife not also to love? Is the wife not also to serve? Is the wife released from (or restricted from) any responsibility to mirror Christ in her relationship to her husband? I should certainly hope not! But if Christlike love and service define the “role”, then the wife, in engaging in those activities, is also fulfilling the “role”, and it ceases to be a gender based role at all. So, “head” simply can not logically be a gender specific “role” because it does not unlilaterally pertain to the behaviors, activities, or responsibilities of a single gender. (Incidentally, the same is true for submission. Paul is clear that submission is not a female specific responsibility. That is ignored by complimentarians, but it doesn’t change the reality. The submission issue is well discussed here so I will say no more).
So what in the world is Paul doing by bringing up Christ/Head/Husband and Church/Body/Wife? That, I’m sure, will be a major sub topic in any future discussion of Ephesians 5. What I am absolutely convinced of is that he is not defining gender specific “roles” within the marriage. I suggest he is using Christ and His body as models for instructive purposes because of gender specific problems. That does not relieve either gender of their mutual responsibility to love, serve, and submit to one another.
Does Submission (TM) include FGM, honor killings, and burqa?
If not, why is Piper watering down his God-Saith Male Supremacy, when he could be drinking it straight on the rocks alongside the Taliban?
Headless Unicorn Guy,
Welcome to my blog! I hope you feel welcome here enough to come back.
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A correction for post #61. Mara thought that Piper was part of Sovereign Grace Ministries (SGM). He is not. From what I know SGM is led, at least in part if not primarily, by C.J. Mahaney. Piper is Mahaney’s friend and they have been on the speaking roster together at some conferences, but Piper is not part of SGM.
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I don’t think Piper gave his best response in this video (neither the most clear representation of his overall viewpoint, nor showing the most sensitivity to people who are in the midst of abusive situations). I am disappointed with some of the message that came across. I am not sure he clearly understood the nature of the question nor was his response as helpful as it could have been.
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With regard to my second point, I, on the other hand, tend to cut him some slack for the following reasons:
a. This appears to be an off-the-cuff answer to a question he had not seen beforehand nor prepared for. Pastor John is a very careful thinker, and I would say a biblical thinker, and a sensitive thinker, when he has a chance to work through things thoroughly which he usually does in his sermons and books. He also tends to very carefully word things in writing, or preaching. I have several times wondered if this “Ask Pastor Piper” video forum is the best platform for his communication of biblical understanding especially in light of how careful his thinking is in his writings and prepared speaking.
b. If Piper is unclear about the question he is being asked, he is usually very careful to make sure he understands a question before responding. In the video he was not able to have the question clarified.
I may be wrong, but my sense was that he didn’t understand the question clearly. His comment about perhaps being pressured into group sex by the husband makes me think he was missing the mark of the main kinds of abuse the questioner probably had in mind. And in fact, his chuckling (nervous laugh?) at the beginning may be because he for whatever reason thought he may be being asked about some kind of odd sexual abuse and it took him by surprise. I am not sure, but the direction he took on the kind of abuse just struck me as uncharacteristically odd.
c. I am quite familiar with Piper’s thinking as I have been a member of Piper’s church for years and am have been exposed to much of his teaching. So I temper my response to this just under 4 minute video with a pretty good knowledge of his overall theology, his sensitivity and love for people (women and men), humility, love for God, and desire to be faithful to the meaning of God’s Word. He is certainly sinful and imperfect as we all are, but much of the grace of God is evident in his life and teaching.
d. I am overall very empathetic to his theology and teaching, both preached and lived. -
In light of my second and third points above, I would submit the following thoughts to any commenters they may apply to:
a. A number of commenters seems to significantly dismiss Piper’s teaching and ministry based on their interpretation of this one short, off-the-cuff video of his — one which I would interpret as not his best in some ways.
b. I somewhat understand that a main topic/the main topic being addressed in this blog article is wife abuse and related topics. And because of the reality of wife abuse in a segment of our population it is well and good to discuss how to end it, to be riled up about the injustice of it, and to seek to show love and empathy and help to those in the midst of it. I empathize with the desire and rightness of ending spouse abuse.
