Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a minister. When you are in a church, it's a really stressful job. Or at least I thought it was. Delivering sermons on Sunday morning is the easiest part of the job. Running a non-profit and answering to a board is the hard part. The drama in a church can be ridiculous both with congregants and with staff. It often feels like you never make everyone happy. People complain about the music (too traditional vs too contemporary), the temperature, the budget, the children's/youth programs, the service times, order of service, ....just on and on. You have to be really good at not taking things personally. It's a tough job when you have a family. Saturdays are prep days. Sundays are exhausting. I tried to always take Mondays off. You are on call all the time - serious illness, death, family crisis,....just constantly responding to crisis. Having a supportive spouse is critical. I stepped out of church leadership years ago. I work as a Hospice and hospital chaplain now and it's 1000X easier. I admire pastors' spouses. It's not easy.
Interesting
What sort of women do pastors usually go for? Do they prefer a religious woman or an ordinary woman? Is there a certain criteria or requirements they look for?
Anonymous wrote:I am a minister. When you are in a church, it's a really stressful job. Or at least I thought it was. Delivering sermons on Sunday morning is the easiest part of the job. Running a non-profit and answering to a board is the hard part. The drama in a church can be ridiculous both with congregants and with staff. It often feels like you never make everyone happy. People complain about the music (too traditional vs too contemporary), the temperature, the budget, the children's/youth programs, the service times, order of service, ....just on and on. You have to be really good at not taking things personally. It's a tough job when you have a family. Saturdays are prep days. Sundays are exhausting. I tried to always take Mondays off. You are on call all the time - serious illness, death, family crisis,....just constantly responding to crisis. Having a supportive spouse is critical. I stepped out of church leadership years ago. I work as a Hospice and hospital chaplain now and it's 1000X easier. I admire pastors' spouses. It's not easy.
Anonymous wrote:Why are their wives depressed and miserable? I’d assume pastors practice what they preach in their own homes.
If they counsel others in the community like couples, why can’t they fix their own marriage?
I always have this thought that people who are spiritual and work on improving themselves will be different than the rest. So I don’t get how pastors are no different than other men
Anonymous wrote:I get it. I have a huge crush on my pastor and know quite a few men in the ministry. Tbh, though, in real life they are mostly big nerds.
Anonymous wrote:Lol