Colossians 3:19b
Husbands, Be Not Bitter
- The Term: πικρός
1.
It originally (in extra
biblical writings): “pointed,” “sharp,” e.g., arrows or a knife, then more
generally of what is “sharp” or “penetrating” to the senses, a
pervasive smell “shrill” of a noise, “painful” to
the feelings, “bitter,” “sharp” to the taste.
2.
The term was often used in various
ways in secular writings in NT times.
3.
Men can be called πικρός (noun
form) when they are “strict”, “severe,” “rigid”, “hostile” or “cruel”. (Polybius,
of Megalopolis – a historian of the rise of the Roman world used the word this
way.)
a.
Piercing in the way they used
their position of strength or power.
b.
This comes close to the way
Paul used the word in Col. 3:19.
4.
But in the NT, (other than here)
the verb form is used exclusively of a bitter taste –
a.
The other occurrences are all
found in Revelation - bitter water, etc… or bitter stomach.
b.
The harsh, sharp, bitter taste
is used in a figurative sense to illustrate harshness and sharpness in other
realms.
c.
Obviously Paul uses the term in
Col. 3:19 NOT of a bitter taste. He is not forbidding men to eat bitter things…
to have a bitter taste in their mouth or belly.
d.
Paul uses the bitter taste in a
figurative sense.
e.
There is a parallel
between what a bitter herb does to the mouth… and what a husband often does to
his wife.
5.
Usages:
- James uses the term
twice:
- James 3:11 – it is the
opposite of a sweet taste
i.
Here the term is used as an
adj.
ii.
It is used in a literal sense
of taste… opp. of sweet
- James 3:14 – bitter
envying and strife
i.
Again it is used as an adj. to
describe envying & strife
ii.
Here he uses it in the
figurative sense.
iii.
Strife is described as bitter…
there is something about fighting and arguing that likened unto the awful,
bitter, pungent, piercing taste of a dandelion root.
- Heb. 12:15 – the result
of a lack of the grace of God – bitterness arises and causes trouble.
- As an adjective, it is
used to describe a harsh taste to water, harsh strife, bitter, intense
grief, bitter harsh words.
- The term is used of a
harsh strength… potency… pungency… ferocity, pointed, piercing, cutting,
sharp – whether applied to taste, noise, or emotions.
- Paul uses this term to
describe the emotional effect that a husband can have towards his wife.
- The Preposition
- The preposition dictates
what is being commanded. Is he saying to the husbands:
- Don’t become embittered
inwardly BY of your wife…
- Don’t show bitterness
outwardly TOWARDS your wife…
- Don’t be bitter
(resentful) AGAINST your wife…
- πρὸς: With the accusative (as is the case here)
marking the object toward or to which something moves or is directed.
- It marks the wife as
the one towards which the bitterness is directed.
- Thus, the bitterness of
which Paul speaks is in some way unleashed or poured out by the husband
in the direction of the wife.
- Summary of definition: Bitterness speaks of that which is sharp,
piercing, pointed – directed toward the senses. (taste, noise, emotions).
It is the lack of grace, the opposite of sweet, and associated with
envying and strife.
- This sharp, piercing,
pointed, harshness (that seems to come so easily for men) is NOT to
be directed towards the wife.
- That seems to the
essence of the command.
- The command is not:
don’t BE bitter.
- The command is: don’t DIRECT
any bitter harshness TOWARDS her.
- One is inward feelings;
the other outward action.
- It is the outward
action towards the wife that is forbidden here.
- The command is not
“Don’t BE bitter” but “Don’t BEHAVE bitterly… sharply… harshly…
- Don’t vent! Don’t be
harsh, course, or rough towards your wife!
- Most often we read this
passage as if God were commanding husbands not to BE bitter inwardly.
(embittered)
- And we often think of
this bitterness as a bitter feeling in the gut…
- It is not a good idea
to BE bitter or to feel bitter, but that is not the thrust of this
command.
- Feelings are not
easily controlled… and they cannot be instantly changed.
- The command is not for
the husband to control his feelings, but for the husband to control his
ACTIONS: his words and his deeds.
- Repentance can change
our actions, but not necessarily change our feelings… at least not
immediately.
- The first part of the
verse (love) is not telling husbands what to FEEL but what to DO.
- The second part is the
same. It does not tell the husband what not to FEEL, but what not to DO.
- God doesn’t often tell
us what to FEEL. But He does tell us what to do and what to think.
- If we are serious with
God, we can change our actions and our thoughts instantly upon
repentance.
