Wednesday, July 5, 2017

CHILDREN IN MINISTRY: HOW TO NURTURE OUR RELATIONSHIPS

This article is also published in gprocommission.org
http://www.gprocommission.org/articles/children-ministry-nurture-relationships/

How can pastors nurture their relationship with their children in the midst of the pressures of ministry?

Serving the Lord in ministry is a great privilege for anyone, and the rewards can be undeniably fulfilling. I could not think of anything else that can bring the same sense of fulfillment and satisfaction in life as doing ministry, much more if it is your full-time calling. This is because the desire of God that we love and serve one another is being fulfilled in our life, and joy that comes from selflessness is simply incomparable.

While we can identify the benefits for being a pastor and the advantages on the family, including having a wide option of relationships to both nurture and be nurtured in, having an extended family that will be there for you and yours whenever you need them, and a myriad of blessings, tangible and intangible, that are unique only to pastoral families, we cannot negate the downside of it.

Ministry is not all bed of roses. Well, people forget that roses have thorns, and they can be thick and big, which can wound deep and leave nasty scars. The list of pressures and stress that come with being in ministry can range from few to many, depending on who’s retelling it. But one thing is for sure, whether one or ten, these pressures and stress that come with full-time ministry work can bear down on the family real hard. And if parents (i.e. the Pastor and Pastor’s Wife) are not careful or even vigilant to the negative effects of ministry on the kids, the trauma can damage them for a lifetime.

Perhaps the most common source of the pressure and stress on children of pastors and ministers is the expectation that other people have of them.

Expectations on anyone can be frustrating, and sometimes debilitating. Expectations on Pastors Kids (PKs) can be damaging. Church people can be merciless on how they pressure PKs to live up to their expectations or society’s expectations of them; from how they dress to how they walk or how they talk. Some instances, even to how PKs should think! Most people have good intentions, really. I know that they mean well and truly believe that they are doing the child a favor. They call it constructive criticism.
And we all need that.
We need to be taught, because we don’t always know everything.
We need correction, because we are not perfect.
We need to be rebuked, because we are not always right.

Then how can we help our children, the PKs, handle expectations in a healthy way?

Teach Them.
There is a common saying, “the only person that you can control is yourself.” You cannot control what other people will say to you, but you can control how you respond.  As a parent, you may by default, respond or react on their behalf. But  you want to realize that it will not help them cope with it on their own. You won’t be around to defend them at all times. How then will they respond a week from now when they are on the playground? A year or two from now when they are in school? Five years from now when they are in college?

While the Pastor and wife may have the resiliency and strength to withstand the various expectations people have on them, with even the skill of facing them head on with grace and dignity, it is not the same with the kids. The children do not yet possess the same amount of strength, resiliency, resolve, and even grace to face this pressure. They are still in the process of growth and development; being molded, learning and exploring. They are still trying to understand the world around them. They are not yet in the position to be able to resolve such challenges on their own. We cannot expect them to face ministry pressures and stress in the same manner as their parents.
Therefore we have to teach them how.
Teach them how to face any challenge with dignity and grace.
Teach them how to be strong and resilient.
Teach them how to contend with expectations by teaching them of their true identity in Christ alone, so that their foundation will be rooted in who they are in Christ, and not in others.

It would be cruel for us to keep on taking them into our boat and sailing off, without much of an explanation of what will be ahead. We have to make it a priority that we equip our kids with the essentials that they will need to survive the life of a PK.

Love Them.
Always remember that before we are pastors and ministers, we are parents. Their parents. They must never doubt our love and never doubt that they are important.
The welfare of our children is to be our utmost priority. We do not delegate this to anyone else. This includes being their shield and defender, their comfort and guide.

So, as parents we have to be alert with what is happening to them, in light of ministry and we should be proactive – on their side, at all times. If they are right, we commend them. If they are wrong, we correct them. But we remain on their side of this battle they are learning to fight.

They are important.

No matter how busy ministry responsibilities may be, we must never fail to send this message to them. If you want your children growing up with love, respect and understanding of the ministry, then they must never feel that they are competing with ministry or with other people (i.e. church members) for your time and attention.


