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Leadership Formation2 min read

Chapter 2 How Ministry Affects Children

March 23, 2026

The Specific Pressures on PKs Ministry children face several specific pressures that their peers do not. First, the expectation pressure: congregations often hold pastor's kids to a higher standard of behavior, creating a kind of performance pressure that can lead either to resentment of the church or to a false, performed faith that has no genuine interior. Second, the availability deficit: the pastor who is chronically absent from family life because of ministry demands produces in his children a specific kind of wound — the wound of being consistently deprioritized for people they did not choose and may not even know. Third, the glass house pressure: pastor's kids often report feeling perpetually watched — that their behavior reflects on the family and the ministry in ways that ordinary children's behavior does not. This eliminates the psychological safety of normal experimentation and failure that healthy development requires. The Faith Formation Question The thing that determines whether a PK emerges from ministry life with a genuine faith or a rejected one is often this: did they see their parents' faith as real? Not as a professional function, not as a performance for the congregation, but as genuine, lived, costly, and personal? Children are extraordinarily good detectors of inauthenticity. They know the difference between the faith their parent presents on Sunday and the faith their parent actually lives on Tuesday. And if the gap is large enough, the faith — as they have observed it — will not be compelling. The most powerful thing you can do for your children's faith is to live yours genuinely at home. To let them see your actual prayer, your actual struggle, your actual encounter with the living God — not the polished version. That is the kind of faith that takes root. Your child's faith will be built or broken more by who you are at home than who you are in the pulpit. Pay attention to the home version.

James Bell

James Bell

James Bell is the founder of LiveWell and writes on faith, culture, and the Christian life. He leads from the conviction that behavior modification was never the point—heart transformation is.

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