- But feelings don’t
change nearly so easily… not after a long period of hostility.
- The command does not
have to do with the inner feelings of the husband… a bitter feeling in
his gut. (resentment, anger, frustration, rage, turmoil; etc.)
- We are expected to OBEY
this command even if we still FEEL bitterness in our gut!
- The command is not to
demonstrate that bitter harshness in the direction of your wife!
- You may FEEL bitter
inside. The feeling may seem overwhelming. You may feel trapped or
enslaved to those feelings… without any way to release them.
- And it might feel
really good to vent it… and let it all pour out over your wife.
- Especially if she is the
reason you FEEL that way! You may feel justified in venting all this
bitter out on her.
- But God says DON’T.
- This IMPLIES that this bitterness
is IN the heart of man.
- Matt. 15:18-19 - this is not an exhaustive list.
- Bitterness can also
reside in the heart.
- And God knows that some
times the wife is the CAUSE of the bitterness in the
husband’s heart.
i.
She might be a nag… a constant
irritation…
ii.
She might constantly be pushing
your buttons…
iii.
She might put you down… compare
you to other men… insult, and humiliate you.
iv.
She may show no respect and may
not submit.
v.
In other words, she might STIR
UP this bitterness IN YOU… she might be the outward cause of the bitterness in
your heart.
- Sometimes a husband can
be frustrated and bitter just because of life in general. But
sometimes it is caused by his wife.
- The command in Col.
3:19 is that if there IS bitterness in your heart, DON’T POUR IT OUT on
her!
i.
Even if she is the cause of the
bitterness, don’t retaliate. Turn the other cheek. Suffer yourself to be
defrauded. Be like Christ who was reviled but He reviled not again… when He
suffered, he threatened not.
ii.
Deal with the bitterness in your
own heart and don’t express it in
words or deeds towards your wife.
iii.
If there are evil thoughts,
resentment, anger, frustration, bitterness, etc, in the heart, then see it as a
HEART issue.
iv.
Confess it as sin. These sins
defile a man.
v.
Keep your heart with ALL
diligence.
vi.
It doesn’t really matter HOW it
got there. If it IS there, take it to the Lord in prayer! Cast
your burden upon the Lord for HE careth for you.
- II Cor. 5:10 - Casting
down imaginations, and every high thing that exalteth itself against
the knowledge of God, and bringing into captivity every thought to
the obedience of Christ.
- Deal with that
resentment and bitterness while it is still in the thought stage. Keep
a SHORT account with sin.
- Don’t give it time to
develop and brew and fester into the word stage or
the action stage.
- Bitterness is a toxic, spiritual
poison in your heart.
- Get rid of it the RIGHT WAY… through confession… by yielding to God and being filled with
the Spirit.
- Don’t get rid of it the
WRONG way… by pouring it out all over your wife… and contaminating
your whole household!
- The command in Col.
3:19 is, “Don’t pour that bitter poison in the direction of your wife!”
- Psychologists often
teach that one should not suppress such feelings, but rather VENT those
inner passions or they will damage your emotional makeup.
- That is NOT what God
says. God says, don’t vent them, confess them as sin, and they are GONE!
- They are not suppressed:
they are removed as far as the east is from the west… and are replaced
with a peace the psychologists are unable to explain.
- Phil. 4:6-7 - Be
careful for nothing; but in every thing by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving
let your requests be made known unto God. And the
peace of God, which passeth all understanding, shall keep your hearts and
minds through Christ Jesus.
- God can remove that
inner bitterness… and replace it with Himself… and the joy of salvation.
- But even if those
feelings stick around for a while – don’t vent them… and especially not
on your wife.
- When you think of the
one flesh concept it certainly doesn’t make a lot of sense to pour bitter
poison on your wife… you are ONE flesh.
- Bitterness poured out
against one’s wife
- There are two possible
ways to understand the term “bitter” in Col. 3:19: inwardly bitter OR
outwardly harsh.
- And since the command
is AGAINST pouring that bitterness out on your wife… the EFFECT is
exactly the same.
- Harshness is not to be
poured out against one’s wife.
- And if a man has an
inwardly bitter spirit, when that is vented against his wife, it comes
upon her as harshness.
- While the meaning might
be slightly different, the effect on the wife is the same.
- For that reason, some
translators have translated this verse differently than the KJV.
i.
Husbands, love your wives, and
do not be harsh with them. (ESV & ISV & NIV & GNB)
ii.
Husbands, love your wives and
never treat them harshly (NRSV)
iii.
Husbands, love your wives and
be gentle with them. (NCV)
- This command was not
given to women or children, but to men.
