The Dilemma of a Pastor’s wife

This is a guest post from Dr. Abigail O., who loves God and her dear husband, while also juggling her responsibilities at the church(as a pastor’s wife), her work place and her precious three kids.

The Pastor’s wife? Dilemma? I thought she had the best job in the world  – always smiling as she stands beside her husband. Her husband is held in high esteem, she is always so composed and her children are always on their best behavior.

I am a pastor’s wife, albeit areluctant one. I am also a career woman with three children. As a pastor’s wife, I have observed many sisters/comrades whom I admire. I have to ask: What is happening in the world of Christian service? The expectations placed on the pastor’s wife have changed with time. It is in these expectations, in my humble opinion, lie the most critical challenges of being a pastor’s wife.

The expectations include:

  1. Good dressing (adequate, chaste, yet not the same Sunday clothes every week).
  2. Excellent upbringing of her children (well-mannered, smiling, courteous kids who don’t run around the church, who always read the Bible, children who are always the best in Sunday school, etc.).
  3. Being able to smile and greet everyone: anytime and anywhere (including times you look like a mess in supermarket queues, and even to total strangers, as they might be your husband’s missing sheep, or disgruntled sheep with a tendency to bite.).
  4. Provision of food/hospitality to everyone who comes by the church. (Thankfully, my dear husband, being a fussy host, prefers to eat out, so that saves the endless hours of cooking, washing and making sure the house is spick and span.)
  5. Adequate time for everyone, more than the 24 hours that our dear Lord has allocated for each of us.
  6. Being patient, for the pastor’s time belongs to everyone, and whatever morsel of time left is for his wife and family.
  7. Accepting the many ‘helpful’ offers of advice from sister so-and-so who feels that her wise counsel should be adhered to for the sake of the kingdom (not sure if it is for the Lord’s kingdom or her own kingdom – a bit fuzzy).

This list is exhaustive.

I must confess that some of these expectations are valid and needed for the nurturing and tending of the church that God has entrusted to the pastor. However, there are many unrealistic expectations no human being can fully rise up to. The dilemma of a pastor’s wife is the balance of wisdom, experience and confidence to know herself and her abilities. In many situations, these expectations are diffused by the pastor as he leads the flock.

However, if the pastor is not able to do that, the victims are usually his closest and dearest ones, his wife and children. I think it should be noted that there are many instances of pastor’s children being reluctant to serve the Lord. Why? It’s likely that they have seen too many ugly situations of congregation members manipulating situations to suit their purposes.

Church members will leave the church, fight the pastor, or badmouth him. His wife will also be a target, a victim of the crossfire. When the pastor is firefighting all the time, he hardly has time for her or the children – he barely has time to read the Bible! Whatever troubles him could either be shared with her (sometimes burdening her beyond her God-given abilities to carry it) or kept quiet causing tension in the line of communication.

She will, then, find her husband huddled up in meetings, forming strategies with some leaders to counter the onslaught from restless, unhappy sheep that the burden of the family is now entrusted to the wife. She tries to keep everything moving, keeping a cheerful face for the sake of the children while wondering what is going on. She prays short SOS prayers, “God, get us out of this situation. HELP!”

After many years of being a pastor’s wife, I am glad to report that with the wonderful and abundant grace of God, the wisdom of experience, greater self-confidence, and better balanced communication through many hours spent understanding my husband’s heart, the problems do not look so enormous or insurmountable.

One thing I have learnt is to accept the role and responsibilities God has entrusted me. I embrace it and work on it. It is a lifelong process of learning from our loving and patient Master. I started by involving myself in the life of the church, doing the little I could. I stopped saying that the pastor is the one with the gift and calling. I stopped thinking, “Who am I to think I can pray or worship lead or counsel?” I realized I enjoyed working behind-the-scenes; it gave me great satisfaction. And as I was faithful with the little I had, God has given more. Communication with my spouse, my pastor, has also helped a lot. We would drive or walk around on certain nights, spending precious hours understanding the struggles faced, and learning to communicate in a non-judgmental manner.

Today, looking back on those years, I can gladly tell you that being a pastor’s wife is fulfilling. I would not exchange this God-given position and portion for anything in the world. It will never be a bed of roses, but with the Lord who is in and with me, I can be a blessing to the people He has graciously placed in my paths. I have started to enjoy the fruit of our labor. The young people we have nurtured are now serving, our children see the faithfulness of God, and the congregation has tempered their expectations and judgments. Glory to God!

Note to Pastors: Men of God, please love your wife as Christ loves the church.

Spend quality time with her, cherish her and her contributions, and appreciate her effort.

