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cripture provides no list of
qualifications for a pastor’s wife. Pastors and deacons are covered
in 1 Timothy 3 and Titus 1, but the pastor’s wife? She doesn’t show
up, at least in terms of suitability for an office.
Nevertheless,
some churches have their own set of unwritten qualifications for the
pastor’s wife, many of which create unrealistic expectations and abundant
misconceptions. These can place undue pressure on the wife of a
pastor. This shouldn’t be the case, however, since Scripture knows
no such formal category.
Here are
five popular misconceptions about the pastor’s wife:
1. YOU HAVE
IT ALL TOGETHER.
Some will assume you’ve worked
through all your issues. Sure, you may struggle, but not with anything “major”
(whatever that may be). Oh, sister, may I encourage you? On this side of
heaven, we will always have battle to do with our flesh. Will the Father give
relief at times? Yes! But “If we say we have no sin, we deceive
ourselves, and the truth is not in us” (1
John 1:8).
We’re off the hook, not to sin so that grace may abound but to live a life
pleasing to God—a life bought by the perfect blood of Christ, not our
own blood, sweat, and tears to “get it right.”
Three years into Matt’s
position as pastor of The
Village Church, I entered a 12-step program.
Let me quell the questions: I didn’t “work the steps” because he
became a pastor. I needed to recover from the addiction of being a good girl
and performing my way into God’s good graces. I said with my lips that
salvation is by grace alone through faith alone. I even thought I believed
this. But in my heart of hearts, I functioned as if it all depended on me. With
my life I said, “God, thanks for saving me, but I’ve got it from here.”
So one Thursday night at
the church, in front of those who only knew me as their pastor’s
wife, I stood up to say, “There’s something the Lord is asking me to
surrender.” The weight of what people would think of me nearly glued me to my
seat and kept me from standing. But I felt something incredible the moment
I rose to my feet. I felt weightlessness. I felt relief. And there were
tears—lots and lots of tears. In all my anxiety over what the
people would think of me—the gasps and whispers I thought I’d hear—I
instead found fellowship. I wasn’t untouchable or unrelatable. I became
real to them—in real need of a real Saviour.
2. YOUR GIFTING
SHOULD MATCH YOUR HUSBAND’S.
Although you and your husband
are one flesh, you are not the same person. God made you differently. And yet
He knew what He was doing in putting both of you together. He doesn’t make
mistakes.
By God’s grace, be the best
“you” that you can be. Do you enjoy hosting people in your home? Do you love to
teach? Do you come alive when you sit across from another woman pouring
out her heart?
Matt is an exceptional
preacher and teacher. I’ve received and accepted multiple invitations to speak
and teach, but it’s not a burning desire within me. I say “no” more
often than “yes.” Leading worship, on the other hand, is something I eagerly
desire. It excites me to lead 5 or 500 people in song. Matt loves to sing, but
you don’t want him leading worship in song. Trust me.
I am not Matt and Matt is not
me. Praise Jesus.
3. KISS
HAVING CLOSE FRIENDS GOODBYE.
There’s wisdom in carefully
choosing with whom you disclose your hopes, desires, and struggles, especially
when doing so sheds light on your husband’s flaws. Not everyone can handle such
information with grace and maturity. Don’t buy the lie though, that you can’t
have close friends. Doing so will only isolate you and your husband from good
fellowship with other believers. Everyone in your church should know you and
your husband are sinners, not because you blatantly participate in sinful
acts but because of 1 John
1:8.
My closest friends for the
past 12 years have been either on staff, married to church staff, or
covenant members of our church. I also have dear friends in ministry in other
cities, states, and even countries, but there’s something special
about having day-in and day-out friends. They can see the
inconsistencies in my life and can speak into them.
Have there been awkward
seasons and disagreements? Yes. But God’s steadfast love has shone the
brightest when we’ve addressed the awkward, and generously
forgiven and loved one another in the middle of the mess.
4. YOU MUST
BE FRIENDS WITH EVERYONE.
Even if you’re not a
pastor’s wife, how deeply are you able to know everyone? It’s impossible
to be the same kind of friend to everyone. You can try, but most—if not
all—of your relationships will only be an inch deep. We are limited! We
practice humility when we acknowledge we can’t be close friends
with everyone and must trust the Lord to meet that need in both us
and them.
That said, if your friend
circle is so tight that it hasn’t changed in years, examine your heart. Is your
group of friends hospitable or alienating? You can’t control what others think,
but you can be warm, amiable, and flexible. And you can protect yourself
from trading depth for width.
5. YOUR KIDS
ARE THE MOST SANCTIFIED IN YOUR CHURCH.
Faith isn’t an inheritable
trait. Although our homes should model what Scripture outlines for a family,
our children are individuals with their own faith. As my husband often says, we
can put all the kindling we can find around their hearts—family devotions,
discussing Scripture as we go, modelling forgiveness by asking for and giving
it freely, expressing our own need for Jesus, praying for their
salvation—but it takes the Holy Spirit to ignite the flame of faith.
Our kids are like anyone
else’s. They’re going to fail. They will choose poorly. My kids are at church a
lot. They know all the nooks and crannies, all the stashes of mints and
crackers. The staff knows them, and they know the staff. This comfort factor
often gets them in trouble. Unlike most of the non-staff kids at church, mine
let their guards down. They don’t always feel the need to be on their best behaviour.
We train them to be respectful, but they have their bad moments—we all do. My
kids need Jesus just as much as the next kid.
Whatever misconceptions
you may face, sister, remember that your ultimate identity is in
Christ’s performance as your Saviour, not in your performance as
a pastor’s wife.
By: TPW
Hmmm, ok well said, accepted no one is perfect not even a pastor's wife, just dat most pastor's wife dis days are so terrible, they are the ones who directly condemns u after the gossips, a pastor's wife is expected to calm tins down, but most of them will just add fuel to a burning wood making tins even harder on an individual.
ReplyDeleteSo if u ask me, i believe wotever is worth doing, is worth doing well.
A pastor's wife is hereby advised to tink tins through, pray abt it n ask GOD for guidance on how to handle anytin tabled b4 her.
May GOD help us all to always do d right tin. AMEN