FamilyLife Today® Podcast

Complement and Respect

with Trent and Andrea Griffith | October 12, 2017
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Trent and Andrea Griffith describe how God created wives to complement their husbands. One way wives do this is by showing respect.

  • Show Notes

  • About the Host

  • About the Guest

  • Trent and Andrea Griffith describe how God created wives to complement their husbands. One way wives do this is by showing respect.

  • Dave and Ann Wilson

    Dave and Ann Wilson are hosts of FamilyLife Today®, FamilyLife’s nationally-syndicated radio program. Dave and Ann have been married for more than 38 years and have spent the last 33 teaching and mentoring couples and parents across the country. They have been featured speakers at FamilyLife’s Weekend to Remember® marriage getaway since 1993 and have also hosted their own marriage conferences across the country. Cofounders of Kensington Church—a national, multicampus church that hosts more than 14,000 visitors every weekend—the Wilsons are the creative force behind DVD teaching series Rock Your Marriage and The Survival Guide To Parenting, as well as authors of the recently released book Vertical Marriage (Zondervan, 2019). Dave is a graduate of the International School of Theology, where he received a Master of Divinity degree. A Ball State University Hall of Fame quarterback, Dave served the Detroit Lions as chaplain for 33 years. Ann attended the University of Kentucky. She has been active alongside Dave in ministry as a speaker, writer, small-group leader, and mentor to countless wives of professional athletes. The Wilsons live in the Detroit area. They have three grown sons, CJ, Austin, and Cody, three daughters-in-law, and a growing number of grandchildren.

Trent and Andrea Griffith describe how God created wives to complement their husbands. One way wives do this is by showing respect.

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Complement and Respect

With Trent and Andrea Griffith
|
October 12, 2017
| Download Transcript PDF

Bob: The Scriptures offer a specific command for wives. Trent Griffith says a lot of women simply read right past it.

Trent: Did you know you could read the Bible, from cover to cover—you will never find a command that says, “Wives, love your husbands”?—it’s not there. Now, it’s implied for sure; but you don’t find this exhortation—this charge / this command: “Love your husbands.”  The question is “Why?”  I believe it’s because the number one need of your husband is not love. What you will find over and over in Scripture is this command: “Wives, respect your husbands.” 

Bob: This is FamilyLife Today for Thursday, October 12th. Our host is the President of FamilyLife®, Dennis Rainey, and I’m Bob Lepine. What is the Bible saying when it calls on a wife to respect her husband?—

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—and even as importantly, what is it not saying?  We’ll hear today from Trent and Andrea Griffith. Stay tuned.

And welcome to FamilyLife Today. Thanks for joining us. This is culturally-risky territory we’re wandering off into today; don’t you think? 

Dennis: I want to tell you something—I think if wives grasp the importance and the power of communicating respect to their husbands, they would be amazed at how they might see their husband be transformed into more of what they wish he would become.

Bob: —and more of who God created them to be; right? 

Dennis: Exactly. I think the easiest thing in a marriage, Bob, is to spot the weaknesses in your spouse; and, certainly, women can see through men pretty clearly. And there is a lot about men that’s not worthy of respect; but the command of Scripture to women in Ephesians, Chapter 5, makes it real clear:

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 “Wives, respect your husbands.”  That means to hold them in esteem, and value them, and communicate that value with their words, their attitudes, their actions.

And we’re going to hear from a couple of great young communicators today, Bob, who are on our Weekend to Remember® marriage getaway speaker team—Trent and Andrea Griffith. Trent is the pastor of Harvest Bible Chapel in Granger, Indiana—I’ve not been there; but I’ve been close, Bob. They’re a great couple—they’re fun/lively—and they have a lot to say on this subject that, I think, our audience needs to hear.

Bob: They tackle the subject of how a wife can show respect to her husband. I should mention—Trent also did a message on how a husband should love his wife / it’s a great message as well—but we’re going to hear from Trent and Andrea today as they unpack this idea of how a wife can honor and respect her husband.

