How to Thrive as a Pastor's WifeSample
Day Six: Locating your Church
Throughout the decades I’ve been a pastor’s wife, my “closeness” to the church has varied wildly. When we were newly married and didn’t yet have children, I enjoyed being intimately involved in everything my husband did. After we had children, although my heart was very much still in ministry, logistically I couldn’t be as involved. And as our church became established and our leadership team expanded, I could once again choose what I’d do according to God’s leading, my life season, and my own interests.
Having served in all these ways, I’ll tell you that the early church planting days were both the easiest and hardest for me in all our years of ministry. They were the hardest because, as any church planting wife will tell you, the work was endless, exhausting, and uncertain. But they were also the easiest because I didn’t have to wrestle with my relationship to the church—my life and the church felt one and the same. With such little separation, I didn’t have much choice, and that lack of choice blurred the lines so drastically and became so normal that years later I’m still learning how to have a healthy relationship to our church.
I’m reminded what a healthy distinction between the church and me looks like, and that this distinction is right and good. I am not the church and the church is not me; my identity, in other words, is not defined by the church and my role within it. My emotions don’t have to rise and fall according to what is happening within the church body. The church is not my job.
But the church is certainly a gift to me, and I have a place in it.
I am one member of the body that makes up my specific church. I join with the other members to corporately worship God, exhibit love to the world, experience sanctification, and use my gifts to edify my fellow saints. Psalm 121 reminds me that, whenever I enter the house of the Lord, my mind is to be set on Him, anticipating what work He’d like to do in my heart that day. His Word reminds me that I am not alone. He will lead and help me to love others well. He will move among us as a church.
He alone is God, worthy of worship.
How do you love and care for God’s people while also maintaining a healthy distance from what is not yours to carry?
Scripture
About this Plan
Every pastor's wife is a faithful servant and leader in her own right. Christine Hoover knows firsthand the unique struggles and opportunities afforded a pastor's wife—she's been filling that role for more than twenty years. Coming alongside as an understanding friend, she offers encouragement and guidance to those in ministry, recognizing the distinctives of our calling and the necessity for strong relationships that help each of us to thrive.
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