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Who Does the Housework?

Dave Boehi

As I look back on my childhood, it is obvious that my mother was a firm believer in the value of chores.  My sister, Dee Dee, and I cleaned up the kitchen every night after dinner.  We were assigned weekly tasks—like dusting and vacuuming—to be completed on Saturdays.  We were expected to make up our beds and keep our bedrooms clean.  And then Mom found other seasonal chores to give us—weeding, raking leaves, sweeping the deck, and more.

Naturally, as a child I did not share my mother's belief in the value of chores. I grumbled and complained and whined.  But I did them. 

In fact, I still help with housework. And for that my wife, Merry, is very grateful—and not only to me.  I’ve heard her say many times to friends, “I’m fortunate that my husband had a mom who made him work around the house.”

Does that make me unusual?  I don’t think so.  One recent survey released by the Council for Contemporary Families found that men’s contributions in the home had increased almost threefold in the last four decades. 

Despite this, the question of “Who does the housework?” is a big issue in many marriages today.  For years surveys have shown that wives typically do much more of the housework than husbands, even when both are employed full-time.  A 2007 survey by the Pew Research Center indicated that 62 percent of Americans ranked “sharing household chores” as “very important for a successful marriage”—a big jump from the 47 percent who answered the same way in 1990.  Sharing housework ranked higher than factors such as adequate income, shared religious beliefs, and children. 


“I do all the housework …”

I caught a glimpse of how hot this issue is in many marriages when I wrote on this issue recently in FamilyLife’s weekly enewsletter, Marriage Memo.  I asked readers to write and tell me what they did to divide housework in their family, and I received 85 emails just in the first day. (You can read many of these responses by clicking here.) 

Some of the letters spoke of the conflict and bitterness many wives experience when their husbands don’t help. “I do all the housework or it would not get done,” one wife wrote.

Another wife said: 

We have had a constant battle with housework … To this day I feel like he just doesn't hear me or understand how much work I do. It has gotten to the point that either I divorce him for it or come to terms with the fact he won't help out. I feel like I have lost the battle … The only thing he does is go to work. And don't get me wrong, I appreciate that. But I go to work too and do everything else. Including all the finances, yardwork, laundry, dishes, cleaning, kid activities. I have kids and they do their share but no help from my husband. HELP.

(So far I have not received any letters from husbands complaining that their wives don’t help with household responsibilities.)

I think this is one of those “where the rubber meets the road” areas of marriage.  Our choices about housework are influenced by the culture (both past and present), our childhood training, parental models, our personalities, our understanding of God’s plan for how to relate to one another in marriage, and our own selfish natures. 

Put all these factors together, and you end up with a muddy mixture of thoughts, feelings, convictions, and priorities.  Then add your mud to your spouse’s mud, and somehow you come up with decisions about who cleans the dishes, who vacuums the floor, and who pulls weeds in the garden. 


What do the Scriptures say?

The Bible does provide some general guidance in its passages about the roles and responsibilities of husbands and wives.  Husbands, for example, are called to be “head of the wife, as Christ also is head of the church” and to “love your wives just as Christ also loved the church and gave Himself up for her” (Ephesians 5:23, 25).  They are to manage their households well (1 Timothy 3:4) and provide for their families (1 Timothy 5:8).  Responsibilities for wives include being “subject to their husbands, as to the Lord” (Ephesians 5:22), and being “workers at home” (Titus 2:3-5), and maintaining a proper focus on the needs of her household (Proverbs 31:27). 

What I notice about these passages is that they speak mostly about how a husband and wife are to relate to each other. They leave a lot of room for flexibility for decisions about household work. Sometimes I wonder if those who set hard-nosed rules about what represents “men’s work” and “women’s work” are influenced by habit and by cultural tradition more than they are by honest application of scriptural principles.  

One theme that came through loud and clear in many of the emails I received is that a marriage thrives when both husband and wife seek to love and serve each other.   Chad Donley wrote in his e-mail, “I see helping in the housework is one of the easiest and most tangible ways to serve my wife. Anything to lessen her burden.”   

