I was reading Mental Floss and they linked to an article in Time magazine (March, 2007) that focuses on pastor’s wives. Here’s the most interesting part:
Eight in 10 pastors’ wives say they feel unappreciated or unaccepted by
their husbands’ congregations, according to surveys by the Global
Pastors Wives Network (GPWN); the same number wish their husbands would
choose another profession. "Wives’ issues" is the No. 1 reason pastors
leave their ministries. The divorce rate among ministers and their
wives is 50%, no better than that of the general public.
Ouch.
It would be interesting to see if female pastors’ husbands feel the same kind of pressure. I seriously doubt it since our society tends to assume that men will/should work, so a female pastor’s husband probably doesn’t have the same set of expectations heaped upon him. According to the article 70% of pastors wives choose to work, but the tone of the article implies that the working doesn’t relieve the expectations of them to support their husbands’ ministries.
I guess what this means is next time you’re in church you need to make sure you take a moment to shake the pastor’s wife’s hand before you shake his and head out the door.
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I think that there is probably a large cultural difference between churches that have women pastors and those that don’t ordain women. The former would likely impose fewer expectations on their pastor’s husband.
Full disclosure: I am the son of a pastor, from a denomination that considered Southern Baptists to be liberal. Those congregations brought a lot of expectations about the entire pastor’s family.
And your final point is a very good one: spend a little time getting to know/encouraging your pastor’s spouse.