Don’t put her on guilt trips by making her read commentaries to test her spirituality, don’t push her into ministry to fill the gap, or put her down, trying to mould her into the person she is not.

God has made her unique.

She may share many of your values and dreams, but learn to allow and trust God to lead her and mould her the way He desires. After all, He is her Heavenly Papa too.

Amen.

Update: Read more on this topic here: http://theresurgence.com/2011/03/21/loving-the-pastors-wife

Question: How much of this have you experienced or seen?

What are your expectations from your Pastor’s wife? Are they realistic?

  • Bernadine Wicket

    Very good post. Whenever one of our pastors are ready to leave and the next one takes over, everyone comes forward and says a few nice things about the pastor. But a couple of years back my young daughter wrote a poem on ‘the pastor’s wife’ at one of these send-offs and I really began to slowly realize how much these precious women have to sacrifice and give.

    May God bless all u dear women out there out of His abundance!!!

    • Anonymous

      wow thats sweet.

  • Anonymous

    I agree.

  • Anonymous

    Wow, i’m sure that took a lot of courage. I hope God continues to strengthen you as you walk with all your heart fixing your eyes on Jesus. U r right on the Bible college part, there are no Theological schools for a Pastors wife. But thank God for the Holy Spirit our teacher!

  • Chosen me!

    Also would like to add one more thing is that, we should stop comparing the pastor’s wife with the Pastor. Not necessary she be gifted or anointed like the pastor, so the wives seems to be under pressure of that too.
    Remember pastor’s wives are unique in their own ways.
    I pray this blog will open the eyes of many believer’s.

  • Chosen me!

    Also would like to add one more thing is that, we should stop comparing the pastor’s wife with the Pastor. Not necessary she be gifted or anointed like the pastor, so the wives seems to be under pressure of that too.
    Remember pastor’s wives are unique in their own ways.
    I pray this blog will open the eyes of many believer’s.

    • Anonymous

      thats a good thought!

  • Suresh

    Read the following article:
    graceidarajan.blogspot.com/2011/02/spoilage-or-salvage-of-marriage.html

  • http://twitter.com/musiqchild007 Jherrel Peters

    Oh dear…if any girl reads this I’ll die a lonely man God forbid…lol. I always knew that being the First Lady is a lot of work but this article gave me a great insight. So I thank God for 2 things. 1) That I was born a man. (Praise Him! :D ) and 2) For all the pastor’s wives who faithfully support their husbands without complain or regret! God bless them!

  • RevDr Vanitha Rajkumar

    As a pastor’s wife I had to undergo so much and had learned so many things… still learning… surely they are rewarded by God for their sacrificial life.. simply to live with a Pastor itself is a challenge.. And Pastor’s wives are also women who have feelings but most of the times become numb in order to fulfill His purpose.. but again I say in this world also they are rewarded if they are sincere… this is what I feel!

    Sorry about the typing errors in the previous comment. God bless!

  • Marilena

    I felt to say in completion to my previous comment that though it can be very hard at times, the joy of making a difference in people’s lives outweighs all the pain. Though I can’t imagine also working and having children at the same time as pastoring! Someone must be missing out on something somewhere! But the sacrifice is all worth it because you are spending your time bearing fruit for eternity, it is a very priviledged position.

    I agree with her though that sometimes time is sacrificed with the family. I remember at one particular time when my husband started a big ministry, we had office and home in one (because of lack of funds) and it was 6 days a week filled with people. I had some urgent administration things to discuss with him about some of our finances and I ended up out of frustration asking my husband if I can have an appointment with him!!! Which he did, cause we are very good friends and we love spending time with each other. But it can get like that. After about 9 months of office and home in one we were peopled out!!! We did not want to see another human being (well, more in our emotions, not our spirits), so we went away for a number of days. At another time we worked so hard in the church work (Sunday is the hardest day for a pastor because of the church service and that is involved in organising that) that we knew we needed a break. So we went out of the city and guess what we did: woke up, ate breakfast, slept, ate lunch, slept, ate dinner, walked a bit, slept all night, for 3 days! When we returned we still were struggling to even talk properly, so we figured out it is dangerous to go to the prayer meeting cause who knows what we will say there :-) ! Well, we learned to take Mondays off, really off, though some church people tried to break that boundary as well.

    Have a look at these 2 links, confessions of a pastor’s wife, to add to this article:

    http://spiritledwoman.charismamag.com/index.php/newsletters/spiritled-woman-e-magazine/23728–confessions-of-an-apathetic-pastors-wife

    http://www.charismamag.com/index.php/newsletters/spiritled-woman-e-magazine/23473-healthy-relationships-confessions-from-a-pastors-wife?format=pdf

    • Anonymous

      Thanks for the share Marilena, its good to know!