Bryan Donovan added, “As the man, my primary responsibility is love.  I have found that my wife receives a great deal of love when I contribute to chores. Particularly the chores that she hates to do. As the man, I bite the bullet, and do the chores I don't like to do for my wife in love. This has been a very successful way for me to shower love on my wife. I confess that this has been a struggle for me to be consistent (when is fighting selfishness not a struggle?) but I work hard, and rely on the grace of God and my wife.”


Does the 50/50 plan work?

We often hear in our culture that marriage should be a “50/50” relationship, where each spouse strives to do his share.   As FamilyLife says in its Weekend to Remember marriage conferences, one big problem with this belief is that it’s impossible to know when your spouse has met you halfway. This is especially true with housework. As Elisha Page wrote in an e-mail. “I believe that there is no way to split anything down the middle as far as housework goes.”

Marriage works when you adopt a “100/100” philosophy, where each of you—as a practical demonstration of your love—is willing to serve the other. God has blessed me with a very loving husband who does not see that there is a division for the daily upkeep of our home,” wrote Mandy Norman. “I am a stay-at-home mom now, but my husband has always helped with domestic duties … My husband is usually the one who cleans the kitchen up after dinner while I finish feeding and cleaning our small children from dinner. If he finds a pile of laundry sitting on the bed, he will help fold and put them away. We are on the same team; there is no place for ‘your job’ or ‘my job.’  It’s ‘our job.’  I cannot end this without saying that my husband has truly mastered the art of loving and serving as the Bible says in Ephesians 5.  He daily looks for ways to ease my stress and help my day be brighter.”


Applying the 100/100 philosophy

So how can we uphold what the Bible says about marital relationships and make good decisions—as a team—about housework? Here are a few practical suggestions:

1. Make a list of all the work required to keep your home and family working. Include all the household tasks, including cleaning, cooking, ironing, yard work, repairs, grocery shopping, paying bills, etc. If you have children, list all your parenting responsibilities as well. (Some wives report that, when they look at the big picture, they are surprised to learn that their husbands do more than they realized to help with household and parenting responsibilities.)

2. Discuss who does different tasks the best and who enjoys certain tasks, and match those with your schedule. You may end up still dividing many tasks according to traditional gender expectations, or you may come up with something more creative. I liked the letter from Venita Davis, who obviously had talked through these issues well with her husband:

My husband and I divided up our domestic chores based on who was better at doing them. For example, typically women do the laundry, but when we got married, we found out he was better at it than I was so laundry became his chore. But he generally doesn't have the "sit still long enough" to fold the clothes, so I tackle that chore. I cook, but he cleans the kitchen afterwards. He loads the dishwasher, but I empty it (this is also helpful to keep dear husband from putting things in the "wrong" place). As the leader of our household, he sets the goals and vision for the family while I manage the budget to support it. We have a tandem approach at tackling chores focused on our strengths and tolerance levels. 

We also divide chores based on consideration and love for each other. When I went back to work outside the home, it was increasingly difficult for me to come home after battling traffic, cook from scratch every night, and still find time to exercise and relax. So my dear husband as a good and loving leader, decided a couple nights a week either he would cook or pick something up.

3.  Train your children to help.   They can help relieve a lot of pressure, and chores are an important part of character training.  Many parents are lazy in this area—rather than take the time and effort to train their kids to work, they just do it all themselves.  They’re missing a great opportunity.  For more information, check out this list of age-appropriate chores.

4. Set realistic standards and priorities together for your home. Consider your season of life, your personality, your lifestyle. My wife, Merry, and I decided long ago that we generally wanted a clean and orderly home, but we would not worry when things get a bit messy. This means that sometimes housework is put aside when we’ve got other priorities—like time spent with family. 

Reader Laura Pearson echoed this philosophy when she advised, “aim for balance and evaluate these chores in the light of the big picture. What's more important: a spotless house or memories made? Doesn't mean you should always play—a healthy balance between work and play ensures everyone has a chance to get their needs met.”

5. Be willing to step in and do all the work when it’s necessary. Life always offers interruptions that require flexibility and sacrifice.   One of you may be sick, or laid up with an ongoing health problem, or required to spend extra hours completing a project at work. When Merry was pregnant with our second daughter, for several months she suffered from constant nausea. She could hardly do anything, which meant that for that period I did everything.   I still remember cooking Thanksgiving dinner for her and our infant daughter, Bethany. Merry was too sick to eat, and Bethany wasn’t hungry for turkey and mashed potatoes, so I got to eat our Thanksgiving meal alone that year!