Feel Them.
They are real people, with real feelings, going through real issues and struggles. Just because we didn’t go through these issues ourselves at that age, doesn’t mean they are not real to our kids.
Two struggles come to mind.
Identity.  
“I didn’t ask to be a PK, I didn’t chose to be a PK!”
Painful to hear, but true. And this is often the cry of many PKs who go through hell and high water just to survive the agonizing expectations placed upon them, and trying to fit in. PKs often find themselves in limbo – not really sure of who they are, where they belong or what they are supposed to do. That is why they are vulnerable to what the people around them feed them. If these are good and healthy messages, then there’s no problem, but when they are fed negative and unhealthy ones, then the chaos begins. Some find themselves alone, left out and with no real friends. This can be very traumatizing especially for them.

God.
PKs are in an “unfortunate” situation where people, even including their own parents, often tend to assume that they are okay. We tend to have this idea that PKs have the inborn capacity to know God and are therefore capable of nurturing a deep and growing relationship with Him on their own, that they will grow to be as spiritual as us or that they will just pick up the Bible and automatically understand the mysteries in it.

Cassie Carstens, in his book ,The World Needs A Father says that fathers generally form the initial image of God to their children. A permissive father, a permissive God. An absentee father, and absentee God. An uninvolved father, an uninvolved God. You get the point.
When their earthly father doesn’t provide a healthy father image, they don’t develop a healthy image of God. They end up struggling with their formative understanding of God if it is not consistent with what they see in their own father.

Their understanding of God doesn’t begin once you place a Bible in their hands to read. Their understanding of God begins with and most often continues on from how their father is towards them.

Let me share a story.

A PK’s Story.
I have been a PK for 45 years and still counting. I’ve had “do this, not that” for breakfast; “should and should not” for lunch; and the smorgasbord of both for dinner. I was already a young adult when it dawned on me that how I was living my life was not pleasing to God. Why? I was actually living for other people, not for God, much less for myself. In the eyes of others, I was the perfect PK. Not once did I tarnish the image of my parents, of the church or the Gospel. As soon as I stepped into a room, people knew I was not like them. I would not compromise if it meant ruining my image as a Pastor’s Kid. It was actually nice, but deep inside; it was an act I had been playing my whole life until then. I was rebuked, “God looks at the heart.” And yeah, God didn’t like what He saw.

It was only after I decided that I would stop living for the expectations of others that I began to get out from my shell and truly live for God. Never in my entire life did I fully experience “the truth will set you free”. I was living a lie – that my worth was based on what other people said and thought of me. I needed to embrace and live the truth – that my worth comes from God.
My only regret was that it didn’t come to me sooner.

Pastors and wives, your children are not an invisible part of your ministry tapestry, but a very visible partner in serving God. Recognize that they minister to you in very subtle but significant way, in a way only they can do as your children. They make life happier, lighter and more relaxed. They provide deeper meaning and purpose to your life.
Teach them. Love them. Feel them.


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AUTHOR’S BIO
Donna Tan, from the Philippines, is a pastor’s wife, a pastor’s kid, a counselor, professional editor (for both academic and popular writing), resource speaker, writer, and blogger. Her passion is to minister to women (pastor’s wives in particular), couples and families.
Donna’s ministry experiences span ages and cultures; having led youth and women ministries in the Philippines, as well as women ministries in the US (as a leader with Trinity Wives Fellowship from 2010-2012, in Deerfield, IL).
Donna is married to Dr. Jason Richard Tan (Ph.D.), and they have two children – Joshua (16) and Elisha (11). They have been married for 18 years.
Jason and Donna are missionaries under GlobalGrace Fellowship (based in Pasadena, CA) serving the Philippines and Asia.
She is the Admin Director of Great Commission Missionary Training Center. She is also a writer, professional editor, and blogger.
You can connect with Donna through her blog TonesOfHope.blogspot.com



Wednesday, April 12, 2017

MARRIAGE AND MINISTRY: A REALITY CHECK

The following blog is originally posted on the GProCommission Website, a website connecting pastoral leaders and pastoral trainer worldwide. 
Click on the link below to go to the GProCommission website


 "How can a pastor nurture their marriage and family in the midst of the pressures of ministry?"

