THE CHRISTIAN HUSBAND
Each member of the household has  a part in the family life, and the fullest happiness and blessedness of the  home can be attained, only when each one's part is faithfully fulfilled. If any  one member of the family fails in love or duty, the failure affects the whole  household life—just as one discordant voice in a company of singers spoils the  music.
  The husband has a part all his  own, which no other can do. How does the Word of God define his duties? What is  involved in his part in the marriage relation? What does he owe his wife? One  word covers it all– love.  "Husbands, love your wives!" comes the  command with all divine authority. This counsel is short—but becomes  exceedingly long when it is fully accepted and observed.
  What are some of the things  included in a husband's love? 
  One is fondness, affectionate  regard. When a man offers his hand in marriage to a woman—he says by his act  that his heart has made a choice of her among all women, that he has for her a  deeper affection than for any other. At the marriage alter, he solemnly pledges  to her a continuance of that love until death. When the beauty has faded from  her face and the lustre from her eyes; when old age has brought wrinkles, or  when sickness or sorrow has left its marks; the faithful husband's love is to  remain deep and true as ever. His heart is still to find its truest delight in  her.
  But the Word implies more than  mere emotional fondness. The Scriptures give the measure of the love which husbands are to  bear to their wives; "Husbands, love your wives—even as Christ  loved the Church and gave Himself for it." In the true husband who  realizes all that this divine command involves, selfishness dies at the marriage  altar. He thinks no longer of his own comfort—but of his wife's. He denies  himself that he may bring new pleasures and comforts to her. He counts no  sacrifice too great to be made which will bring benefit to her.
  The wife yields all up to the  husband, gives herself in the fullest sense. Will he be faithful in the holy  trust reposed in his hands? Will he cherish her happiness as a precious  jewel—bearing all things, enduring all things, for her sake. Will he seek her  highest good, help her to build up in herself the noblest womanhood? Is he  worthy to receive into his keeping, all that her confiding love lays at his  feet?
  Every husband should understand  that when a woman, the woman of his own free and deliberate choice, places her  hand in his and thus becomes his wife—she has taken her life, with all its  hopes and fears, all its possibilities of joy or sorrow, all its capacity for  development, all its tender and sacred interests—and placed it in his hand. He  is then under the most solemn obligation to do all in his power to make her  life happy, noble and blessed. To do this he must be  ready to make any personal sacrifice. Nothing less can be implied in  "loving as Christ loved the Church and gave  Himself for it."
  This love implies the utmost gentleness in manner. One may  be very faithful and true—and yet lack that affectionateness in speech and act  which has such power to satisfy the heart. Scripture admonishes husbands to love their wives—and do not be bitter against them. The teaching is that  all bitterness should be suppressed in the very workings of the heart—and  changed into sweetness.
  Are all husbands blameless in  this respect? Are there none that speak sharp words that sting? No man who  truly loves his wife, would intentionally cause her pain! The trouble is that  men often fall into careless habits at home,  which they do not exercise in society.  They will pride themselves on their thoughtfulness and sensitive spirit—but at  home too often they are rude, careless in speech, and heedless of their words  and actions. They forget that their wives are women with gentle spirits, which  are easily hurt. A man thinks that because a woman is his wife she should know  he loves her even if he is rude to her, that she should endure anything he says  or does, even if it is something that would sorely hurt or offend any other  woman.
  There never was a more false  premise than this! Because she is his wife, he owes her the loftiest courtesy  he can pay. There is no other of whose feelings he should be so careful, and  whom he should so grieve to hurt. But it is not enough that men do not be  bitter against their wives. It is a step in the right direction when, instead  of being bitter, his words and acts and whole bearing are characterized by  gentleness and affectionateness. Yet, there are also men who speak no bitter  words—but few kindly, tender words fall from their lips. The old warmth of the  newly-wed husband has died out—and the speech has become cold and businesslike.  The mere absence of a fault or vice in not necessarily a virtue. Silence is no  doubt better than bitterness, and coldness better than rudeness. A garden  without weeds, though having no plants or flowers is better than a patch of  weeds; but a garden beautiful and fragrant with flowers is better still.
