A Handbook for Ministers Wives: Sharing the Blessing of Your Marriage, Family, and Home by Dorothy Kelley Patterson


A Handbook for Ministers Wives: Sharing the Blessing of Your Marriage, Family, and Home
Title : A Handbook for Ministers Wives: Sharing the Blessing of Your Marriage, Family, and Home
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 0805420630
ISBN-10 : 9780805420630
Language : English
Format Type : Hardcover
Number of Pages : 256
Publication : First published June 1, 2002

Prolific author and Christian personality Dorothy Patterson offers A Handbook for Ministers' Wives for women who are in the challenging role of being married to men who serve in ministry positions. This book addresses the personal commitments to Christian character and conduct a minister's wife must make and the commitment to family relationships to her husband, her children, and the extended family as well. It also speaks definitively to the ministry of community a minister's wife herself is called to in the civic and church arenas.


A Handbook for Ministers Wives: Sharing the Blessing of Your Marriage, Family, and Home Reviews


  • Donna

    Slightly dated but good book if you have never hosted people in your home or had a larger dinner party. Some of it is common sense but if you don't know it; it is in this book. Also some inside tips and traps of minister's wives that could keep you from trouble.

  • Rebekah Schrepfer

    I enjoy Dorothy Patterson. Her contributions to the complementarian view of womanhood have been invaluable! This book is also a great addition to the pastor’s wife’s library.

    The main body of the book reads like Emily Post’s Guide to Manners. She tells the pastor’s wife how to act and even what to wear and what to say in a variety of ministry areas. Her advice for home life is quite detailed. Perhaps she was just trying to throw out there as many ideas as possible, but I would be overwhelmed if I tried everything she suggests. I felt a little defensive for my own way of conducting home life. For example, she is very structured with her child rearing, and I am not so much. She even devotes a couple of pages to the process of naming your children. However, the reminders of the point of each exercise and habit and tradition was good.

    Her Victorian style and suggestions would not work so well in our neck if the woods, and so her belaboring the point was annoying to me. I would rather have enjoyed wrapping my mind around the Biblical precedents and principles for hospitality, rather than wade through her numerous practical suggestions that don’t mean much to me. I think Mrs. Patterson was desirous to be of practical use to new pastor’s wives, but for me it was a lot of mental clutter to wade through.

    It is a handbook after all, though. So if I ever need to know the protocol for entertaining formally in our home, I have the book to turn to. I think a lot of her suggestions on gifts and recipes and hospitality ideas could be substituted by using Pinterest these days.

    This is really for a pastor’s wife who is starting from square one. Most of the reminders of propriety and appropriateness seemed obvious to me, but I grew up in a ministry family. A wife who never has been around such things may truly need these things spelled out. Where should the pastor’s family sit or stand at a funeral, what kinds of gifts are appropriate, and practical suggestions on how much or how little she should be involved would be helpful to many. I know some pastor’s wives who need to read this! And to be honest I need improvement in some of these areas too. Appropriateness and graciousness is becoming a lost art.

    Some sections are written to congregations as admonitions and suggestions in regards to their pastor and his family. I appreciated her addressing the unique challenges of living in a parsonage. I also appreciated her discussion on whether a pastor’s wife should work outside the home and whether that is any business of the church’s. The was a good section on resignations and terminations. She tactfully discusses difficult ministry hurts. Just to know that it has happened before to others and the varying degrees of severity, was soothing and helpful to me.

    I loved her answering of dilemmas and philosophical questions. I wish the book spent more time on that, but that’s just me.

    “I desire to seek fewer self-fulfilling experiences in exchange for more God-honoring obligations. I want to yield personal rights in exchange for God-given privileges. I want to commit my life to begin my ministry for the Lord in my home, focusing on meeting the needs of my household. I want to renew my efforts to be a helper to my preacher-husband in his God-assigned task. I want to expect great things from my preacher-husband and attempt great things with him. I will gladly spend and be spent in all I do for God as the wife of a preacher (p. 77).

    “God does not give any woman a blank slate and tell her to write her own job description—to do as she pleases with her life. She is not simply to consider her gifts and training and make her own choices. Rather, He gives you a road map in Scripture with the fixed boundaries and general guidelines and lots of crossroads with choices to be made. Fortunately, however, He also furnishes a guidance system for finding and redirecting you when you get lost along the way. The Holy Spirit is on call twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week, and He always knows your location and the proper destination. If you let Him, He will get you there!” (pg. 158).

    The Kindle version was hard to read because of pull out quotes in boxes. The formatting was not so good, so you might want to be aware of that if you are considering purchasing it.


    See more of my book reviews and articles at MostlySensible.com.

  • Mandy J. Hoffman

    MY REVIEW:

    This is truly what the title says it is - a handbook for Minister's Wives! I have read a number of books for Pastor's Wives now and never before read one that was so detailed. Dorothy covers everything! Devotions and quiet time to how to dress and what our manners should be like. If you are a Pastor's Wife looking for a book that gives encouragement and practical help then this book is for you...especially if you are new to the "position". However, if you have already read a extensively from books written for the wives of Pastor's than you may want to skip this book. While full of everything you can imagine, I found much of it to be common material in books of this genre and some of it in today's culture is rather outdated as this book is 10 years old.

  • Zinnada Hodges

    This is TRULY a handbook. I think ANY married woman who has a husband in ministry ought to have this book on her bookshelf. Single women who desires to marry someone in the ministry should borrow this.