A 'rule book' which listed the '30 ways to keep your husband' has been slammed by horrified women.
The list was posted to a Facebook page by an anonymous guest who said it had been posted to a wedding planning group she was part of.
The strict guidelines include 'never to raise your voice at your husband' and to 'provide regular sex so he doesn't stray'.
The unnamed original author claimed many of the 30 points were backed up by passes from the Bible.
Posting the screengrabs to the page, the horrified guest wrote: "Titled '30 ways to keep your husband' and shared in a wedding planning group. So many people were happily tagging their partners!".


The advice quickly racked up over a thousand likes and outraged comments - but it has since been taken down.
Titled 'Every woman should read these godly rules for women', the first rule on behavior reads: 'Never raise your voice for any reason to your husband. It's a sign of disrespect'.
Referring to housework, another reads: 'Never forget that your husband married you, not your maid or anyone else. Do your duties'.
And perhaps the most controversial rule advised women to keep their husband satisfied in the bedroom department - or another woman would.
It read: "Never pretend to be sick for the purpose of denying your husband sex.
"You must give it to him how he wants it. Sex is very important to men, if you keep denying him, it is a matter of time before another woman takes over that duty.

"No man can withstand sex starvation for too long".
But the so-called 'rule book' has been slammed. One woman wrote: 'Wow, look, another man giving advice that no one asked for.'
Another added: 'How ridiculous and to think that out their some women and a lot of men think like this'.
And a woman happily married for more than a decade also dissed the 'rules', writing: 'How ridiculous! I’ve been happily married almost 15 years, I don’t follow any of these and we met in church. Someone really stupid wrote these and people are even stupider for following them.'

Questioning why the rule book was needed, another said: 'What's with these detailed lists? Isn't it enough to want to make your partner happy, and try to work through any disagreements in a respectful way? Then everything else will fall into place.'
Elsewhere one woman suggested the same rule book should be created for men, writing: 'We really need to write something like this for men so they’re less disappointing. Okay thanks.'
Branding it sexist, another added: Works both ways. Gender heavy cr** like this makes me cringe.'