  While gentleness should always  mark a husband's bearing towards his wife, there are occasions which call for  peculiar thoughtfulness and sympathetic expression. Sometimes she is very  weary. The cares of the day have been unusually trying, and matters have not  gone smoothly at home. Her quivering nerves have been sorely overtaxed, or  maybe she has heard bad news. A child has been sick, or worse, has by some  disobedience almost broken her heart. What is a husband's part at such times?  Surely, if he is capable of tenderness, he will show it now. He will seek to  lighten the burden, to quiet the trembling heart, and to impart strength and  peace. Every wife should be sure that her husband will understand her, that he will deal most gently with her, that he will give his  own strength to shelter her, that he will impart of his  own life to build up hers. She should never have to doubt that he will  sympathize with her in whatever it may be, which tries her. She should never  have to fear repulse or coldness when she flees to him for shelter. What Christ is to His people in their weariness,  their sorrow, their pain—every husband in his own measure should be to his own  wife!
  The spirit of love requires a  husband to honour his wife. He honoured her before  she was his wife. He saw in her his ideal of all that was noble, lovely and  queenly. He showed her every mark of honour of which his soul was capable. Now  that he has lifted her up to the throne of his heart, will he honour her less?  Not less—but more and ever more, if he is a true husband and a manly man. He  has taken her now into the closest and holiest relation on earth. He has linked  her life with his own, so that henceforward whatever affect one, affects both.  If one is exalted, the other is exalted; if one is dishonoured, the other is  debased. There is definitely more reason why he should honour her now, than  before she was his wife.
  The ways in which he should show  her honour are countless. He will do it by providing for her needs on as  generous a scale as his position and his means will justify. He will do it by  making her the sharer of all his life. He will counsel with her about his  business, advise with her concerning every new plan and confide to her at every  point the results of his undertakings. A wife to him is not a child. When he chose her to be  his wife he believed her to be worthy.
  But even if she is not qualified  to give him great aid in his business plans, she loves him and is deeply  interested in everything that he is doing. She is made happy by being into all  his counsels, and thus lifted up close beside him in his life-work; and he is  made stronger, too, for energetic duty and for heroic achievement by her warm  sympathy and by the inspiration of her cheerful encouragement. Whether the day  brings defeat or victory, failure or success—he should confide all to her in the  evening. If the day has been prosperous, she has a right to share the  gratification; if it has been adverse, she will want to help her husband bear  his burden and to whisper a new word of courage in his heart. Not only does a  man fail to give his wife due honour when he shuts her out—but he also robs  himself of that inspiration and help which every true wife is able to minister  to her husband.
  Ofttimes it is the very  tenderness of his regard for his wife, which leads him to keep from her things  that would cause her distress or anxiety of mind. He does not suppose that she  could help him in the solving of the perplexing questions or in the bearing of  the heavy burdens. In an effort to shield her from deep anxiety and heavy  loads, this is affectionate unselfishness in the husband. But there is no doubt  that in ordinary circumstances, such a course is both wrong and unwise. It is  robbing the wife of love's  privilege of sharing the  whole of her husband's life.
  When a man has taken a woman to  be his wife, he has linked her life with his own, in the closest of all earthly  relations. Whatever concerns him—also concerns her. He has no interests which  are not hers as well as his. He should, therefore, make her the sharer of all  his life. She should know of all his successes and triumphs, and to be  permitted to rejoice with him in his gladness. If trials come, she should know  also of these, that she may sympathize with him, encourage and help him in his  struggles and stand close beside him when the shadows rest upon him. They have  linked their lives together, "for better or for worse," and they  should share the pains—as well as the pleasures which come to either of them. A  true wife is not a child;  she is a woman, and should  be treated as a woman.
  A man does deep injustice to the  woman he has chosen to be his wife, when he thinks that she is too frail and  delicate to endure with him the storms that blow upon him; or that she is too  inexperienced in life to discuss with him the problems that cause him grave and  earnest thought. She may not have all his practical wisdom with regard to the  world's affairs, and yet she may be able to offer many suggestions which shall  prove of more value to him, than the counsel on many shrewd men of the world.  There are many men whose success would have been greater, or to whom failure  would not have come—had he sought or accepted his wife's counsel and help. Even  if a wife can give no real practical aid, her husband will be made ten times  stronger in his own heart, by her strengthening sympathy and brave cheer while  he is carrying his load or fighting his battle.
  It need scarcely even be said,  further, that a husband should honour his wife by being worthy of her. Love has been the  inspiration that has lifted many a man from a lowly place—to lofty heights of  worth or power. Many a youth of humble origin, has worshiped at the feet of a  maiden far above him in social standing, and incited by his ardent affection,  has made himself worthy of her and then won her as his bride.