6. Never forget to express your appreciation to each other.   Alexis McQuown says it best: “I don't think that there has been a meal yet where [my husband] hasn't thanked me for preparing it … and he verbally thanks me for all of the other chores I do, like having his work uniforms clean and folded or cleaning out his lunch pail—the little things. And a big thing he is doing is teaching our child to do the same. My heart melts when my husband gives my son a subtle reminder: 'Josiah, did you thank Mommy for your meal?' When my 2-year-old looks at me and says 'Thanks, Mommy, for my food,’ is there really anything else that needs to be said or done? I am so appreciative that my husband is leaving a lasting legacy of respect for women with my boys.”


“…the love and team work I have seen in my family this past year is remarkable”

I think my favorite email came from Genevieve Vaughn, who wrote that the Marriage Memo on housework provoked a great discussion with her family at the dinner table.  She said her 10-year-old said, “It is definitely Mom who does all the chores.”  But Genevieve reminded her family what they had done over the last year.  While she and her husband were building a new home themselves, she was diagnosed with cancer.  The entire family stepped in to fill the gap:

I have watched my husband and children take over much of my role as a homemaker. My children, all three, have done laundry successfully, dishes, mopped, dusted, helped on the house and in the yard. My husband has constructed this 3,000 square foot home while managing the kids, our current home and working a full time job (he is a soldier and a pilot). Sometimes the house is not as neat as if I were doing it and oftentimes things are put away in different areas than I would put them ... but the love and teamwork I have seen in my family this past year is remarkable. I am very blessed and proud of the family I have.

Now that I am feeling better, my children and husband still pitch in and make sure things are done and ask if I need help.

Now that’s a family that is learning about servanthood. 

How do you divide housework in your family?  Leave a comment below to let us know.  And click here to read comments and ideas from readers of Marriage Memo.

Related articles
Mom's Night Out by Tracey Lanter
Before You Touch Her Body by C.J. Mahaney
A Wife's Job Description by Dennis and Barbara Rainey
Male Leadership and Decision Making by Dennis and Barbara Rainey

Related resources
Love and Respect by Emerson Eggerichs
Rocking the Roles by Robert Lewis and William Hendricks
The Excellent Wife by Martha Peace
The Christian Husband by Bob Lepine


