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Clergy Families

GOD’S CALL IN ABRAM’S CONFUSING WORLD AND OURS

By March 1, 2019No Comments

ABRAHAM’S SACRIFICE

While we may read with horror the story of Abraham’s near sacrifice of Isaac, most pastors know that there is a sense in which their family pays a heavy price for having responded to God’s call to ministry. While it’s not a physical sacrifice, there are poignant echoes in the story of what a pastor’s family sometimes experiences. Other professionals can also become consumed by their career at the expense of their family, but that doesn’t make it right. Think about what some of the sacrifices are that members of your family experiences.

MAKE A LIST

Make a list of at least five possibilities. Try to be brutally honest as you create such a list.

Your list might include the long hours, the lack of weekends, the bitter joke when the calendar suggests that others have a three-day weekend, the emotional stress of the pressures of ministry, and the modest salary that comes with the profession. Add to that the experience of living in a fishbowl where everyone around you assumes the permission to criticize not only the pastor but family members about their behaviors. Sometimes the pastor also expects certain behavior on the part of members of the family.

CONGREGATIONAL EXPECTATIONS

While this has eased in the last few years, there are still churches that assume that the pastor’s spouse will be both active and better informed than an average member. At the same time, many churches are not willing to elect them to the session or other positions of responsibility that their gifts and skills might suggest. Even if they are on such church boards, their decisions and comments often are seen as reflections of the pastor rather then just the opinions of another member. Children may feel the pressure to behave in specific ways, be active in church school and youth groups, etc.

WHO PASTORS THE PASTOR’S FAMILY

Also, to whom do members of a pastor’s family go when they need spiritual counseling or are struggling with questions of faith. Not only do we have to ask the question of who pastors the pastor but who pastors the pastor’s family. And what does the pastor or church do to assist in supporting the family as they respond to the unusual dynamics of being a part of a pastor’s family.

Continued in the next blog. this is an excerpt from “clergy family health” Volume 6 of the nine-volume series healthy clergy make healthy congregations.  

http://bit.ly/clergyfamilyhealth

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