  Every true-hearted husband should  seek to be worthy of the wife he has already won. For her sake, he should reach  out after the noblest achievements and strive to attain the loftiest  heights of character. To  her he is the ideal of all that is manly, and he should seek to become every  day more worthy of the homage she pays to him. Every possibility in his soul,  should be developed. Every latent power and energy of his life, should be  brought out. His hand should be trained under love's inspiration to do its most  skilful work. Every fault in  his character should be  eradicated, every evil habit conquered, and every hidden beauty of soul should burst into fragrant  bloom—for her sake! She looks to him as her ideal of manhood, and he must see  to it that the ideal is not marred—that he never falls by any unworthy act of  his own, from the high pedestal in her heart to which she has raised him.
  In the spirit of this love every  husband should be a large-hearted man. He should never be a tyrant, playing the  petty despot in his home. A manly man has a generous spirit which shows itself  in all his life—but nowhere so richly as within his own doors. There are wives  whose natures do not blossom out in their best beauty, because of the atmosphere in which they live  is chilly and cold. A lady who is always watching for beautiful things and  gathering them about her, brought from the mountainside a sod of moss. She put  it in her parlour, and after a while, in the genial warmth, there sprang out  from the bosom of the moss a multitude of sweet, delicate spring flowers. The  seeds had long lain in the moss—but in the cold air of the mountain they had  never burst into life. There are noble wives in humble homes and stately homes—who are just like this moss.  In their natures there are the germs of many excellences and the possibilities  of rich outcome, and in it none of these richer qualities and powers manifest  themselves. The bringing of new warmth into the home will draw out these latent  germs of unsuspected loveliness. The husband who would have his wife's nature blossom out into its best possibilities of  character, influence and power—must make a genial summer atmosphere for his  home all year round.
  It is then that this  large-heartedness will impart its spirit to the home itself. A husband who is  generous within his own doors—will not be close and stingy outside. The heart  that is always open at home—cannot be carried shut through this suffering  world. The prosperous home of a generous man sends many a blessing and comfort  out to be a help to a great many struggling lives. Every generous and  large-hearted man, scatters many a comfort among the needy and the suffering,  as he passes through this world.
  There is nothing lost by such  scattering. No richer blessing can come upon a home—than the benedictions of those  who have been helped, who have been fed at its doors, or sheltered beneath its  roof, or inspired by its cheer and kindly interest. There is no memorial that  any man can make for himself in this world so lasting and so satisfying, as  that which a life of unselfishness and beneficence builds up.
  Every husband of a Christian  wife, should walk with her in common love for Christ.  There are some husbands, however, who fail in this. They love their wives very  sincerely, and make sacrifices for their sake. They carefully shelter them from  life's crude blasts. They bless them with all tenderness and affection. They honour  them very highly, bringing many noble achievements to lay at their feet, and  show them all homage and respect. They do everything that love can suggest, to  make their earthly happiness full and complete. They share every burden and  walk close beside them in every trial. But when these husbands come to the  matter of personal piety and eternal realities—they draw  back and leave them to go on alone. While the wife goes on in the sanctuary to  worship, the husband waits outside. At the very point where his interest in her  life should be the deepest—it fails altogether.
  Surely, it is a great wrong to a  woman, tender and dependent—to leave her to walk alone through this world in  her deepest life, receiving no sympathy, no companionship, no support, from him  who is her dearest friend. She must leave him outside of the most sacred part  of her life. She must be silent to him concerning the experiences of her soul  in its spiritual struggles, aspirations, yearnings, and hopes. She must bear  alone the responsibility of the children's pious nurture and training. Alone  she must bow to God in prayer.
  It cannot be right that a husband  should leave his wife to live such a large part of her life without his  companionship and sympathy. His love should seek to enter with her into every  sacred experience. In no other way could he give her such joy—as by taking his  place beside her as a fellow heir of the same grace. It would lighten every  burden, since he would now share it with her. It would bring new radiance to  her face, new peace to her heart, new zest to all life for her. It would make  their marriage more perfect, and unite their hearts in a closer union, since it  is only those who realize the full sweetness of wedded life, who are one at every point and in every  feeling, purpose and hope—and whose souls blend in their higher, spiritual  part—as well as in their lower nature and experiences. Then it would also  introduce the husband himself to sources of blessing and strength of which he  has never known before; for the religion of Christ  is a reality and brings the soul into communication with God and with infinite  springs of comfort, help and blessing. In sharing her life  of faith and prayer and devotion to Christ—he would  find his own life linked to heaven!
  United, then, on earth in a  common faith in Christ, their mutual love mingling  and blending in the love of God—they shall be united also in heaven in eternal  fellowship! Why should hearts spend years on earth in growing into one,  knitting life to life, blending soul in soul—for a union that is not to reach  beyond the valley of shadows? Why not weave for all eternity?