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Here’s Pastor Trent Griffith.

[Recorded Message] 

Trent: Ephesians 5:33 is our summary verse; and it says this: “However, let each one of you”—that particular you is [addressed] to husbands / you, husbands—“let each one of you [husbands] love his wife as himself, and let the wife see that she respects her husband.” 

I remember—a couple of weeks ago, we had a plant up here. We kind of hypothetically talked about that husband that says, “You know, my marriage is dead.”  Well, the question is: “Did you water it?  Did you feed it?—because it needs some things from you.”  What did we say the number one need of a wife was?—what was it, guys? 

Audience: Love.

Trent: Love. So, you’ve got to constantly be loving your wife.

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Now, ladies, as we turn our attention to you this morning, here is something that may surprise you. In the span of eight verses in Ephesians, Chapter 5, God tells husbands to love their wives three different times: “Husbands, love your wives,” “Husbands, love your wives,” “Husbands, love your wives.”  Ladies, why do you think God had to tell your husband three times in the span of eight verses to love you? Sometimes, we can be a little thickheaded. We have to be reminded / we have to be reminded over and over: “Oh, yes. Oh, yes. I’ve got to love my wife.” 

Did you know that you can read the Bible from cover to cover—you will never find a command that says, “Wives, love your husbands,”?—it’s not there. Now, it’s implied for sure. Titus, Chapter 2, says that older women are to teach the younger women to be lovers of their husbands.

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So, of course, you are to love your [husbands]; but you don’t find this exhortation—this charge / this command: “Love your husbands.”  The question is “Why?” 

I believe it’s because the number-one need of your husband is not love. What you will find over and over in Scripture is this command: “Wives, respect your husbands.”  Why is that?  It’s because the number-one need of your husband is respect; and when he senses you respect him, he will understand he’s loved.

If you asked the wives in this room—the wives that just stood: “Do you love your husband?” most of them would say: “Yes; I love!—the knucklehead.” Wives have a natural ability to love a needy person—God built that into you; okay?

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But wives have to be urged, and encouraged, and reminded, and charged with this command: “Respect him.” 

And you say, “I would respect him if he was respectable.” Listen, if he was respectable, you wouldn’t need the command. In the same way that, if you were always loveable, your husband wouldn’t need the command to love you. [Laughter]  We get the commands because there are times when wives are not loveable and husbands are not respectable—get it?  That’s why God puts the command there. So, we’re going to study how to do that today; okay? 

Point number one is this: “Wife, complement your husband.”  Now, be careful how you spell that as you fill in the blank. That is a complement with an e, not a compliment with an i. It doesn’t mean you are supposed to say: “Your biceps are so huge!” and “I love the way you change the oil in the car.”   

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Now, we don’t mind that kind of compliment, ladies—we could use more of that, probably—but that’s not what we’re saying.

This word, complement, is like the word you used in your geometry class in high school. Do you remember complementary angles?  It means to fill-in—to complete / to complement in a way that you bring something to your husband he doesn’t have. It means to play a team role well; and we’re going to see that, here, in verse 22. So, look back up at Ephesians 5:22—let’s start in verse 21. We’ve looked at this several times; but it says, “Submitting to one another out of reverence for Christ.” 

Do you remember a few weeks ago when we talked about that message, “How to be a Winner Every Day”?  One of the things that winners do is—they fill their relationships with submission.

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That means that we come alongside each other / we come up under one another—we support; we cheer on; we say: “I want to be on the team. I don’t even have to call the plays. I just want to—I believe in you, and I want to go the same direction that you’re going in. I want to help you get there.”  We fill our relationships with submission—that’s verse 21.

Then, when we get to verse 22, it is specifically targeting wives. So, he says, “Wives, submit to your own husbands as to the Lord.”  Now, ladies, aren’t you grateful for that little three-letter word there—own husbands?  Isn’t it great you don’t have to submit to everybody’s husband?  There’s just one, and God’s command is not that all women submit to all men. God’s command is that, if you’re a wife, you have one husband and that is the husband you are to submit to.

