(1 Corinthians 11:3)
C.S. Lewis said that redeemed humans are destined to become “immortal splendors”. It’s true. Christians are immortal: they never truly die; they just pass through death into life eternal. And they are destined to be immortal splendors: splendid, magnificent, glorious, shining reflections of God’s majestic beauty. Never-dying mirrors of God.
Let’s review the history of man. Made in the image of God at creation, we have mutilated that image almost beyond recognition through our many sins against God our Maker. But now, through God’s regenerating (i.e.-reviving, remaking and renewing) and sanctifying (i.e.-morally transforming) grace, that image of God is being restored. As regenerate people, we are destined to be conformed to the glory and image of Christ who is the exact image of the Father. We will not be God (or gods), but we will look and be very much like God’s Son, “immortal splendors” indeed.
Typically (and rightly) we tend to think of this image bearing capacity in terms of our moral likeness to Christ (2 Cor. 3:17, 18; Rom. 8:29; Ephesians 4:20-24; 1 John 3:2). Christians are being transformed in character, increasingly made to be like Jesus. And eventually, believers are going to be morally perfected, “saved to sin no more” as the hymn writer expresses it.
The Bible also gives some emphasis to the idea that we will be conformed in measure to the physical glory of Christ (Phil. 3:20, 21). We are going to be glorified together with Christ so as to share His immortal splendor in body as well as spirit (1 Cor. 15:35-56).
What is not so common is for us to think of our image bearing role as a relational likeness. But 1 Cor. 11:3 makes it clear that the husband’s relationship with his wife reflects Christ’s with the Church, and the Father’s with the Son. “The head of every man is Christ, the head of a wife is her husband, and the head of Christ is God.” Christ relates to us as Head. The Father relates to the Son as Head. Each of us is to relate to his wife as head. In this way we are mirrors of the relational life of God.
So understanding and living out our headship requires that we understand something of the relationship of the Father and the Son. The Father is the head of the Son. Though this might get a little heavy, it’s worth knowing that Biblically defined, the Father’s headship over the Son involves at least the following:
- Equality in essence and glory. The Son is the Father’s equal. Each is fully God, in full possession of all the divine attributes and majesty. The fact that the Father is Head of the Son does not imply any inequality between them.
- Eternal generation. The Son is the uniquely begotten One who came from the Father. The Son is the eternal, cherished, perfect image the Father has had of Himself, so perfect that the image is equal with the Father (see the worship-producing reading from John Piper at the end of today’s devotion).
- Tender and affectionate love. Jesus is God’s “beloved Son” the Father spoke from heaven for all to hear (Luke 3:22). The Father views and treats the Son with all tenderness of affection and care.
- Loving authority and willing obedience. The Son “became obedient unto death” (Phil. 2:8) for He “came to do His Father’s will” (John 6:38).
This is how (in part) the Bible defines the relationship/headship of the Father with and over His Son. What it says to us men is staggering! Like the Father does His Son, a man is to treat his wife as his equal, making sure to honor her as a fellow image-bearer of God. He should also always remember the fact that in the beginning woman was “generated” from his side (Gen. 2:22, 23). In coming from his rib, woman is made to be (like the Son is to the Father, John 1:18) at his side, not under his feet.
A husband should also regard his wife with tender and affectionate love just like the Father loves His Son. Words and deeds demonstrating that she is his beloved, and his tenderly and affectionately cherished treasure should mark all his dealings with her.
And finally, the man should image the relationship of the first two Persons of the Trinity when he exercises loving authority and wins his wife’s willing obedience. He is not to lord it over her or force her obedience by coercion or threat. He is to lead her in love, guide her with grace, and seek to win her glad and ready following, through the proven character and wisdom of his ways.
In all these ways we see that a good and godly husband is very God-like; he’s a mirror of God. In fact what the Bible reveals is that when people look at a godly man in relationship with his wife, they should catch a glimpse of the Father in relationship with His Son. That’s part of why God created marriage. In other words, headship wasn’t a caveman’s idea (as some allege); it was God’s idea to reflect his loving union and relationship with His Son!
To know this is to guard your heart from two errors: the error of thinking that roles don’t matter, and the error of thinking that your role as head of your wife is a license to domineer. Roles do matter because they call attention to the relational heart of God. And knowing that your role is to mirror God’s matters because it ensures that you will seek to do it right.
Guys, let’s think on these things.
Application and Reflection Exercises
1. Reflect on the first aspect of the Father’s relationship with the Son: equality in essence and glory. Realize that your relationship with your wife is to image this. What does it mean? Do Gal. 3:28, 1 Peter 3:7, and Gen. 1:27 help you think this through? Record your thoughts, including one practical way that you can demonstrate the equality you and your wife share.
2. Reflect on the third aspect of the Father’s relationship with the Son: tender and affectionate love. Think of at least one way you can practically demonstrate such love to your wife today.
3. Have you thought much about your destiny as an “immortal splendor”? Record what that means to you, and how it encourages your heart.
4. Write a prayer that captures your commitment to God and to your wife in light of the meditation of the week.
“So the Son in whom the Father delights is the image of God and the radiance of the glory of God. He bears the very stamp of God’s nature and is the very form of God. He is equal with God and, as John says, is God.
For all eternity, before creation, the only reality that has always existed is God. This is a great mystery, because it is so hard for us to think of God having absolutely no beginning, and just being there forever and ever and ever, without anything or anyone making him be there – just absolute reality that everyone of us has to reckon with whether we like it or not. But this ever-living God has not been “alone.” He has not been a solitary center of consciousness. There has always been another, who has been one with God in essence and glory, and yet distinct in personhood so that they have had a personal relationship for all eternity.
The Bible teaches that this eternal God has always had a perfect image of himself (Colossians 1:15), a perfect radiance of his essence (Hebrews 1:3), a perfect stamp or imprint of his nature (Hebrews 1:3), a perfect form or expression of his glory (Philippians 2:6).
We are on the brink of the ineffable here, but perhaps we may dare to say this much: as long as God has been God (eternally) he has been conscious of himself; and the image that he has of himself is so perfect and so complete and so full as to be the living, personal reproduction (or begetting) of himself. And this living, personal image or radiance or form of God is God, namely God the Son. And therefore God the Son is coeternal with God the Father and equal in essence and glory.”
John Piper, The Pleasures of God