This was one of the questions asked at the Global Proclamation Congress for Pastoral Trainers held in Bangkok last year (2016). It is a question that probably haunts many more ministry couples than we care to admit.
It is no secret that ministry can be extremely stressful, and the demands overwhelming. Ministry can demand a lot, if not all, of a pastor’s time. Pastors can end up becoming so busy with “God’s work”, but neglecting their marriage and their family in the process. And yet, despite the hard and even damaging effects ministry can have on marriage and family, it is an issue that continues to be ignored. If ever it is discussed, it is very rare.
These realities may be hard to swallow and painful to admit, but realities nonetheless. They exist. They happen. It may already be knocking on your door.
And unless we come to terms with these realities, of what is actually going on in our support net (i.e. our spouse and children) and admit where we have fallen short, then we cannot move in the direction of improving or reversing any damage that the neglect for family has already caused.
We all wish these challenges can be wished away, or perhaps more appropriately, prayed away. That at the word “amen”, our family situation would be better, our spouse would be happier and our children emotionally healthier. But it doesn’t happen that way, does it?
For ministry couples, marriage and ministry are intrinsically connected. We cannot avoid one from affecting the other. But how do pastors respond to the overwhelming pressures of ministry and the effects of these pressures on their marriages? Very seldom do they pause to analyze the problem and focus on working at it, instead many “continue to press on, ignoring the family consequences until a crisis occurs.”[1] The common refrain:
I didn't realize the strain that ministry was putting on our marriage. I knew that it wasn't what I wanted or what it should be. Yet at the same time, I'd just keep going. Then, when we got away for awhile, it all came crashing down. I feel like the toll on my family—the damage to me, my wife, and my son—has not been worth the fruit of the ministry.[2]

It is not easy to respond to the issue of balancing marriage and ministry in just a few words, in one sitting or in one article. There is a lot to be discussed, and a lot to be said. So let’s start. Let us begin by doing a reality check.
1. Evaluate Yourself.
Evaluate our own understanding of the relationship of ministry and marriage.
While it is true that ministry is an “absorbing lifestyle”, it doesn’t mean that marriage must suffer. Marriage and ministry should never be in competition with each other, but instead they should support and strengthen each other. But it should begin with making sure your marriage is healthy. “The way pastors navigate this lifestyle will influence their marriage and family. Conversely, their marriage and family life will directly affect their churches”.[3]  It is therefore critical that pastors learn to navigate through this lifestyle without neglecting their commitment to their spouse.
A strong and thriving marriage leads to a happy pastor. And when a pastor is happy, his ministry becomes more fruitful.
So, what are your core beliefs? Do you believe that ministry should be primary to marriage or that marriage is primary over ministry? It is imperative that you are clear about what you believe in because your core beliefs affect your attitude, and your attitude affects your actions.
Take a close look at your cultural background, your family upbringing as it relates to marriage and to ministry. Are they consistent with what the Bible teaches? Are they glorifying to God?

Take Action!
Find time this week to evaluate your own understanding of the relationship of ministry and marriage. You can start by listing down what are your beliefs about marriage and ministry and how they relate to each other. Do not just make a mental list, but make an actual list. A mental list will just be forgotten, a visible list will help make things clearer and help you in your self-evaluation.

2. Talk With Your Spouse.
It is also a growing concern how many pastors take their spouses for granted, without intending to. I know of pastors who have assumed that their wife will (or has) embrace his calling to full-time ministry. One wife once said of her husband who was in his first year in seminary, “I didn’t sign up for this pastorate thing!” She was obviously distraught, I could hear in the tone of her voice that she felt cheated. They were married only a year and she was pregnant with their first child. It made me wonder if they ever talked about his decision to go into ministry, but I was almost sure that if they did, it wasn’t a two-way discussion.
Pastors, you will want to have your spouse on your side, not just on the sidelines. Her willing and loving support is critical to your pastoral ministry, especially in sustaining leadership in the church (conversely, marriage difficulties can derail ministry leaders). Let’s be reminded of the word “helpmeet” in Genesis 2:18 “The Lord God said, “It is not good for the man to be alone. I will make a helper suitable for him” (also in verse 20). The Hebrew word used is EZER. The word ezer appears in the Old Testament 21 times—twice for the woman in Genesis 2:18 and 20, three times for nations Israel turned to for military assistance when they were under attack, and, take note of this, 16 times for God. So what does this information tell us, or how does it affect you?
Pastor, your spouse can be your strongest ally, your staunch supporter and your faithful warrior if you allow her to. Now you understand why you would want her on your side?