You say, “Well, I don’t like that.”  Well, then, you shouldn’t have gotten married. [Laughter]

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You didn’t have to get married; but if you are married, and you are a wife, and you’re a Christian, this is a requirement—it’s not an option. So, he says in verse 23/24: “The husband is the head of the wife even as Christ is the head of the church, His body, and is Himself its Savior.” 

Husbands have a role to play—we are to lead. We are the leaders in the relationships; we are the initiators of the relationship. We’re the risk-taskers. We’re the ones that say: “Follow me. I know the way. I’m going this way. Everybody come with me.”  That’s the job of the husband. Verse 24: “Now, as the church submits to Christ, so also wives should submit in every way in everything to their husbands.” 

So, this is your favorite word, ladies, I know, in the whole Bible. If you think it’s hard to listen to, just imagine how hard it is for me, as a man, to actually have to give you some instruction today. It’s like walking through a minefield. [Laughter]

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You may actually witness me blow myself up, right here, on the platform; okay? Now, in order to prevent that, I am going to need some help. I’m actually going to ask a wife that, at times, has to deal with a disrespect—a needy husband—to come up here and help me. Andrea, my wife—would you please come up here and help me from stepping on a landmine?  [Applause] 

Now, as we get into this, there—it’s important that we understand what submission is not and what submission is. First of all, understand this: “Submission is not a statement of value.”  Men and women have equal value before the Lord. God’s statement of submission is a statement of function and role, not of value; okay?  God has a different function / a different use for a husband than He has for a wife. When we both play our role well, we both win. So, it’s a statement of function, not of value.

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Secondly, submission is not just a woman’s issue. Everybody has to submit to authority. Your husband submits to the authority of God, and God is his Head; and he has to submit to an employer. The reason why this is hard—is not because you are a woman—it’s because we don’t like to be told what to do. We don’t like to bring ourselves up under somebody else’s leadership. So, it’s hard for all of us.

Also, understand this: “Submission is not enabling sinful activity in your husband.”  It’s not blind obedience to sinful activity. We have to obey God rather than man; and when one authority conflicts with another authority, which one do you obey?  The higher authority; right?  You have a higher authority than your husband. So, ladies, if you’re in a relationship, where your husband is abusive or if he’s asking you to do something that is clearly sin, you don’t submit to that. 

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So, the question is: “What is submission?”  Let’s give it some meaning here. It simply means to give up control / it means to yield. It means to use all of your creativity, and your intelligence, and your intuition to come up under and to support the direction that your husband is leading.

Probably, the best description of this that I’ve ever heard—I can’t improve on it—comes from John Piper—no surprise. Here’s what John Piper says about this idea of submission: “Submission is the divine calling of a wife to honor and affirm her husband’s leadership and to help to carry it through according to her gifts. It is the disposition to follow a husband’s authority and inclination to yield to his leadership.” 


I love these words: calling, disposition, inclination. Then, he says:

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“It’s an attitude that says, ‘I delight for you to take the initiative in our family. I’m glad when you take responsibility for things and to lead with love. I don’t flourish in the relationship when you are passive and I have to make sure the family works without you.’” 

So, men, ladies have a hard job. Now, we talked about how they’ve got a hard job, and we can make their job easier by loving and leading the way God’s called us to lead. Ladies, you have a hard job. We admit: “This is hard.”  Yet, by doing this, you can make your husband’s job easier—to love and to lead—when he senses that he has your respect.

Andrea: Now, I remember one time when I was just not getting this. We were living in Buchanan, and I was homeschooling our kids. Every night after dinner, Trent would say, “Hey, let’s go take a walk!” Every night, I was like: “No; I have dinner dishes to do. We’ve got to get stuff ready for tomorrow.”

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I had my own agenda, my own plan, my own way that I was going.