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Anonymous @ 7/12/2008 12:53:40 PM 
My husband has retired and now takes on many houshold chores like laundry, shopping , creating meals, training the dog along with improving his golf score while I work rotating 12 hour shifts (nights and days) and attend college online. I still do the same things with him when I am available but he carries the load when I run out of time and energy and is so supportive of me..I thank God for him daily.
Anonymous @ 7/2/2008 12:07:14 PM 
The bottom line is that marriage is about serving one another. Christ gives us the perfect example of how to love and serve. Even on the very week when Christ was going to be betrayed and denied, He washed all twelve of His disciples feet. Christ could have easily said, "Well Judas and Peter, you are going to betray me and you are going to deny me three times so you really don't deserve to have your feet washed because, after all, what will I get in return." Instead we have the beautiful picture of Christ tenderly washing the feet of the disciples without any contempt, blame, or resentment. It is so easy to get quickly divided in our marriages over who did the last load of laundry or who gave the kids a bath last night. If we truly have a servant's heart like Christ, we look at our spouses and say "Honey, What can I do for you today that would make your life easier?" and make it a constant prayer to ask God to remind us "How can I serve my spouse and family today in a way that represen
Anonymous @ 7/2/2008 7:43:33 AM 
Here's another side: I work full-time in management (which means 50+ hours/week). My wife can stay home with the kids (ages 2 & 5). When I'm at home, virtually all kid responsibilities and household cleaning responsibilities transfer to me. I do 100% of yardwork, car maintenance, painting and other household projects. My wife has a housekeeper because she refuses to do any heavy housework. She does keep things straight and neat in between housekeeper visits and does laundry. When we can't afford a housekeeper, I'm the one who mops, cleans bathrooms, dusts, vacuums, etc. We've discussed my dissatisfaction with this arrangement, but to no avail. I try to keep from being bitter. I have to rely on God ALOT.
Anonymous @ 7/2/2008 5:45:24 AM 
How infantile can people get? This should be a non-issue. My husband and I both have careers; we both live in the same house; we both share the responsbility for keeping the household running. Period, end of issue. 50/50? 100/100? No, more like 75/25 and we change places depending on what's going on in our lives. It's only natural that one spouse would take on additional burden--for a while, when needed--then thankfully give that up. We have emotional ebs and flows--it's when things get seriously out of whack and one spouse is physically/mentally/emotionally checking out all the time that there is problem!
Anonymous @ 7/1/2008 2:21:34 PM 
I love my husband with all my heart. We both work full time, and he has 2 part-time businesses. He wants me to work beside him and help him with those, which I enjoy doing, but at the same time I am supposed to magically do ALL housework, plus a list of personal chores (like phone calls) he wants me to do. I have a few health problems tht limit me. He is constantly adding things for me to do, and constantly angry at me because I can't all this. Our housework doesn't get done, so we can't ever let anyone else in the house.
Anonymous @ 6/30/2008 9:15:22 PM 
Lest you think I'm not looking at the other side... we'd have a whole lot less talk about this issue. The same goes for a man. If a man goes to work as though He is going to work for the Lord, he's not going to complain about having to trod off just to pay the bills and provide for his family. It speaks volumes about one's perspective of living for Christ when "sharing housework" ranks higher than "sharing religous beliefs". Lastly, I'd just like to say that many of the comments left were as, if not more, enlightening than the article itself.
Anonymous @ 6/30/2008 9:12:00 PM 
I think there's somewhat of a PC issue with the story especially with regard to "even when both are full-time employed". I heard either FLT or FOTF a few years back talk about how little financial progress double-income families really made as compared to "stay at home Mom" families. Maybe that should be looked at as a start as perhaps the wife shouldn't be working outside the home in the first place. The author wonders about "those hard nosed rules" regarding "men's work" vs. "women's work" and their Scriptural application/principals vs. habit or cultural influences. There are numerous references to the roles of men and women in the Bible. I think they are clear. Not that it must be legalistic and unflexible, just that the heart of the issue is clear. The woman is to be the "HOME maker" and speaking very frankly, I personally believe if more women looked at their roles and responsibilities as something they are doing FOR the Lord, rather than a burden they must shoulder, we'd h
Anonymous @ 6/30/2008 8:21:01 AM 
I know it seems that most women do most of the housework (which no doubt it true). My wife does most all the housework. But what about the other household responsibilities that must be done as well? Yes, I will occasionally cook and wash dishes but my responsibilities consist of doing home repairs, remodeling, auto repairs, tending the yard and large vegetable garden (we live on 2 acres) as well as taking care of the finances, run a part time business as well as a full time job in addition to church responsibilites. I know the world (TV?) often portrays the husband in a negative light—the couch potato who sits and watches sports in his free time while the wife does all the housework. Well there's a few of us out here who rarely have time to relax. Thank the Lord he foresaw such a problem and set aside one day a week for us to recharge.
Anonymous @ 6/30/2008 6:41:49 AM 
I am married to a wonderful guy with a big heart for others who has been trying to get his business off the ground for 4 years. He travels a lot and is usually tired when he gets home. That means for the last 4 years I have been working, paying the bills, cooking, doing all the housework,(he never helps but is messy and only adds to the work), and lending him money to keep his dream going. When I mention making the bed or putting the dirty dishes in the sink he only smiles, it doesn't get done. I am getting tired of the strain
Anonymous @ 6/29/2008 11:57:53 PM 
My husband works long hours under a huge amount of stress, works at home on freelance work and still helps out with the dishes, making the beds, bathing our little girl and maintaining and cleaning both our cars! Needless to say, I appreciate his help and it shows me that he loves us. We both work and I do the cooking so I seriously appreciate it when he does the dishes afterward. Generally, after Sabbath, he looks after the outside and I look after the inside and if he has time when he's done and I'm not, he helps out inside too! We make a great team - we are after all each other's helpmeets! Cape Town, South Africa
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