c. I may be wrong, but I get the feeling that many of you might not have a broad understanding of Piper’s overall teaching.
d. If you don’t know much of Piper beyond this video, in your zeal to speak against abuse be careful of extrapolating his thoughts beyond what you know him to be saying. Many viewpoints have been given that don’t just try to clarify incorrect or sinful ideas about abuse in marriage that are out there, but I fear there are many straw-men ideas of what Piper teaches and believes included as well.
e. So I just request that when dealing with real people and naming names that we are all careful to accurately represent people’s viewpoints the best we can without a lot of speculation.
f. For those that have a particular issue with Piper, he certainly is fallible and would readily admit it. You can easily find lots of resources on what he has taught over the years by doing a search at http://www.desiringGod.org where large quantities of what he has preached and written over the past 29 years is available free online.
I don’t represent Piper or his ministry. I am just a member of his church who thanks God for the grace that has come to my life through the ministry of his servant John Piper.
May God bless us all as we seek to accurately hear from Him through His word and to live it out in our lives.
David
I found a great quote on this web site http://quiveringdaughters.blogspot.com
It is a grave disservice to the spirit of a woman when she is given the subtle message that the truth of her own pain is not as important as the reputation of the ones who inflicted it.
I like that quote from Quivering Daughters too.
Sorry, not “anagram”. Whatever that thing is that makes a word out of the first letters of the words in a phrase. Acronym – is that it?
Kay, Again amazing idiocy and hatred toward women.
I left you a note in the other thread. 🙂
Cheryl, I just tried to play this video again, and found it missing from the Desiring God site. Thought you’d like to know.
your link doesn’t seem to be working either. 🙁
Hmmmm…it works for me. Maybe hit your refresh button to get a new copy of the page or click here http://strivetoenter.com/wim/wp-content/uploads/2010/05/what-should-wifes-submission-to-abuse-look-like.mp3
Pam, I forgot to welcome you to my blog. Welcome!
Pam (#110)
Hannah has a copy of the Piper clip on her blog, dated 9-1-09, and it still works. http://eaandfaith.blogspot.com/search?updated-max=2009-09-04T14%3A40%3A00-05%3A00&max-results=4&reverse-paginate=true
Kip,
Thanks for dropping by my “drop in the ocean”. I hope you feel very welcome here!
Kip, and Cheryl, as I read your comment it should be clear some do read this blog! I guess I keep an eye wherever because of my ministry but it takes a lot for many Christian women to admit they are being abused and love tends to cover a multitude of sins – even where abuse is concerned. I don’t read every blog every day and guess that is the same for most of us. I cannot remember if I said I was given a whole service to do around the theme of abuse by the Senior Pastor of my church and wish other Pastors would follow in this. At it my own daughter testified that she had been in an abusive relationship – thankfully it ended before the marriage and she is now married to a different and lovely man – apparently her church had told her to continue ‘because Jesus was abused.’ I am so glad that with the end of the relationship the church affiliation to that church also ended!
One thing that seems to be forgotten by many Christians is that Jesus promised us our lives would be abundant. That is the starting premis of my book ‘Not a Victim’ (See http://jesusheals.informe.com for details). If we are meant to have abundant life then abuse by a marital partner does not seem to be within God’s will for it.
Abuse of a marital partner means the ABUSER has broken the marriage covenant, and not the victim. By that score our support should always prioritise the victim. The safety of the victim and of the children should be the paramount concern in any abusive relationship. By definition, a victim is the one who needs saving and when we are drowning we do not need a manual on how to swim, but a lifebelt. By that stage, it is too late for education on how to deal with such a relationship in the early stages.
When we take our marriage vows we say ‘let no man put asunder.’ That does not preclude God intervening in an abusive relationship.
Minister Jacky Hughes
Debate Points
## John Piper: “What should a wife’s submission to her husband look like if he’s an abuser. ”
None
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