Finally, one night, he just stopped—he took me by the shoulders and he said, “Andrea, I am trying to lead you.”  All of a sudden, I saw it. I thought: “Why do I always have to have a better idea?” or “I can’t get off my own agenda”?  So, I was like: “Okay; you know what?  Those dinner dishes can wait. Let’s go take a walk.” We just started taking a walk after dinner. You know what?—I love being outside. I really needed to be with my husband, because I was only being with kids all the time. So, following his leadership was of great benefit to me. When I came back to do the dinner dishes, it was a lot more fun; because I had connected with my husband. I’ve found that to be true so many times in submission.

For me—though I never would have said this going into marriage—submission has become kind of an adventure; because I have one way and then Trent says, “Well, why don’t we do it this way?”

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It’s a way I’ve never thought of / I get a new perspective. I get out of my box / I get out of my comfort zone—and it is fun, and there’s adventure there. There’s also protection when he is saying, “Don’t do things.”  There has been a lot of wisdom as I’ve just said, “You know, I’m just going to step back; because he’s not in on this.” 

So many times, we think submission is a statement of value. It’s not a statement of value—it’s a statement of role / of function as we come alongside and help our husbands to be all that they were created to be as they lead our families.

Trent: So: “Wife, complement your husband.” 

Secondly: “Wife, respect your husband.”  So, what does this word, respect, mean?  Let’s give it some definition here—some short phrases here:

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It means to esteem, to regard, to value, to look up to, to admire, to heed, to notice, to consider, to recognize, to defer to, to honor, to be kind to, to spare, to take into account, to uphold, to appreciate. All of those aspects of respect are there.


Now, ladies, please understand how God has wired your husband. Almost every husband—almost every wife would appreciate their husband taking leadership; but you fail to understand what fuels his leadership. Listen, respect is rocket fuel to leadership. If a husband doesn’t sense that he has respect from his wife, ladies, your husband will lose motivation to lead; and he will fade into the background.

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If you start picking up all of the leadership responsibility, your husband will be glad to let you have it; but if you will respect him, encourage him, and inspire him, and motivate him, he will pick up that God-given role and love and lead the way God has called him to.

Andrea: You may be like me. I found that I had a respect for Trent—like I had this feeling of respect—but there was this gap in me feeling it and him hearing it from me. There was this huge communication gap. I didn’t know how to tell him, and he wasn’t hearing the ways I was trying to tell him. So, one day, I just asked him—I just said, “How do you hear respect from me?”  I was so surprised at his answer. It had nothing to do with the way I was trying to communicate it.

Ladies, that would be something I would encourage you to do—just ask your husband, “How do you hear respect from me?”  When they tell you, just listen. Don’t be defensive.

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If that goes well, then, go to the next question and say, “How am I communicating disrespect to you?” 

[Studio] 

Bob: Well, again, we’ve been listening to the first part of a message from our friends, Trent and Andrea Griffith, talking about how a wife can demonstrate respect for her husband.

Dennis: I feed off of Barbara’s respect for me.

Bob: Yes; [Trent] called it, “Rocket fuel.”  It really is; isn’t it? 

Dennis: It is—it feeds the soul. Every man needs a woman in his life, besides his mom, who would believe in him, and expect the best of him, and cheer him on. I don’t think it means that a woman is less of a person for respecting her husband. It’s really, in my opinion, a very noble assignment and one that takes, I think, some skill and prayer and asking God to show you to catch your husband doing things right, where you can show him respect.

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Bob: This is one of the subjects that gets addressed at our Weekend to Remember marriage getaways. It happens on Sunday morning—while the men are hearing straight-talk about their assignment, as husbands and as fathers—the wives get an extended period of time where it’s just the women. There is conversation about what it is we’re to do and to be, as wives and as moms. Folks, who have attended the getaway, tell us, Dennis, Sunday morning is really a highlight of the weekend for them.


