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What Are 10 Things That Might Help a Pastor and His Wife Stay Married and In Ministry?

I chose the words, “might help” carefully for these are not at all 10 rules that will keep your marriage and ministry from imploding. But, these 10 things might create some needed conversation with you and your spouse to keep your marriage and ministry pressing on for a bit longer.

Marriage is hard enough, but add ministry into the mix and you have a recipe for a potential mess. My work with pastors and their families cause me to see a lot of the messiness that exists in pastor’s homes. There’s plenty of the same mess in my own home. The combined stress of marriage in ministry is a unique situation that demands an intentionality to keep a marriage or ministry from imploding.

Because of this, here are 10 things to consider that might help a pastor and his wife stay married and in ministry:

1. Be safe for each other in an unsafe church. The reality is most churches are unsafe for a pastor and his wife to be open and vulnerable. It is a real gift when a marriage can be a safe place for both a pastor and his wife to be themselves.

2. Establish boundaries together and keep them. The pastor’s wife is usually the one with the most discernment on setting boundaries with the church. Pastor’s listen to your wife on these boundaries and work together to keep them.

3. Learn to rest. Take all your vacation time the church gives you. But even if you do that, it doesn’t mean you will rest well. Learning to rest is learning to let go of all church matters and burdens while gone.

4. Carefully listen to each other. I have spent most of my marriage not listen well to my wife. I am aware of this epic failure and now trying to change that. Listen to each other so you both know when there are cries for help when drowning in ministry and life.

5. Laugh a lot as a family. Marriage and ministry are both very serious and heavy so much of the time. Make sure you have times where you family is gathered around the dinner table or on the floor playing games or watching a movie laughing and engaged together. It is life-giving to all.

6. Encourage your children to be themselves. Pastor’s kids feel such pressure to be who everyone thinks they are supposed to be. Encourage your children to be who they are with you and the church. Try to embrace the good, bad, and the ugly of it.

7. Be willing to walk away from your ministry. I constantly battle ministry being an idol in my life. It is amazing how much more enjoyable ministry actually is when I realize it doesn’t define my value or who I am. I have a daily gut-check on this by asking, “Can I walk away today if needed and still be alright?” I have found that freedom makes ministry sweeter.

8. Find deep meaningful safe friendships. My wife and I learned some painful lessons through our almost 20 years married and in ministry. One is, we cannot meet all of each other’s needs. Find deep meaningful friendships where you can be yourself and bring your darkest struggles. Those friends might be in your church, but I would also look outside your church for those safe friendships.

9. Understand your roles. Your wife in not your fellow pastor/elder. Don’t treat her like one. She is not to carry all the burdens you are called by the Chief Shepherd to carry. Be mindful of this as you bring your ministry burdens home to your marriage.

10. Love Jesus the most. If you love Jesus more than your marriage and your ministry, that is a wonderful, centered, and freeing place to be. Your spouse will fail you. Your church will most certain disappoint you. Jesus is always with you and never fails you. He will be there to care for you if your marriage and ministry implodes at some point.

I chose the words, “might help” carefully for these are not at all 10 rules that will keep your marriage and ministry from imploding. But, these 10 things might create some needed conversation with you and your spouse to keep your marriage and ministry pressing on for a bit longer.

Brian Croft is Senior Pastor of Auburndale Baptist Church in Louisville, Kentucky. This article is from his blog, Practical Shepherding, and is used with permission.

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