
What Most People Don’t Know About Being a Pastor’s Wife
Being Married to the Man You Call Pastor
“Life ain’t always beautiful, but it’s a beautiful ride.” That lyric by Gary Allan hits close to home. For those of us called “the pastor’s wife,” the truth of that line shows up more often than we’d like. Ministry life isn’t always beautiful. Sometimes, it’s heavy. Sometimes, it’s just plain hard.
Please don’t misunderstand me. Ministry is a beautiful journey, but the day-to-day reality can feel more like survival than serenity. That tension is real.
Yes, There Are Joys
There are moments that feel like wins. People who love you unconditionally. Friends who truly see you and carry you when you can't carry yourself. Those rare few make the church a beautiful place to serve.
There are also moments that are absolutely hilarious. Like the Sunday a man, clearly under the influence of several substances, sat next to me and mimicked my every move. I was still new in this role and, well… I got mischievous. I held back fake laughter at serious moments, and he followed through every time with full-on cackles. Needless to say, my husband was not amused. I did offer the man my Bible. And no, I’m no saint—but I’m definitely human.
A Calling That Comes With Pain
I remember my mom once saying, “I hope God doesn’t call you to be married to a pastor.” At the time, I didn’t understand. I brushed it off. Now, I understand.
Being a pastor’s wife is often lonely and painful. I’m not here to give you a list of things not to say or do. I’m not interested in building walls or demanding etiquette. I just want to be real, maybe even be a voice for other ministry wives who don’t have the words right now.
The Silent Battles
I talk with other pastors’ wives who feel isolated, misrepresented, criticized, and completely defenseless. I’ve felt all of it too. I’ve sacrificed birthdays and anniversaries for people who would later ignore me entirely. I’ve been lied about by those I called friends. I’ve been uninvited, overlooked, and treated like a suggestion box.
But being married to the man you call “Pastor” means I’m still showing up, still fighting battles. Many of them are yours. I hear your struggles. I take them to God. They leave a mark.
The War for Time and Marriage
I’m fighting alongside my husband—and sometimes for him. Ministry demands time, and when he gives that time to others, it leaves less for me. That hurts. It takes work not to resent that.
Alter calls used to be especially tough. One woman in our church would regularly cling to the pastors during prayer. Eventually, older women stood nearby as a kind of human shield. My husband was her frequent target. I’d hear things like, “Well, Michael got molested at the altar again... we did what we could.” It’s funny now. It wasn’t funny then.
The Fight for Our Kids
Your pastor’s wife is also fighting for her children. We carry their everyday challenges and the ones that come with being the “pastor’s kid.” The enemy would love nothing more than to take them out, and I feel that weight every single day.
The Battle for Our Marriage
Marriages in ministry are under attack. Infidelity is becoming disturbingly common. Some churches even treat it like a footnote in a “grace story.” That’s not accountability. That’s broken leadership. Pornography is ravaging the lives of pastors at an unprecedented rate.
So yes, I fight for my marriage every single hour. I war for it with prayer, with presence, and with tears. And many days, I feel like I’m fighting alone.
The Weight of Expectations
Sometimes the criticism comes dressed as kindness. I once received a text that read, “I want to apologize for unrealistic expectations I’ve placed on you.” Translation: “You’re not measuring up.” The follow-up? “You just have no eye for excellence.”
Maybe not. Maybe I can’t decorate a church lobby. But I know there is a more excellent way for the church to love, serve, and live—and my eyes are fixed on that every day.
When Support Disappears
One of the hardest things about this life is that when we need support the most, some of the people we counted on walk away. We’re left exposed. Vulnerable. And very, very tired.
So if you take anything from this, take this: your pastor’s wife is probably hurting more than you know. She’s not just managing the home. She’s waging wars. She’s fighting battles you don’t see—many of them for you.
What Can You Do?
Love her. Really love her. Be the kind of friend who holds up her arms when she’s too weary to keep them raised. Pray for her. Don’t just pray about her—pray for her. Check in. Show up. Be a safe place.
Because ministry life isn’t always beautiful. But with the right people by your side, it can still be a beautiful ride.