Take Action!
Set a time this week to talk with your spouse. If you haven’t done it in a while, then go out on a date…just the both of you. Find out what she feels about your ministry and how you handle family and ministry? Does she agree with you? Does she support you? What has been the effect of your current ministry on her and your children?
At this point, just listen to what she has to share. Resist the urge to defend your position or your actions. You will not get her to your side if you bring out the sword and spar with her.

3. Recognize The Stressors
Why do we need to know the stressors that affect our ministry and marriage? Simply because one cannot treat an ailment that he/she doesn’t know about. One cannot defend himself from an unknown enemy.
There are two kinds of stressors present for those in ministry: the usual stressors and the ministry-related stressors. In the book Resilient Ministry: What Pastors Told us About Surviving and Thriving, the authors have identified “five primary challenges facing marriage and family for those in ministry.”[4]
They are (with the first being common to all married couples and the next four being the ones unique to ministry couples and families):
1. The “normal stressors” in marriage and family life
2. The nature of ministry, which demands being always on the job.
3. The conflicting loyalties of church and home
4. Abandonment of the spouse from always being on the job
5. The unmet needs of ministry spouses for confidants

Take Action!
Based on stressors 2-4 mentioned above, which ones are the ones happening to you and your family right now.
What do you intend to do about it?
With you spouse, discuss the specific things that comprise that stressor in your life right now. Then discuss what actions you can do to manage these stressors together, so that it has the least effects to your marriage and family.

Finally, I would like to end by reiterating that marriage is important to God.
1. It was the first institution He ordained.
2. It is the second relationship, next to man’s relationship to God and vice versa, that He directed man to nurture.
3. It is the only relationship that He often mentions alongside Christ’s relationship to His Church’s.
It is for this reason that the enemy targets pastors and their marriages so much. “The enemy strikes at marriages…When marriages are destroyed, their witness to the gospel (Ephesians 5:25) gets distorted and future generations are harmed in the process”[5] The enemy knows too well that when the church leaders fall, then followers are wounded in the process, and the integrity of the church is tarnished. So, the more we must safeguard our marriages, not only from those that want to destroy it from the outside but also from within.

End with Prayer
Pray with your wife right now. Begin by thanking God for each other, for your marriage and for your partnership in this task that God has given you to do.
Then pray for strength to face the challenges in a manner glorifying to God.
Then pray for the grace to continue to honor each other as God has ordained it – honoring the wife by loving her, and honoring the husband by respecting him.

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RESOURCES
Bob Burns, Tasha D. Chapman and Donald C. Guthrie. Resilient Ministry: What Pastos Told us About Surviving and Thriving, (Intervarsity Press. Downers Grove, IL. 2013)

Bob Burns, Tasha D. Chapman and Donald C. Guthrie in Christianity Today. http://www.christianitytoday.com/pastors/2013/april-online-only/is-ministry-killing-your-marriage.html. Accessed 05 March 2017



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AUTHOR’S BIO
Donna Tan was a Pastor’s wife for 17 years, and a pastor’s kid to this day. She is also a minister, serving in the area of mentoring women and couples.
Donna has a graduate diploma in Christian Counseling. Her ministry experiences span cultures having led youth and women ministries in the Philippines, as well as women ministries in the US (as a leader with Trinity Wives Fellowship from 2010-2012 (a seminary student wives ministry in Deerfield, IL). In the past seven years, Donna began to develop a passion for the welfare of pastors’ wives, having been one and encountered their struggles in her counseling. She is currently writing a book for pastors’ wives,
Donna is married to Dr. Jason Richard Tan (Ph.D. Intercultural Studies), and they have two children – Joshua (15) and Elisha (11). They have been married for 18 years.
Jason and Donna are missionaries under GlobalGrace Fellowship (based in Pasadena, CA) serving the Philippines and Asia.
She is the Admin Director of Great Commission Missionary Training Center. She is also a writer, professional editor, and blogger.

Thursday, January 19, 2017

LET'S FIGHT

Are you ready to fight for your marriage?

