A group of children were asked, “How can a wife submit to her husband?” An 8-year-old named Mary said, “My mom could mow the yard, feed the dogs, work in the garden, and help us with our homework instead of making my dad do it. She could also make food for special occasions, go grocery shopping, take us to doctors’ appointments, pick out our clothes every morning, and fix our breakfast, lunch, and supper.”

Mary’s definition of submission makes for marital chaos and a perpetuation of misinformation regarding submission. So, what did Paul have in mind when he penned those well- known words at the end of Colossians 3?

The command for wives to submit to their husbands was actually one of the evidences of the Colossians putting on the new self. So when Paul gave this command for wives to submit to their husbands (Colossians 3:18), he was not saying that wives were inferior, that husbands could force submission, that all women must submit to all men, that wives aren’t intelligent and don’t have good ideas, or that wives should follow their husbands into sin.

The word submit meant to “line up under.” Paul was saying that each wife, in recognition of God’s orderly arrangement established at the creation of the first human beings (Genesis 2:7,18,21-23), should line up under the headship of her husband. This brings honor to Jesus and clearly reflects His rule in her life.

As followers of Jesus, we shouldn’t react negatively to the word submission based on bad experiences and misuse. Instead, reflect on its true biblical meaning. Husbands and wives ought to confer on decisions and situations they face and strive for unity in their decisions—all with the husband lovingly bearing the final weight of responsibility (Colossians 3:18-19).

That’s God’s orderly arrangement.

NLT 365-day reading plan passage for today: 2 Kings 11:1-21