Dennis: Most of us do not understand how to be a wife or how to be a husband in the assignment that God has given us. There’s really nothing in life that would prepare you, other than your family of origin; and in many cases, the model that was presented there was not a biblical one. Unless you’ve been discipled and mentored by a godly woman, how is a wife going to figure out, “What does it look like to truly respect my husband?” 

I think these kind of discussions—like we’re having, here, on FamilyLife Today

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—are really important to, I think, equip wives to be who they are supposed to be so the men will be able to lead, and serve well, and love well in their assignment.

Bob: I’ve talked to a lot of men—and a lot of wives, for that matter—who have said the time together at a Weekend to Remember marriage getaway was transformative in our marriage. In fact, you and I were talking to a couple, this week, who said they were at a low point—they were separated. God used a Weekend to Remember as a turning point for them; and, now, more than 20 years later, they are thriving.

Dennis: They are, and they are impacting other marriages. You left out a detail or two, Bob. You spoke at the conference where their marriage was saved, 20 years ago. Now, here they are—business owners, impacting other people’s lives. They just left to go on a mission trip to Africa.

I just think, when all is well at home, you can do a lot of stuff in the world to make an impact for Jesus Christ; but when all isn’t well at home—

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—when you two aren’t clicking—likewise, I think we’re rendered far less useful in the Kingdom’s work when we’re not clicking with our spouse.

Bob: Yes; the reality is that most of the people who are coming to a Weekend to Remember are in a pretty good place in their marriage. They would score their marriage above 70 percent; but those folks still need an adjustment / a tune-up, because it’s easy to slip out of tune in your marriage. That’s what we try to provide at the Weekend to Remember—an opportunity for you to reexamine, recalibrate, get your minds set in the right direction, and then begin to live that out in your marriage.

Again, I’d just encourage our listeners to find out more about the Weekend to Remember when you go to FamilyLifeToday.com; or call if you have any questions: 1-800-FL-TODAY. We’d love to have you join us at an upcoming Weekend to Remember marriage getaway. They really are a great weekend away for a husband and a wife.

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And if this respect issue is something that, as a wife, you’re struggling with in your marriage, our friend, Nina Roesner, has written a book called The Respect Dare. It’s a 40-day journey to cultivate respect for your husband. We have copies of that book available in our FamilyLife Today Resource Center. You might check that out, online, as well. The book is called The Respect Dare, and the website is FamilyLifeToday.com; or again, call 1-800-358-6329—1-800-“F” as in family, “L” as in life, and then the word, “TODAY.” 

You know, ultimately, when we think about these issues, we want to make sure that we are thinking biblically—not just pragmatically / not just what works out best in your home—but instead: “How has God designed us to function in this life—in our marriage / in our family?” and “How can we live according to His design and, in the process, bring glory to Him and to His design?” 

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That’s what FamilyLife Today is all about—we want to provide practical biblical help and hope for marriages and families. We want to see marriages and families aligned with God’s purposes for His creation.

And we appreciate those of you who share that vision with us—those of you who have helped us expand and reach more people with God’s blueprints for marriage and family. Thanks to those of you, especially, who are monthly Legacy Partners in support of this ministry. Your financial support is what makes FamilyLife Today possible, and we’re grateful to be partnered with you in this endeavor.

If you’ve never made a donation—a longtime listener but you’ve never donated—today would be a good day to go online and make a donation. It’s easy to do. Our website, again, is FamilyLifeToday.com. You can call to donate if that’s easier: 1-800-FL-TODAY; or if you’d like to mail your donation, our mailing address is FamilyLife Today at PO Box 7111, Little Rock, AR; and our zip code is 72223.

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Now, tomorrow, we’re going to hear Part Two of Trent and Andrea Griffith’s message on wives respecting husbands. We’ll hear about the mindset shift that Andrea had to make in order to be in the right place in her marriage. I hope you can tune in for that.

 

I want to thank our engineer today, Keith Lynch, along with our entire broadcast production team. On behalf of our host, Dennis Rainey, I’m Bob Lepine. We will see you back next time for another edition of FamilyLife Today.

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