- Evidently God believed
that men need to hear this.
- We men tend to develop
bitter, harsh, frustrated, angry, cruel feelings
- And we tend to unleash
them at times… especially against one’s wife.
- Hence, the need for the
command!
- This is not to say that
a wife cannot do the same, but God sees this as primarily a problem of us
males, and thus addresses men… husbands.
- God addresses us right
where we NEED to be addressed.
- Present Imperative in
the Negative
- This verb construction
could be translated, “STOP being bitter against them.”
- It is a prohibition
against an action already in progress.
- In other words, it is
as Paul ASSUMES that husbands in Colossae WERE already bitter against
their wives.
- He tells them to stop
pouring out harshness in their direction.
- This does not seem to
be written this way because Paul heard of a particular case. Rather, it
was because Paul understood human nature.
- Eph. 5:23 - God created the husband to be head of
his wife.
- The kind of headship
God designed is normal, natural, and GOOD for any husband/wife
relationship.
- It is a headship
characterized by love… sacrificing self for her good… a husband
who is willing to give himself, his all, for his wife…
- It is a headship that
is to reflect the manner in which Christ heads His Body, the church… His
Bride…
- It is a position of
authority over the wife… as Christ has authority over the church.
- The authority was given
for the protection and care of the wife…
- Loving headship was a
wonderful thing in the Garden of Eden before the fall. But sin has
changed everything.
- Headship often goes
to the head of a man… even a
Christian!
- Some men have abused
their authority and behave more like a rigid drill sergeant than a
husband.
- Some men see themselves
as head of the household in the same way Sadaam Hussein saw himself as
the head of Iraq… a brutal dictator.
- I have cringed at the
way some Christian men treat their wives.
- Some men use their
authority as an excuse to do whatever they want… to please themselves…
at the expense of their wife and family. They have twisted the concept
of headship to mean a master/slave relationship.
- Raw authority without
love can be extremely ugly… totalitarian… cruel.
- Headship needs to be mitigated
by love or the husband can turn into an oppressive tyrant,
someone who is almost impossible to live with. I’ve seen that happen.
- It is an awful perversion
of the meaning of headship… an almost blasphemous picture of the
relationship between Christ and His Bride, the church.
- It is human
nature to ABUSE authority and power.
- A husband who is
stronger and is given authority by God over his wife… can use that
strength and authority to love and care for her… or as a vicious weapon
against her.
- The command in Col. 3:19
is: DON’T let your authority go to your head and start spewing out harsh
words or deeds towards your wife.
- An abuse of
authority easily turns
into insensitive, critical, treatment… bitter, unfeeling, severe, cruel, words…
as well as a controlling, demanding, harsh, authoritarian attitude
towards one’s wife.
- This is human nature.
It is what often happens when a husband is controlled by the flesh
rather than the Spirit. (The fruit of the Spirit is love… gentleness…
meekness…)
- Paul gives this command
to us men because he knew all too well human nature: He
knows all too well what we men are capable of! O wretched man that I am!
- There is nothing good
in human nature. It is completely corrupted by sin. In my flesh dwells no
good thing!
- It is IN us to
pour out all that inner bitterness and harshness on our wives. That
is the fallen nature of a man.
- Harshness can cause a
woman to WITHER.
- Ex: It can wither like
a hothouse plant… they cannot handle a hostile or harsh
environment. A woman, like a hot house plant, needs protection and care.
- Ex: A harsh chemical
can destroy a delicate veneer on a piece of furniture. The veneer
shrivels up and is ruined.
- The point is that
something harsh can ruin or destroy… something that is delicate.
- A harsh wind can
destroy a city.
- Harsh, impure waters
can ruin metal pipes… or wear away stone.
- A harsh dictator can
terrorize a country.
- Unmitigated harshness
can do a LOT of damage.
- Harsh, bitter
words poured out against
your wife can destroy, terrorize, and cause her to wither on the inside,
emotionally.
- And the husband may not
be able to SEE the effects of his harshness… the damage that he
caused is inward… but God gives the command because the effects (though
invisible) are real.
- They are the weaker
vessel. (I Pet. 3:7)
- Venting anger and
bitterness out on your wife is like confronting the fine china with the
cast iron pot.
- What happens if the
iron pan treats the china with bitter harshness? What happens when these
two items collide?
- It might not hurt you,
but it DOES hurt her.
- When you yell at a man
repeatedly, what emotions are evoked? Usually anger!
