Chrysostom
Beloved
You are caught in a grievous storm, and the wounds of your household cry out. The marriage covenant is a lifelong bond; the Scripture says a wife is bound to her husband as long as he lives, and to depart from him and join another would be adultery. Yet the Lord sees your affliction and the hard heart of your husband, who, in his arrogance, heaps abuse and refuses to see his own folly.
Do not think that his cruelty escapes the eye of God. Divine justice is not mocked; even when men appear to prosper in wickedness, their reckoning is only deferred. But your calling is not to return evil for evil. To revile the abuser only wounds your own soul. Instead, overcome his fury with a meek and quiet spirit, for gentleness has a power that no harshness can match. Even if he is profligate and his heart is stone, your chaste, respectful conduct may yet win him without a word, or at least heap coals of fire on his head in the day of judgment.
When he blames others, remember the hypocrites who wore a mask of piety but had hearts of cruelty. Your husband's self-deception is a snare, and you must guard your own heart from bitterness. Keep free from passion; bear his insults without being inflamed, for resentment does greater hurt to the one who holds it than to the one who provokes it. Pray for him fervently, not with ostentation, but from a hidden store of mercy, that God might grant him repentance.
The husband is the head, yet he is commanded to nourish and cherish as Christ does the Church. He fails this role terribly, and he will answer for every wound. But for your part, do not abandon the marriage bed out of a misplaced sense of devotion; that would only drive him further into ruin. Stay, unless he forces you to depart, and if you must separate for a season, let it be with the aim of reconciliation, not with another man. Your silent endurance and steadfast love, by God’s grace, may be the very instrument of his salvation. Trust that the Lord sees your tears and that His strength is made perfect in your weakness.
Do not think that his cruelty escapes the eye of God. Divine justice is not mocked; even when men appear to prosper in wickedness, their reckoning is only deferred. But your calling is not to return evil for evil. To revile the abuser only wounds your own soul. Instead, overcome his fury with a meek and quiet spirit, for gentleness has a power that no harshness can match. Even if he is profligate and his heart is stone, your chaste, respectful conduct may yet win him without a word, or at least heap coals of fire on his head in the day of judgment.
When he blames others, remember the hypocrites who wore a mask of piety but had hearts of cruelty. Your husband's self-deception is a snare, and you must guard your own heart from bitterness. Keep free from passion; bear his insults without being inflamed, for resentment does greater hurt to the one who holds it than to the one who provokes it. Pray for him fervently, not with ostentation, but from a hidden store of mercy, that God might grant him repentance.
The husband is the head, yet he is commanded to nourish and cherish as Christ does the Church. He fails this role terribly, and he will answer for every wound. But for your part, do not abandon the marriage bed out of a misplaced sense of devotion; that would only drive him further into ruin. Stay, unless he forces you to depart, and if you must separate for a season, let it be with the aim of reconciliation, not with another man. Your silent endurance and steadfast love, by God’s grace, may be the very instrument of his salvation. Trust that the Lord sees your tears and that His strength is made perfect in your weakness.
