Books

Ajith Fernando: How Church Leaders Can Serve God’s Family Without Neglecting Their Own

‘It’s a huge balancing act, and I don’t think anyone in the world is perfectly balanced!’

Too often, American church leaders make headlines for failing their spouses, children, and congregations. Others buckle under the combined stress of leading a church and raising a family. As longtime Youth for Christ leader Ajith Fernando demonstrates in The Family Life of a Christian Leader (Crossway), these problems are not confined to the West. For several years, Fernando has devoted himself to counseling and mentoring church leaders and their families in his native Sri Lanka. Megan Hill, author of Praying Together: The Priority and Privilege of Prayer in Our Homes, Communities, and Churches, spoke to Fernando about the importance of ministry families expressing love, cultivating beauty, and having fun.

The Family Life of a Christian Leader

The Family Life of a Christian Leader

Crossway

224 pages

$17.99

How does the family life of Christian leaders differ from that of other Christians?

Christian leaders face a special challenge of commitment. They have to ask themselves, “Am I committed enough to take on the strain of being a good father or a good mother while I am caring for other people, too?”

Living for other people can be very hard on children and spouses. Church leaders often face unrealistic expectations. It’s a huge balancing act, and I don’t think anyone in the world is perfectly balanced! Like anyone who works long hours, we are tired when we come home, and we don’t feel like showing active, sacrificial love. But that’s the most important place to show love.

Prayer is the most important thing I do. If I don’t spend time with God alone, I won’t have the strength to do ministry and care for my family. Without prayer, I would have burned out long ago.

It’s common to hear about resentment in ministry families. How can Christian leaders help their families love the church?

In Sri Lanka, people have certain expectations of church leaders’ children. They say, “Oh, you’re a pastor’s child! You should know the answer.” But my wife and I never told our children they should do anything because they are children of ministers. They should pray, not because they are a Christian worker’s child, but because praying is good for you.

We tried to make sure our children were happy that we were in ministry. If I couldn’t do something or come to something for my children, I always expressed sorrow. We never said, “Because of God’s work, I can’t come.” That makes children angry with God. When they were children, we didn’t talk about the conflicts and problems in ministry.

One of my seminary professors, Robert Coleman, told me, “Whatever happens, make sure your wife is happy.” The children spend most of their time with their mother, and if the mother resents the ministry, the children will blame ministry for unhappiness in their home. And who is responsible for their father being in ministry? God. Therefore, they will think the unhappiness is God’s fault.

Why do you encourage ministry families to make beautiful homes?

In our culture, many people don’t dress properly at home. They don’t make an effort to be nice at home. As a youth worker, I hear parents say, “My son is involved in your ministry, but at home he is so rude.” Outside the home we have to act—to put on a show of being nice. But we don’t necessarily have to do that at home. We really need to work on making the home beautiful, so that our witness is consistent.

Life in a ministry family can get heavy. How do you handle that?

We are serious about fun. We believe God gives us a capacity for having fun in ways that honor him. Enjoyment is an important aspect of a child’s life, and sometimes that drove me to do things I didn’t feel like doing. I would much rather read a book than play with my son, but cricket is popular in Sri Lanka, so my son would ask me to play. And I knew, as a father, that I was supposed to play with my child. My theology made me do it, and I’ve never regretted it.

How can we help Christian leaders avoid making headlines for moral failures like abuse and adultery?

Pastors need someone to make sure family life is good and that they are happy in ministry. I’m in a Methodist church that changes ministers frequently, and I sometimes end up mentoring my own pastor. There’s so much loneliness among Christian leaders, and we need to bring them friendship and affirmation.

But leaders also need spiritual accountability. As someone who travels often, I don’t know where I’d be without having my life monitored by accountability partners. Temptation is so accessible these days! Serious sins are not committed suddenly, but usually after a long process of compromise. If there is confession and healing the moment a problem emerges, the next dangerous steps along the slippery slope can be avoided.