- When you yell at a
woman repeatedly, what emotions are evoked? Maybe anger at first, but she
wears out more easily, and eventually withers up and shrivels – she
crumbles emotionally.
- When the two collide,
the woman is more likely to get hurt.
- Hence, this command.
- This is part of the
KNOWLEDGE that Peter wants husbands to know and to dictate their
treatment of their wives.
- They are different from
men. Men are stronger physically and emotionally.
- A husband may never
lift a finger to hit his wife because he realizes he is stronger
physically and it would not be fair or right.
- But that same husband
may engage in very bitter arguments with his wife… but that is just as
wrong.
i.
It is wrong because he is also
built differently emotionally.
ii.
Even though she may be mean
spirited and vicious in her words towards you… a man is able to handle them
better because he is stronger emotionally.
iii.
If that husband fires back with
equally vicious words, his words can do MORE damage to her because she is the
weaker vessel.
iv.
Think of it as fighting fire
with fire.
v.
The cast iron frying pan can
handle the fire.
vi.
But the dainty china cannot. It
will break or melt.
vii.
Men and women are not the same
physically or emotionally.
viii.
You KNOW that it is not a fair
fight physically, so you don’t hit her.
ix.
God wants us to KNOW that it is
not a fair fight emotionally either.
x.
The husband is stronger and is
responsible to take the lead in ENDING an argument… letting the wife have the
last word… responding with a soft answer…
- It is not a matter of
superiority – any more than the iron pan is superior to the china.
- But men and women are different…
and were designed differently – for different purposes!
- God commands us to
dwell with them according to KNOWLEDGE… realizing your physical and
emotional strength… and using that strength responsibly.
- God provides PROTECTION
for the weaker vessel by means of the stronger vessel. (Eph. 5:25-29)
- Vs. 26 – Christ cares for the church by protecting
us from dirt and infection. He cleanses us to keep us pure.
- The husband is to
protect his wife spiritually – to provide a safe spiritual environment
for her… that she might be pure.
- Vs. 27 – the husband is
to use his strength to provide a wall of protection for his wife from
anything that would hurt her or defile her spiritually.
- The iron pan provides a
wall of protection for the fine china.
- Vs. 28-29 – the husband
is to provide the same level of care and concern for his wife that he
demonstrates towards himself… towards his own body.
- The strong vessel is to
care for and protect the weak vessel. That’s God’s design… God’s plan.
- The man’s physical and
emotional strength is given to him to provide care and protection AGAINST
anything that would harm the wife…
- A man’s strength was
given to him to be poured out against anything that would harm his wife…
FOR the good of his wife….
- It is NOT to be vented
against the wife!
- When SIN controls
our hearts, the very strength God gave to man for the GOOD of his
wife is used to HARM the wife!
- Thus, the delicate
nature of a woman required the command of Col. 3:19… for the
stronger vessel not to collide harshly with the weaker vessel.
- That command is an expression
of God’s love, care, and protection for the weaker vessel that He
created.
- The command wasn’t
needed in Eden before sin entered the world. Adam would
never have poured out bitter harshness on his wife. She was precious to
him.
- But it IS needed
today. Adam’s sons are not so sensitive.
Be Not Bitter Against Them
- Consider a likely
scenario:
- A wife is not
submissive and begins nagging.
- She learns how to
irritate him… she learns all the buttons to press…
- She’s never going to
win in a fist fight, so she learns how to hurt him in other ways.
- This is not the
affectionate woman he married and he gradually becomes more and more irritated.
- The husband develops
bitterness on the inside.
- So in anger and
frustration he spills out all that bitterness on her… which causes her to
wilt.
- He’s striking back at
her…
- She in turn strikes
back at him…
- Poison has entered the
relationship… and it destroys BOTH of them! They are one flesh.
- She fills him with a
bitter poison which is in turn poured out on her. They are both ruined…
and on and on it goes.
- It is a vicious circle
that will go on forever until one person decides to go to the cross…
- Col. 3:19 commands the husband to STOP that
vicious cycle by NOT retaliating… by NOT spewing forth the bitterness in
his heart all over his wife.
- This command requires
the MAN to take the stand and end the cycle… the strong one
has a responsibility to bear the infirmity of the weak…
- Even if she is the one
who fills you with bitterness, don’t spew it back… don’t retaliate…
- If she’s dishing it
out, then take it like a man… and deal with it in your
heart before the Lord.
- A lesson from the Old
Testament (Ex. 15:22-26)
- Vs. 22 - The children of Israel
have just experienced physical redemption from bondage in Egypt.
- The very next thing we
read is that Moses brought them from the Red Sea experience
into the wilderness… to learn to trust God.
