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Husbands and wives should love each other and commit themselves to each other just the same. RELATED : Best Wedding Bible Verses That Celebrate Love, Marriage and Family Woman's Day/Getty Images
22 Wives, submit yourselves to your own husbands as you do to the Lord. 23 For the husband is the head (kephalē) of the wife as Christ is the head (kephalē) of the church, his body, of which he is the Savior. 24 Now as the church submits to Christ, so also wives should submit to their husbands in everything." NIV
Jewish law governing tzniut requires married women to cover their hair in the presence of men other than their husband or close family members. [19] [20] Such covering (known as the tichel or mitpachat) is common practice among Orthodox Jewish women. [21]
In 1 Peter 3 wives are exhorted to submit to their husbands "so they may be won over." (Wives, in the same way, accept the authority of your husbands, so that, even if some of them do not obey the word, they may be won over without a word by their wives' conduct).
The women were regularly ostracized and humiliated by the local Haredi community because of their clothing. "We pulled them off buses and yelled at them, 'Desecrators of God's name! '", one inhabitant said. [4] The movement has caused severe distress among the women's husbands and relatives, though most husbands endure it.
According to the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, "Men who abuse often use Ephesians 5:22, taken out of context, to justify their behavior, but the passage (v. 21-33) refers to the mutual submission of husband and wife out of love for Christ. Husbands should love their wives as they love their own body, as Christ loves the Church." [2]
The video — taken as they prepared to head home to Dallas, Texas, from Long Beach Airport in California after a trip to Disneyland— shows Jake Bennington, 34, standing with their three ...
The first part of the story (chapters 1-21), an expansion of Genesis 41:45, describes the diffident relationship between Aseneth, the daughter of an Egyptian priest of Heliopolis, and the Hebrew patriarch Joseph; the vision of Aseneth in which she is fed honeycomb by a heavenly being; and her subsequent conversion to the God of Joseph, followed by romance, marriage, and the birth of Manasseh ...