I hate to jump in the middle of this, I have been meaning to find time to post on this thread all day. This is as good of place as any.
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That a husband is head of his family does not preclude discussing, listening, and learning from one’s wife. I am very blessed by the wisdom of my wife.
So what happens when after discussing, listening, and learning from each other, the couple can not reach an agreement? If the family isn’t going to fall into disunion and anger, someone must make a decision and both must support it.
Pax
Here is the difficulty: It does not match anyone’s experience, especially any Catholic family experience.
The concept of wife’s being submissive to the husband, and the position Dan Daly has been advocating, is difficult to argue against; it is the Church teaching. I will say that this is the one teaching of the Church I have struggled with understanding the most. And the above explanation of this teaching: the wife and husband, discuss, listen, learn, etc; but at the end of the day if there is no agreement the man decides; I have heard many times. It doesn’t work for me; and it doesn’t work for the others because it does not match anyone’s experience.
One of the very great things about Catholic teachings is that they never seem to contradict our human experience. Consider the Church’s moral teachings on sexuality for example: when you look at our human experience objectively, you can see the Church is right time and time again; what the Church teaches works. Look at original sin: as GK Chesterton said, it can be proven any day by looking throught the London times. There just is no conflict with Church teaching and our human experience. But on the surface, I have always thought it is hard to say this, with respect to wives being submissive to husbands. It doesn’t seem to pass that litmus test.
I grew up in a Catholic family, in a Catholic community; everyone was Catholic. And let me tell you, the women I knew were all strong. And I don’t remember examples of what Dan Daly is describing. After 20some years of very happy marriage to a wonderful Catholic wife, I see the same result. I can think of a few times where my wife and I could not come to an agreement; a couple of times on very important matters. Not once was it resolve with “well your the husband, so I will submit”. I don’t remember that happening with my parents either, yet I remember at least one important issue that was discussed between the two of them for months; almost every night at the dinner table.
So how can this be? First all of, for husbands, we need to ultimately focus on “hubands love your wifes as Christ loved the church”. Yea, yea, and as the apostle said, He gave Himself up for the Church. We have that example. But we should consider a couple of other ways Christ loved the Church. They are the hints to how I have come to understand this teaching of submissiveness.
One of the very first posts on this thread was “Is the Church on equal footing with Christ?”. Don’t worry, I am not answering yes, the obvious answer is no. But before stating no, I would it is good to consider how close Christ made the Church to be on the same footing as He. The Church is The Mystical Body of Christ. The word mystical does not mean symbolic or represents. In some way we do not fully understand, the Church is the Body of Christ. That is what mystical means.
As such, Christ gave the Church real, and very important authority. And this is the key: He did not only give the Church authority, He pretty much said on certain matters He would abide by the Church’s decisions. “what you bound on earth, shall be bound in heaven; what you loose on earth, shall be loose in heaven”. There is no qualifier as to such as “what you bound on earth and I agree with, shall be bound in heaven”. And He did this with one of the ultimate responsibilities: forgiveness of sins. In Jewish tradition it was absolute blasphemous to thing anyone by God could forgive sins. And now, can you think of a more important thing the Church does. He also did it by providing it with the treasure of indulgences. He gaev the Church the authority to safeguard the truth.
And that, in a very practical sense, mirrors the experience in we see in many good Catholic families. Not only different roles, but different areas of authority. And some of the most important, eg education issues with kids, are often in the domain of the wife. That is true love of a wife. A wife should be given areas of authority AND a husband should agree to abide by those decisions. Likewise, areas of authority should be reserved for the husband, and likewise the wife abides by those decisions. Christ did that for His church, and we were told explicitly to mirror Christ’s love of church in our we love our wives.