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Holy Home, Part 5

September 6, 2017 • Pastor Star R. Scott

Chapter 5 of Ephesians. We left off in our last session dealing with the responsibility of the husbands to make sure that they were fulfilling the call of God on their lives, fulfilling the mandate of them to wash their wives with the water of the Word of God. We saw what that entailed. In our last session we dealt with the fact that it was men's responsibility for making sure that our wives don't lose their first love; amen? We'll go into it in detail, but then we talked about the fact that our responsibility, men, is to help our wives achieve that role of the Proverbs 31 virtuous woman. We were talking about this just the other day. Of course, the way you don't do that is by on a daily basis sitting down with your wife and pulling out each chapter and saying, "And you're not doing this and you're not doing that." That is surely not the way that we deal with that issue. In this chapter that we're looking at in Ephesians 5, we see that the thing that is behind all of this ministry of care is the love of God. We are to love our wives as Christ loved the church; amen? So in every way that we deal with our wives it's to be done in First Corinthians 13 love. We'll be talking about that a little bit later, but we should say it at this point. In every way we approach our wives, it's to be done in love, it's to be done with kindness, it's to be done with gentleness; amen? It's to be done not promoting or vaunting ourselves or our will or our way, because, man, we're not looking to accomplish our will, we're looking to accomplish God's will. Aren't we? So when we understand that, we see and we receive that ministry from the Lord. As we've been loved we then are responsible to love.

Ephesians goes on and speaks to us, saying in verse 25, "Husbands, love your wives, even as Christ also loved the church, and gave Himself for it." Now this giving of ourselves is a very interesting aspect. We've been talking about that and man has an innate selfishness and love of himself. Very clearly we see that's why Adam sinned. Ultimately, it was a love of self. He didn't want to lose his helpmeet that he had just been given. He had been in a place of fellowshipping with God but somehow that wasn't sufficient...

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