I Didn’t Choose to be a Pastors Wife
This post may contain affiliate links which won't change your price but will share some commission. Read more here.As I was teaching my children to write during my many years as a homeschooling mom, I never dreamed that one day at least one of my kids would enjoy writing like her mom and would wield the pen as a mighty sword. Rachel is so much like me with the way her writing comes from a well of deep emotions. Inspiration strikes and lives can be touched when we allow ourselves to be vulnerable in those deep places in our hearts that hold sacred truths.
Thank you, Rachel, for your advice for the young pastors wife and reminding us that it is a blessing when we serve God first and our husband second.
My husband and I recently began counseling a soon to be married couple who are going into the ministry. We had them over for dinner one night and they were picking our brains for advice and honest answers regarding the good and bad of church ministry.
It made me reflect on the path my life had taken.
Some girls grow up dreaming of being a pastor’s wife.
Seeing her fantasy of baking meals for the sick, owning a house with a white picket fence and parenting 2.5 kids, all while masterfully juggling being a stay at home and leading the women’s bible study at church and never yelling at any of her 2.5 kids.
I didn’t have that vision (although I can’t deny I’d love a house with a white picket fence…or any fence if we’re being realistic.) I knew I wanted desperately to be a wife and a mom but having watched my own mother’s heart broken and my dad overly criticized in their church careers I wanted no part of that life. That didn’t mean I didn’t want to play an active role in whatever church I was attending, but I was not a fan of the junk that came with ministry.
I didn’t choose to be a pastors wife.
I’m pretty sure that’s why God decided to pick Donny for me.
You see, God has quite the sense of humor.
My husband’s title is “worship pastor,” but for all intents and purposes it should be far more encompassing, like “worship pastor/graphic designer/janitor/secretary/accountant.” He wears many hats and most of those hats no one will ever see or know about.
I didn’t choose to spend many nights alone because he has church functions or meetings that have to happen when other people are off their 9-5. jobs My husband doesn’t stop at 5pm…or even 8pm…or even 10pm…
I didn’t choose to have the stress of him not getting full paychecks for months on end because the church wasn’t stepping up to the plate. To wonder if our (at the time) unborn chid was a wrong decision, that we couldn’t financially handle it.
I didn’t choose a road that meant I would watch my husband’s character be attacked, would watch his heart break when church members he deeply cared about left the church. Those same people going on about their days as if he had never invested in their life while he was left behind with a deep heart wound.
I didn’t choose to have phases of our church life that would feel so very, very alone.
As I looked into the faces of this young couple we were ministering to I began to think about the things I would have told the younger me when I married Donny.
I would tell myself that I didn’t choose to be a pastors wife, I chose to be DONNY’S wife.
My identity does not lie in his career path.
I would tell myself that even though he may be gone some nights his schedule has given him precious hours of each day with our son. Their bond is something I could never replace and they would not be as close if he had a job that restricted him from being at home for chunks of the day.
I would tell myself that my faith needed to be strong to weather the financial storms of church plants. That I should learn sooner vs later I can only be controlled by allowing myself to be overwhelmed by fear, anxiety, and worry. Key word: allowing. Those chains don’t bind me anymore (or at least most days. Habits are hard to break.)
I would tell myself that I have the honor of loving a man as selfless as Donny, that though his heart may break over and over, it’s only because he loves and cares so deeply for people.
I have the honor of watching him bring a congregation to their knees in worship on Sunday mornings, ushering in the Holy Spirit with his passionate prayers. I also get to watch our son see his Daddy on stage and light up – so completely engaged watching his Daddy lead worship. I hear his sweet baby voice add his cooing to the body of believers in song and I feel as if my heart could burst.
I would tell myself to shift my focus from being lonely to finding MY own ministry. And no, that doesn’t have to be in the church! I know I just heard you gasp when you read that, didn’t you? Its true! My identity lies in Christ and not my husband – I have my own talents I was designed to use. I have my own circle of people I have been called to invest in that may or may not attend our church. And that is OK! (This one has taken me 4 years to figure out)
And you know what else I would tell myself? That I am blessed. So very blessed.
I get to watch my husband follow his dreams – a calling on his life. What greater thing could we teach our son but to follow his own dreams, too? We have a church family who loves us. We are in a community that NEEDS us. And I get to share a bond with my husband that only those in the ministry would understand. A bond that goes beyond the emotional, physical, and mental realms but that dives into the spiritual realms.
I am called to be his biggest supporter. Not because I’m a pastors wife, but because I am DONNY’S wife. And he just happens to be a pastor too. I wouldn’t have it any other way.
Check out more of Rachel’s wonderful writing in these posts:
Advice for New Dads (Rachel and Donny)
it is tough to be a pastor I think. You get people within the congregation who project their past hurt on to you and screw you over at the first chance available, when it is never fully or truly about you, it is about their need to punish someone for someone in their lives in the past, people who they could not get to.
However, it can work both ways, pastors can be bullies too. Pastors themselves can project their past hurts onto other members of the congregations, and take our their unforgiveness on others. A few years ago I went to this church’s introduction session, there was this guy who like to joke around, and yes, he was interruptive. However, the pastor could have handled it politely and assertively, by saying something like ” you are making it very hard for me by interrupting me, can you stop please” instead he said ” don’t you give me a hard time” Which was rude on his part, and I know he well enough to know he wouldn’t appreciate it if he is on the receiving end of it. Though the impression I get is that he wasn’t repentant about it.
For me, in end of the day, pastor are not perfect, and we as congregation need to cut them some slacks.
However, many pastors seem to take that as mean ” if I sin against you, it is because I am not perfect” in another word, I can’t and should not be made to take responsibility for it, hence I don’t have to make an effort to change, because being a pastor is too hard?
No, that is not acceptable, if a pastor sinned against others, he should man up and say, ” I was wrong, I take full responsibility for it, and I am sorry. I will ask God to help me and make real effort to change, and if I do it again, please call me out on it and I will give you an apology ”
if that is the pastor’s attitude, then I don’t care if he slipped again and again, because he has shown true repentance rather than just want to be left off the hook.
as for your husband being attacked. All I can say is when we are being attacked we need to examine ourselves before God first to see if we are truly at fault, or at least partially at fault. and if not, then great.
but we should not deflect those accusations immediately and become defensive.
Not saying above apply to your personal situation, I don’t know you, just a general statement
I hope this comment is not going to be censored, because that itself says something is quite right on your part.
Ps–You and Hubby are quite adorable! Blessings on your journey!
The description you wrote is fitting as well for a professional coach’s wife….the criticism, heartbreak of betrayal, lack of sufficient pay, loneliness, throw in relocating….. it too is a thankless occupation/ministry that we recently transitioned out of. I love how you wrote this. It is something I didn’t understand off the bat. You make a clear point that a relationship with Christ is first, and our husband next..being a support….21 years of working this out daily has grown our marriage and our trust in Him immensely. Thank you for sharing how to have the right perspective. Xoxoaimee
Good morning Rachel,
That was beautifully written. Being a Pastor’s wife is not always going to be easy but as you said, the hours that he works has certainly allowed him some good time at home with your sweet little boy. Thank you for sharing this heartfelt story of what it is like being married to a Pastor.
What a wonderful reminder to people and how they treat others. Thank you Rachel.