The Apostle Peter
1 Peter 3:5BSB·traditional attribution

For this is how the holy women of the past adorned themselves. They put their hope in God and were submissive to their husbands,

John Calvin Reformed @genevareformer

He sets before them the example of pious women, who sought for spiritual adorning rather than outward meretricious ornaments. But he mentions Sarah above all others, who, having been the mother of all the faithful, is especially worthy of honor and imitation on the part of her sex.

Matthew Henry Presbyterian @wholebiblehenry

The apostle having treated of the duties of subjects to their sovereigns, and of servants to their masters, proceeds to explain the duty of husbands and wives. I. Lest the Christian matrons should imagine that their conversion to Christ, and their interest in all Christian privileges, exempted them from subjection to their pagan or Jewish husbands, the apostle here tells them, 1. In what the duty of wives consists.

Commenting on 1 Peter 3:1-7

John Gill Reformed Baptist @doctorgill

For after this manner in the old time,.... In ages past, the years of many generations, since the time that God created man upon earth; in the times before the flood, and after it; in the times of the patriarchs, judges, kings, and prophets of Israel, under the Old Testament dispensation.