Married life is not a bed of roses.
Married life ain’t gonna be easy.
Married life is gonna be messy.

image from familylifecanada.com
Just like one couple who came to me for counseling - their marriage was a total mess, to say the least.  After many years of marriage, she wanted out. She was tired and what was fairly obvious, even in the sessions, was that she didn’t love her husband anymore. He wanted to keep the family “intact”, even if they were for all the wrong reasons and fueled by wrong and selfish motives. I had to get straight to the point and move them in the direction of drastic decision-making. And so I asked them just one question: "Are you willing to FIGHT FOR YOUR MARRIAGE?"
I was really praying that I would hear an affirmative answer, even if everything else I saw from them showed that wouldn’t be the case. My heart ached when she shook her head. The husband just stared straight out the window. A once beautiful thing now shattered into unmendable pieces. I was so devastated that none of them were willing to FIGHT for their marriage. 
She didn’t think it was worth saving. 
He didn’t see it was worth anything but his own pride.

I am also reminded of another couple I counseled a few years ago, with a very similar situation and the same issues. Despite the pain that I could see in her eyes,  the wife said she was willing to fight to love her husband again. Despite being the “guilty one" the husband was willing to fight to win back his wife’s trust. So they fought, together. They fought the things (and people) that were tearing their marriage apart. They fought the negativity that was persistently building up inside them, telling them it was useless. They fought their own pride, ego, and stubbornness. That was 15 years ago. Today, they are still together, now fighting the good fight and with a love stronger than ever!

Married life is not a bed of roses.
Married life ain’t gonna be easy.
Married life is gonna to be messy.

I find myself saying this more often now in marital counseling sessions. Well, because this is the reality. Of course, I don’t say it in the tone of hopelessness but in the tone of hopefulness.

The response that I intend to draw out from couples is not for them to back out or to throw in the towel. The response I want to draw out is “I am ready to fight for it.

Because…

It is not a bed of roses…but so is life.
It is not going to be easy…so you have to work hard at it, together.
It is gonna be messy…so make it a beautiful mess, together.

After all, we are all a mess. But God has chosen each one of us, as messy as we are and made us beautiful in His eyes.

Marriage is not some magic potion that we swallow and everything will be ok for us. It is not an escape pod to get away from our problems from childhood or growing up. It is not the solution to our unmet needs and personal issues. 
Our spouse is not our Mr. or Ms. Fix-it.
Our spouse is not our genie. 
Our spouse is not our savior. 
Only Jesus can be our Savior. Only He can make our dreams come true. Only He can make everything okay and meet our needs.

When we fight for our marriage, we fight not only the ones trying to break our marriage from the

outside but even from the inside. I would add that we fight both with equal fervor. 

Allow me to share two practical ways you can do to fight for your marriage:

1. Ask for help.
It is never cowardice to ask for help. In fact, it is a courageous act. After all, “an ounce of prevention is better than a pound of cure.” Small but sure doses of help can prevent major disruptions in your marriage later. It will also bring you closer to each other day by day. Help can come in many forms:
a. Mentors/coaches (couples whom you look up to, who love God and love you both)
b. Marriage counselor (they would really appreciate it if you don’t go to them only when it’s on the verge of breaking apart!)
c. Attend seminars and couple’s retreats (especially if you have missed a lot of date nights or don’t have one – this is your chance to get away just the two of you! By the way, don't get stingy because these are worthy investments. You love your marriage, don't you? Invest in it heavily!)
d. Books and other published material on married life. (Invest in books because you will not just read it once, but will go back to it often. If you go for online sources, choose credible ones and not just a random website. As your mentors and counselor for recommendations).

2. Go Out on Dates

If you own a vehicle, you very well know that to keep it in good, running condition you need to bring it for a maintenance check up and tune up. If you disregard this, sooner or later it will give up on you. And it will cost you more to have it “overhauled”. Dates are your maintenance checkup or tune up. They are the simplest form of "making time for each other". You do it not when there is something wrong, but because you want to keep the sweetness, the spark, and the flame burning. 

They need not be expensive, extravagant dates. Here's a secret - the simplier the better. Because simplicity is scarce nowadays, it is in this mode that you give more of yourself, actually. Did you notice?


If we are serious about having a thriving marriage then we have to fight for it! God fought for his bride, the church – US! He fought hard despite the heartache and pain, remaining faithful to his marriage vows. 
(For further reading on God's love for us - read Hosea and Ezekiel 16).

So, go ahead. Fight! Your marriage is worth fighting for!