- They traveled 3 days
into the wilderness and found no water.
- Vs. 23 - Then they came to a place called Marah and
finally found water, but it was bitter… undrinkable.
- Vs. 24 – they murmured & complained to Moses
about the bitter experience he led them into.
- Vs. 25 – Moses in turned cried out to the Lord.
i.
The Lord showed Moses a special
tree and told him to cast the tree into the bitter waters.
ii.
When he did, the bitter waters
were made sweet.
- What a glorious picture
for us of what the CROSS of Christ can do in bitter experiences in our
lives!
i.
Maybe a lot of bitterness has
arisen in YOUR household.
ii.
Perhaps your wife has refused
to submit and has given you cause to become bitter.
iii.
Perhaps your husband has not
been obeying Col. 3:19 and has been spewing out harsh bitterness in your
direction.
iv.
And maybe, like the children of
Israel, you’re beginning to think that God has brought you into this
wilderness to die… there is nothing but bitterness there… and you can’t handle
it any more.
v.
God’s answer is the CROSS…
applying the TREE upon which Christ died to the bitter experiences in your life
can make even those bitter experiences sweet.
vi.
The cross: an end of self… an
end of living for self… an end of trying to please and satisfy self… a new and
abundant life dedicated to serving others…
vii.
That’s what’s needed in your
household and mine! Believers who BELIEVE what Christ said – that if we are to
follow Him, we are to pick up a cross… and live the CRUCIFIED life…
viii.
This is the life God has called
BOTH the husband and the wife to live…
ix.
But the husband is to take the
LEAD.
x.
It is HE who is called of God
to deal with the bitterness and harshness in the relationship… and put it away…
by keeping his old self life on the cross by faith.
xi.
Once we get public enemy number
one (ME!) out of the way… those bitter waters will become sweet…
xii.
And that relationship that had
been nothing but harsh, cruel, bitterness will once again become sweet… and the
sweet fragrance of Christ will once again fill that house…
- Vs. 25c – It was the LORD who led them to Marah, not
Moses.
i.
God allowed them to experience
this bitterness to TEST them… to demonstrate to them what their hearts
were like… that they might learn NOT to trust in themselves but to cast
themselves upon the Lord!
ii.
He tested them to see if they
would love the Lord and obey Him…
iii.
Vs. 26 – FOR I am the Lord! God tested them to demonstrate to them whether
they love and obeyed God for what He GAVE them (sweet water – a pleasant
life)… OR if they loved and obeyed Him because of who HE IS… the Lord!
iv.
They failed the test. But God
did not forsake them. He provided a way back.
v.
And they way back was by
“applying the tree to their bitterness”… the way of the cross…
vi.
They needed to learn that there
is no bitterness that the Lord cannot sweeten!
- Vs. 27 – Elim!
i.
God led them to the place of
bitterness to test them… not to harm them.
ii.
They complained when they got
to Marah…
iii.
They assumed that they would
nothing but bitterness the rest of their days… but this was only a test from
the Lord.
iv.
What they DIDN’T KNOW was that
right around the corner from Marah was another place called ELIM.
v.
And there were 12 wells of
sweet water there… water of life… and 70 palm trees to provide shade… an oasis
in the midst of the wilderness!
vi.
God knew this all along… God
wasn’t lost. God didn’t really want them to experience bitterness the rest of
their days.
vii.
God wanted all along to bring
to Elim… but the way to ELim was THROUGH Marah.
viii.
O how often believers come to
bitter experiences and are ready to quit… to throw in the towel…
to run to a divorce court… to forsake the ways of the Lord because they think
they can’t handle the bitterness any more… so we run away into
the wilderness on our own rather than following the pathway God set before us.
ix.
How much better is it to run to
the cross of Calvary! To by faith reckon our old man dead… crucified
with Christ… and enter into the sweetness of the selfless and joyous
resurrected life…
x.
What a pity to quit at Marah –
when Elim is right around the corner!
xi.
The cross is right there to
turn the bitterness in YOUR relationship into sweetness…
xii.
Are you willing to come to the
cross?
1.
Without applying the tree they
would have been stuck perpetually at Marah… with nothing but bitter water to
drink.
2.
Applying the tree was the only
way they would ever make it to Elim!
3.
Applying the cross to our
relationship is the only way we’ll ever make to Elim too… to the place of sweet
waters...
4.
The cross can transform a cruel
bitter home into an oasis. COME to cross… to an end of self today.
5.
And if you are NOT SAVED… come
to the cross!