I have kept an eye on the news regarding a woman who disappeared from a conference about three months ago. There is still no new information, but there is a current article regarding the affects of her disappearance on her friends and family here.
No one really knows if something happened to her or if she ran away. If it is the former, I pray she is safely in the arms of Jesus; if the latter, I can understand why.
When we are at our best, raising a family, caring for our spouses, doing well at our occupations and managing a home is a daunting task. Add to that mix falling into a pit of addiction and/or illness of any kind, especially mental illness, and there is great potential for anyone to completely lose it. If a family is involved in ministry, a microscope is placed over their family that can't be fully understood unless it is experienced personally. There is pressure to look like "you are living in the fullness and freedom of salvation," all the time. Any struggles within the family and that pastor might be accused of their home "not being in order," which is a scriptural requirement for being involved in ministry. In short, getting caught up in the struggles of a fallen world can cost your husband his job.
Even if help is desired, where does she go? Is there another woman in the church she can trust? Maybe. But, what if she's wrong and her personal stuff becomes fodder for gossip? If she seeks professional help, what if someone in the community finds out she's seeking counseling? What conclusions might they jump to?
Yeah, I can fully understand why someone living like this might want to run away.
Lesson: Women of the church, strive to be a safe place for your pastor's wife to be herself. Such trust is built over time. Don't push. Trust her enough to confide in her, too! Don't just act like a friend to her, BE a friend to her. Write her encouraging notes from time to time. Take her to lunch. Spoil her. She, of all people, deserves it! If you hear anyone speaking about her - or anyone else for that matter - squash it like a bug. Lovingly confront that sinful behavior, like a good sister should!
I am not implying that any pastor's wife I know might be having these struggles. I have, however, experienced this pressure cooker life as a pastor's child. It was the article about the missing woman that inspired me to write about this at all, not anyone I know personally. But why wait until someone is hurting to come alongside them? Be a friend now. 1:3 Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of mercies and God of all comfort, 1:4 who comforts us in all our affliction, so that we may be able to comfort those who are in any affliction, with the comfort with which we ourselves are comforted by God.
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