I have just finished reading a 1969 report
entitled "An Insight Into the Role of a Minister's Wife" compiled
from 23 questionnaires sent to various ministers' wives and also to a
number of presidents of local Women's Missionary Societies of the Baptist
Church in Southwest Iowa. I cringed, giggled and snorted through most
of it, but I realized again the terrible gap between the parsonage family
and the church people when one is allowed free expression without fear
of identification.
It is quite obvious to me now that no one will ever offer
my name for beatification. However, I shall have to live with this disappointment
along with many others. The report was not a scientifically prepared job,
but if the Methodist have the same viewpoint expressed in the report as
the southwest Iowa Baptists, I am in deep trouble! One lady said: "A
minister's wife because of his many callers should keep their home and
herself presentable at all times because there is a reflection on the
church if she does not." Now the grammar may not be quite up to snuff,
but the thought literally explodes! Right there, I've failed! My house
almost always looks like a gaggle of geese has been driven through it
followed by my husband, three children, a dog and various numbers of gerbils
at various times. I am one of those poor benighted souls who always snatches
frantically at a nightgown on the wing chair (the dog is lonely when I
am out of the house and always drags filmy stuff downstairs to her favorite
chair to lie on), kicks the shoes under the sofa, stuffs socks in my pockets
and throws magazines into the closet when the doorbell rings. As soon
as my caller leaves, I clean the house in a frenzy of guilt. Before the
next person arrives, those crazy geese have gone through again!
Another individual commented in the report, "Be
clean. Be neat. Wear make-up in good taste so you'll look warm and alive
and not like something the cat dragged in. A good thing to re-evaluate
every now and then is your hair style...This goes for shoe styles."
Well, I am warm; touch me and I'll giggle. I am alive. See ... I'm breathing.
However, I seldom wear shoes, a fact which all of my friends have accepted
with good grace even though my mother hasn't. She insisted I soak my feet
in Clorox for twenty before I went to the hospital to deliver my first
child. By the third baby, I barely had time to even find my shoes! As
for hair styles, I can wear it only one way: short and curly! If I let
it grow, I look like George Washington without the powder. When I am painting,
walls or pictures, or throwing pots on my potter's wheel or even trying
to cope with goose feathers, I look more like the wrath of God than a
cat's plaything.
The questionnaire pointed one thing out to me in particular.
The minister's wife is judged actually on the image one has already formed
of a position, not of a person. She should be, but usually is not, the
epitome of womanhood, an Eve gone straight! She should also do everything
and be everything that the women of the church do not want to do or cannot
do. My husband really lucked out! I can't play the piano and my typing
is lousy, so no church organist job or choir directorship for me; I can't
even be an unpaid secretary. I do direct a mean Christmas program, however!
Several weeks ago, I had a very special experience. I
was at a friend's house having coffee when another woman dropped in, a
stranger to me. Debbie, my hostess, introduced me:
"Sally, I'd like you to meet Margie Greenwood."
So what's special about that? Well, I was practically
wriggling with joy! Sally stared at me, perplexed. Then recognition dawned
upon her.
"Oh yes, you're the new minister's wife."
I stopped my happy squirming but for a precious moment
I had been an individual in my own right, free of my tight second skin.
This second skin, like any girdle which is too small
for its wearer, constricts only a part of one. The rest bulges out uncontrollably.
So, too, with ministers' wives. Resentments hostility and anger spill
over despite our determination to shove it back under the unforgiving
garment. Have you ever seen a woman suffer when her girdle hurts? The
metaphor is most appropriate!
The first half of the survey was devoted to ministers'
wives' reactions, their joys and their frustrations. The Baptist girls
sound remarkably like the Methodists with whom I have talked. In fact,
they sound quite human. Most of them felt their greatest joy was in being
a wife to their husband, and in this I heartily concur! Few of them had
any desire to be "Mrs. Minister," although this slipped through
with a couple of them. I'll never forget a Christmas card my husband and
I received addressed to "Rev. Frank and Mrs. Pastor Greenwood."
The greatest frustration of these gals was almost unanimous; it was the
inability to make close friends within their congregations and to be held
at a distance by them. What a congregation as a whole expects of its minister's
wife is unbelievable! When they suddenly discover that her feet are clay
(even when washed), occasionally they'll smack her right in the solar
plexus. This is why we have so many gasping ministers' wives.
I discovered this fact early in my married life. There
was a small group of self-appointed watchdogs in our first church who
checked on me twice a week. They didn't even bother to knock on the door.
After a year's residence, I installed locks. you should have seen me once
when I was trying to iron my dress in the kitchen and I caught sight of
one of the ladies as she stepped onto the front porch. I dropped to my
hands and knees and crawled to the front door. I held it tightly against
her as she tried to push it open, but my twenty years of strength more
than matched her seventy odd years of determination. Knowing she would
also try the back door, I snaked along the walls, still on my hands and
knees, and held that door against her, too. My husband arrived a few minutes
later and found me lying on the linoleum floor of the kitchen too weak
with laughter to get up! Ah, the dignity of such encounters with the good
ladies of the parish.
