WOMEN-WORKING
The idea that
women should not hold jobs is false. [In Proverbs 31 we see] a prominent city
elder's wife who does. The key to whether a job is fitting or not lies solely
in whether the job helps or hinders her family.
Jay Adams
Christian
Living in the Home, P&R Publishing, 1972, p. 83.
One
expression in Titus 2 deserves special notice. It is the word homemakers. The Greek word is oikourgous, which
literally means “workers at home.” Oikos is the Greek word for “home,” and ergon means “work, employment.”
It suggests that a married woman’s first duty is to her own family, in her own
household. Managing her own home should be her primary employment, her first
task, her most important job, and her true career.
John MacArthur
The
Fulfilled Family, Copyright: John MacArthur, 2005, p. 43.
Mothers,
don’t let anyone ever dupe you into thinking there’s anything ignoble or
disgraceful about remaining at home and raising your family. Don’t buy the lie
that you’re repressed if you’re a worker in the home instead of in the world’s
workplace. Devoting yourself fully to your role as wife and mother is not
repression; it is true liberation. Multitudes of women have bought the world’s
lie, put on a suit, picked up a briefcase, dropped their children off for
someone else to raise, and gone into the workplace,
only to realize after fifteen years that they and their children have a hollow
void in their hearts. Many such career women now say they wish they had devoted
themselves to motherhood and the home instead.
John MacArthur
Successful Christian Parenting, Word
Publishing, 1998, p. 195.
Teacher:
Susie what do you want to be when you grow up?
Susie:
I want to be a doctor.
Teacher:
How wonderful! And what about you Julie?
Julie:
I want to be a soldier.
Teacher:
How commendable! And what about you Hannah?
Hannah:
When I grow up I want to be a wife and mother!
Teacher:
[dead silence]...
Author Unknown
The Rise and Fall and Rise of Motherhood in America, May
9, 2008, Vision Forum Ministries, Used by Permission.