Verse explainer
A verse about mutual, self-giving order — not a blank check for male domination — that only makes sense inside the passage it was cut out of.
Wives, submit yourselves unto your own husbands, as unto the Lord.
BSBWives, submit to your husbands as to the Lord.
The plain meaning
Verse 22 doesn't stand alone. In the oldest manuscripts it doesn't even have its own verb — it borrows 'submitting' from v. 21: 'submitting to one another out of reverence for Christ.' The wife's submission is one application of a mutual posture that the whole congregation is already practicing. What follows (vv. 25-29) is just as demanding in the other direction: husbands are told to love their wives as Christ loved the church — which meant giving his life. The word 'as unto the Lord' sets the quality of the wife's regard, not the quantity of the husband's power. Paul's framework makes the husband responsible for self-sacrificial care, not entitled to unilateral control. Removing v. 22 from vv. 21-33 is what produces the distortion most people have heard.
The common misreading
What the commentators say
Clarke accepts the ordered structure Paul describes but is quick to add a balancing check: the husband must not be a tyrant. The submission called for is patterned on the church's willing, loving deference to Christ — not on coercion. Clarke reads 'as unto the Lord' as defining the spirit of the submission (church-like, willing, reverent), not as granting the husband Christ-like authority to command anything he pleases.
JFB notes that the oldest manuscripts omit the verb in v. 22 entirely, drawing it from v. 21 ('submitting to one another'). They distinguish the terms carefully: 'submit' is used of wives, 'obey' of children — because husband and wife stand in greater equality. They also observe that the submission is rendered 'under the eye of Christ,' meaning it is a spiritual act directed ultimately toward the Lord, not unconditional compliance with a husband's every wish.
Gill emphasizes the parallel with the church's posture toward Christ: cheerful, voluntary, and arising from love and honor, not from force. He adds a significant qualifier — 'in everything' means everything 'consistent with the laws of God and the Gospel of Christ.' He does not read the verse as obligating a wife to follow a husband into sin or against conscience.
The word behind it
'To arrange under' or 'to place in order beneath.' A military-origin term that in Paul's usage almost always appears in the middle or passive voice — implying a voluntary, chosen ordering, not an imposed subordination. The same word appears in v. 21 for mutual submission among all believers. It is markedly softer than the 'obey' (hupakouō) Paul uses for children in 6:1, which signals that Paul himself drew a distinction between the wife's relationship to her husband and a child's to a parent.
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