This kind of problem gave me food for thought, so I devised
my own system to beat it. I hid. I hid behind my Eastern debutante background,
my education, anything that would suffice. I hid behind my wonderful sister-in-law
who lived nearby. Without her, I never would have survived. She took most
of my problems, many of which I created myself, onto her own back. There
was a period of three months when all three churches on the circuit owed
us my husband's salary, $995. I finally went home to visit my parents
and took the baby with me. My husband ate one good meal a day at his sister's
house. When the churches finally paid up, I could return. However, one
cannot hide forever. So, in our next church, I tried a different attack.
I was so busy with three children, one of whom was always sick, that I
don't think anyone even realized my husband was married. In our third
parish I resolved, since I had been seen on moving day, that I would try
to be myself, and it worked to my great surprise! In all the responses
in the aforementioned questionnaire, only one dear soul, bless her forever,
suggested that the greatest asset of a minister's wife's personality is
"being herself." I'll say one thing for this approach; it's
a whole lot easier on a person even if it is sometimes embarrassing.
In one small town where we lived, the church had built
us a beautiful new parsonage. I loved it and everyone in town was proud
of it. One day, true to the directions in the minister's wife handbook
which I was rereading for the twentieth time, I decided to bake some bread
for someone who was sick. I also decided to plant petunias around the
foundation of the house. I left our baby inside asleep in her crib, feeling
guilty because maybe the house would blow up or catch on fire or some
other such dire calamity would happen, but I traipsed outside with my
trowel and flowers anyway. Some time later I decided I'd better check
on her. I opened the kitchen door and nearly fainted. The house was full
of smoke! I grabbed the baby, took my older daughter by the hand and ran
to my husband's study in the church shouting, "The house is on fire!
The house is on fire!" (One has to shout at him, he only responds
to frightening sounds!) He told me to call the fire department and he
raced over to the house. A word of explanation is appropriate here. In
small Iowa towns, the fire department is a voluntary deal. Any man who
is in town responds to the fire whistle and usually everyone else does,
too. this was no exception, and besides, the parsonage was the newest
house in town. Those men went through the house with a fine-toothed comb.
Finally, one gentleman lifted the lid on a pot on the stove and discovered
the charred, burned potatoes for my bread! A friendly woman comforted
me with the words: "Don't feel badly, Margie. Now we know you're
human."
I do try not to take myself too seriously, and I am trying
to be myself. I even allow my parents to be themselves although that was
not always the case. A year after we were married, my mother visited us.
She had snatched a quick cigarette while I stood sentinel at the window.
I saw one of my dear watchdogs coming up the walk and I yelled at Mother
to run upstairs and take her ashtray with her. Thus, when I opened the
door I stood innocently alone, wreathed in a thick gray cloud of cigarette
smoke!
It's difficult to find the Holy Spirit in such an atmosphere,
but after nine years of searching, I finally found him. I had seldom attended
church before my marriage, and had no background on which to build. I
only saw the marvelous faith of my husband and that of several of the
fine people in our various churches. I wanted this assurance, but I didn't
know how to go about finding it. I had been thrust into a wildly different
life, from the cosmopolitan atmosphere of Boston to an Iowa town of 250
people which looked like a set for a bad John Wayne western. A "modern"
house back East was one with unusual architectural characteristics. In
rural southwest Iowa thirteen years ago, it was one with an indoor toilet!
It was indeed a radically different way of life. I didn't understand the
people and many of them never did figure me out. It was when I finally
made the decision to be the human being that God had created originally,
not a paper doll image raggedly drawn by a mythological congregation,
that I really learned to love. when one's eyes are always checking on
one's image, one can't see past one's nose.
I had to make some spiritual giant steps, after hundreds
of baby steps and innumerable "Go back three paces" even to
come within sight of my goal. An understanding, forgiving and patient
husband and a loving group of friends in our church (I refuse to call
them our "congregation." They are my friends and it is our church.)
have supported and helped me tremendously in my spiritual growth. I had
a dramatic encounter with God during an early morning prayer vigil which
cemented my relationship with him. I don't have any astounding answers
to life's problems, but together as loving children of God, we all can
struggle, supported and helped by each other. It's a lot easier to climb
a barbed wire fence with someone to hold the wires for you.
The role of the "Minister's Wife" exists in
capital letters. I can't deny it and it would be foolish to try to do
so. however, I can re-define it in human terms. For me it is the role
of a searching woman attempting to discover joy of her own humanity and
the love of God and trying to relate this love to her very existence.
This makes me no better or worse than any of my friends. If my house is
messy and my feet bare, I shall hope that my callers will be more interested
in our relationship as children of God than they will be in that last
goose disappearing around the corner. We haven't time to play around with
non-essentials when there is such a desperate need for love, forgiveness
and understanding in the Christian community and the world.
Please examine your image of your minister's wife. Let
her be human and love her despite it. It's quite possible that as a child
of God, she is having just as hard a struggle trying to love your human
failings, too. God loves you, and I love you, too. |