  • Binsurobinson

    well . ok ///insightful. never knew this part of the picture.. will take special efforts to make sure i dont add to their insecurities.
    appreciate for addressing a very pressing need . going by the comments i read.. God Bless.

    • Anonymous

      “will take special efforts to make sure i dont add to their insecurities.” Thats a good response Binsu. May we all remember that.

  • Marilena

    This is so true… from the outside it looks like an easy comfortable life, from the inside, it is exhausting, emotionally painful many times, discouraging at times when you invest time in people who then go back in the world or sin in some way, painful when other pastors use cunning methods to steal the sheep from the church, those who when they were spiritual babies you changed their nappies and fed them VERY often the spiritual milk to the point of exhaustion, the discouragement that comes from spiritual attacks as well as from not seeing progress at times in the ministry and on top of it all, those who should be thankful for the sacrifice you make to help them in God turn against you and hate you simply because you are holding the standards of God’s work against their newly exposed sin.

    But one thing I have learned that changed my outlook on everything. Every person God sent you, even though in a phase of rebellion, they are people entrusted by God to you to help mold, and one day you will give account for them. You might not get them to perfection in the few months they allow you to work with them before they leave the church offended, but the words you spoke can remain in them and produce a change later, though you might see little now.

    Also, what I have found the hardest, is the loneliness that comes with the job. Because you give your heart and soul to the group of people called the church you pastor, you have no time left for building deep friendships with others who are doing the same kind of work like you, and also because of the competition between churches at times, they don’t even want to be your friend that much. So even though you are surrounded by so many people, you can feel alone in the crowd when you are at a low point and can’t turn to those you disciple to ask them to encourage you, since they are looking to you to do that for them.

    Also, pleeease support your pastor well financially. We were ok, thanks be to God, but my sister-in-law’s parents were pastors and not supported financially well by the church, they had 5 children. As a result, the mother had to go and work and the children HATED it and hated the church for doing this to their family. They also saw a lot of the behind the scenes behaviors of phony Christians while fighting with the pastor and now only 1 of them are serving God, the rest don’t want to have anything to do with church.

  • Hoyilikiho

    felt my heart beat so strong making me think that being a house wife is not an easy task,but for those wives who have made tis kind of big effort today we have seen that it bears an healthy fruits,and a good wife is a God perfec creation and a blessing for the man,i am not a married women yet it touched my heart so much after i read this,questioning myself that will i b able to be a perfect house maker n shower my luv for my husband n my kids,will i be able to do tis task,all i pray to god is give me strength and guide me,thank u for sharing such an healthy encouragement and making us realise to pray for tis,

    • Anonymous

      Knowledge of the reality with prayer should work! God bless you Hoyilikiho.

  • Edelbertk

    The Perfect Pastor

    From what I’ve seen in many churches, this church joke is only a slight exaggeration!

    The Perfect Pastor preaches exactly 10 minutes. He condemns sin roundly, but never hurts anyone’s feelings. He works from 8 a.m. until midnight, and is also the church janitor.

    The Perfect Pastor makes $40 a week, wears good clothes, drives a good car, buys good books, and donates $30 a week to the church. He is 29 years old and has 40 years’ worth of experience. Above all, he is handsome.

    The Perfect Pastor has a burning desire to work with teenagers, and he spends most of his time with the senior citizens. He smiles all the time with a straight face because he has a sense of humor that keeps him seriously dedicated to his church. He makes 15 home visits a day and is always in his office to be handy when needed.

    The Perfect Pastor always has time for church meetings and all of its committees, never missing the meeting of any church organization. And he is always busy evangelizing the unchurched.

    The Perfect Pastor is always in the next town over!

    If your pastor does not measure up, simply send this notice to six other churches that are tired of their pastor too. Then bundle up your pastor and send him to the church at the top of your list. If everyone cooperates, in one week you will receive 1, 643 pastors. One of them should be perfect.

    Have faith in this letter. One church broke the chain and got its’ old pastor back in less than three months.

    • Anonymous

      I had a good laugh pastor.. .good one…

  • Leo

    Very true & very useful..
    Bro Shyju, it was a good thought to publish this article. God bless you

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Anupa-Shettigar/1224734095 Anupa Shettigar

    Wow! amazing truth …..im glad all these were revealed hope people change expectation list from a Pastor and his wife and family after reading this.Thank you for this post

    • QRI_Musings

      We are all in need of more grace. Thank God that it is available to us in abundance. Thank you for your feedback! God bless!