B
ByzCathCantor
Guest
More directly to the OP, a priest’s wife must be willing to also make sacrifices for the good of a parish family, as well as her own.
A rarity for it’s time, I actually grew up in a parish with a married priest and family. The priest’s wife, who we called Pani (title of respect by custom), played a very central role in the life of the parish. She was also expected to have a secular job in order to help support the family financially. As challenging as all this was - mother to three children, leader in parish life and career woman (she worked in the financial services industry) - she exuded love and dedication at all times. It does take a special woman …
Also, many of the wives of priests in earlier times came from other religious families, often daughters of priests themselves who understood the role through their own experience and witness in their own families.
A rarity for it’s time, I actually grew up in a parish with a married priest and family. The priest’s wife, who we called Pani (title of respect by custom), played a very central role in the life of the parish. She was also expected to have a secular job in order to help support the family financially. As challenging as all this was - mother to three children, leader in parish life and career woman (she worked in the financial services industry) - she exuded love and dedication at all times. It does take a special woman …
Also, many of the wives of priests in earlier times came from other religious families, often daughters of priests themselves who understood the role through their own experience and witness in their own families.