Also in this issue

The CT archives are a rich treasure of biblical wisdom and insight from our past. Some things we would say differently today, and some stances we've changed. But overall, we're amazed at how relevant so much of this content is. We trust that you'll find it a helpful resource.

Cover Story

CT Makers: 20 of the Most Creative Christians We Know

Editorial

Andy Crouch: Stop Engaging 'The Culture,' Because It Doesn't Exist

Kulandei Francis

New & Noteworthy Books

My Top 5 Books on Faith and Football

Review

D. L. Mayfield: ‘What If I Made Everything Worse?'

Review

Where the White Working Class Went Wrong

Manny Pacquiao, Championship Boxer, Has a New Opponent: Philippine Poverty

Testimony

Professional Soccer Was My God

Creating for Good

Catalina Bellizzi

Health Is About Way More Than Weight

Why Christians Should End Their Search for 'Relevance'

Porn Is More Criticized and More Popular Than Ever

Excerpt

Why Every Christian Should Be Ambitious

News

Preventative Play: Sesame Street and World Vision in Zambia

Let Deuteronomy Awaken Your Inner Child

Why Married Sex Is Social Justice

Reply All

How Neuroscience—and the Bible—Explain Shame

The Gift of My Anxiety

Myquillyn Smith

News

Who Gets to Count That Convert?

News

NGO No-Go: More Countries Make Christian Charity Harder to Give and Receive

News

Gleanings: July/August 2016

Chris and Will Haughey

Andrew Peterson

Lara Casey

Megan White Mukuria

Jeremy Cowart

Eric Wowoh

Christine Moseley

News

Releasing God's Word: Do Copyrights Help or Hurt Bible Translation?

Ryan and Amy Green

David Bailey

Pete Docter

Enoch Ho

Rebecca Bradley

Nury Vittachi

Jon Batiste

Sajan George

Alex Medina

Becca Stevens

View issue

Our Latest

The Bulletin

Young Republican Texts, Anglican Split, and George Santos Released

Controversial Republican texts, Anglican Communion splits, and George Santos’s sentence is commuted.

Review

Do Evangelical Political Errors Rise to the Level of Heresy?

A Lutheran pastor identifies five false teachings that threaten to corrupt the church’s public witness.

Highlights and Lowlights of 1957

In its first full year of publication, CT looked at Civil Rights, Cold War satellites, artificial insemination, and carefully planned evangelism.

News

Will There Be a Christian Super Bowl Halftime Show?

Conservatives suggest country and Christian artist alternatives for game day.

News

As Madagascar’s Government Topples, Pastors Call for Peace

Gen Z–led protests on the African island nation led to a military takeover.

News

Amid Fragile Cease-Fire, Limited Aid Reaches Gazans

Locals see the price of flour rise and fall as truce is strained and some borders remain closed.

News

Federal Job Cuts Hit Home as Virginia Picks Its Next Governor

Meanwhile, the GOP candidate draws from Trump’s playbook to focus on transgender issues in schools. 

Religious OCD and Me

Scrupulosity latches onto the thing we hold most dear—our relationship with God.

Apple PodcastsDown ArrowDown ArrowDown Arrowarrow_left_altLeft ArrowLeft ArrowRight ArrowRight ArrowRight Arrowarrow_up_altUp ArrowUp ArrowAvailable at Amazoncaret-downCloseCloseEmailEmailExpandExpandExternalExternalFacebookfacebook-squareGiftGiftGooglegoogleGoogle KeephamburgerInstagraminstagram-squareLinkLinklinkedin-squareListenListenListenChristianity TodayCT Creative Studio Logologo_orgMegaphoneMenuMenupausePinterestPlayPlayPocketPodcastRSSRSSSaveSaveSaveSearchSearchsearchSpotifyStitcherTelegramTable of ContentsTable of Contentstwitter-squareWhatsAppXYouTubeYouTube