How is the husband held accountable?

How is the husband held accountable? 

Or should I say, "How is my husband held accountable?"

Accountability Isn’t Theoretical — It’s Weekly and Personal

After my last post, Linda asked a question that I think many people quietly wonder:

"How is the husband held accountable?"

Not all people are held accountable but this is how my husband has set it up. I would have never thought of it, but he set it up. And the four families meet for bible study and family get togethers.  

It’s easy to say, “He’s accountable to God.” But if that accountability never touches the ground in real life, it can start to sound abstract. I understand that concern. Authority without accountability is dangerous in any setting — Government, Police department, Church, Workplace, or even a Marriage.

So I want to share what it actually looks like in our home.

My husband meets weekly with four other men for Bible study. These are not surface-level friendships. These are men who know his struggles, his pressures, his blind spots, and the weight of leadership he carries. They have permission to ask hard questions — and they do.

At the end of each meeting, they ask one another the same seven questions every single week:

  1. Have you been with a woman anywhere that might be seen as compromising?
  2. Have any of your emotional dealings lacked integrity?
  3. Have you exposed yourself to any sexually explicit material?
  4. Have you prioritized and managed your time properly? (God, family, and work)
  5. Have you taken care of your temple (body) with clean living — mind, body, and soul?
  6. What have you done to glorify God and spread His Word?
  7. Have you just lied to me?

The first time he told me about that last question I was surprised. Because it removes loopholes.

These men are not there to flatter each other. They are there to sharpen each other (Proverbs 27:17). If something is off, they press in. They follow up the next week. They ask for specifics. They don’t allow vague spiritual language to cover concrete behavior.

They also have a day each during the week day that they share a bible verse in their group chat. Hubby has Monday. 

That matters to me.

It matters because I submit to leadership that is itself submitted — to God, yes — but also to other godly men in real, practical ways.

And here’s something else that’s important: I am not trapped in silence. If I ever had a serious concern about integrity, addiction, anger, or harmful behavior, I could reach out to those men. They would listen. They would take it seriously. There is structure beyond just the two of us. Although I have never had to and never anticipate I would.. 

Accountability in our marriage is not invisible. It is relational.

It also shows up in smaller, everyday ways. My husband has apologized to me more than once over the years — for poor decisions, for losing his temper, for letting exhaustion speak instead of patience. Especially during his military years, when he would come home drained, there were moments he later acknowledged he hadn’t handled well. He has owned those moments without defensiveness.

Leadership without humility isn’t leadership.

When he fails, he doesn’t hide behind authority. He admits it. He corrects course. He prays with me. He makes changes.

That is what makes this dynamic safe.

Domestic discipline only works — and I mean truly works — when the husband’s authority is anchored in accountability and integrity. Otherwise, it becomes imbalance.

I don’t follow a perfect man. I follow a man who is willing to be examined.

And that makes all the difference.

I also want to copy and paste this from the chat....

My husband absolutely has standards he holds himself to, and he does not expect from me what he is unwilling to practice himself. Leadership in our home is not perfection — it’s responsibility.

He has apologized to me several times over the years. 

  1. For poor decisions. 
  2. For losing his temper. 
  3. For being short when he was exhausted. 
  4. For being unsafe
    1. I remember especially during his military years, he admitted he drove home completely drained and it was unsafe. There was a moment he realized he shouldn’t have been behind the wheel because he was so tired., And he owned it. Not defensively. Not halfway. He has sat me down, looked me in the eye, and said, “I was wrong.” He has prayed with me. He has made changes. He has adjusted his behavior.

Accountability for him doesn’t look like me disciplining him. It looks like humility, repentance, and course correction. And I have always felt respected in those moments.

Him being the leadership of this family isn’t about never failing. It’s about being quick to admit when he did.

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