Elders’ wives can face some unique challenges in the church, and we need to have a correct biblical mindset lest we succumb to discouragement, burn out, or worse. Difficulties will come. Megan Hill puts it well in the section of this book entitled “When You Are Home Alone--Again”:
“Elders’ wives have to sacrifice their husbands in dozens of ways. We give up our demands on their time to elders’ meetings, home visits, and sermon or Bible-study preparation--which often come at the end of an already long work day. We give up our demands on their attention to text messages, phone calls, and a long line of people who are waiting for them after church. We give up our demands on their emotional energy to what Paul calls ‘the daily pressure…[of] anxiety for all the churches’ (2 Cor. 11:28). Sometimes it’s enough to make you want to cry.” (100)
So if elders’ wives will face challenges, what is the solution? They need to be able to fall back on the truths of God’s Word--and that means knowing what God’s Word says. Megan Hill’s book strives to help in this area through 50 short meditations (2-3 pages each) organized into four topical areas--heart, home, church, and community. Each meditation addresses either a joy or a challenge for elders’ wives in these areas and includes relevant portions of Scripture, some reflection questions, suggested topics for prayer, and application.
Many of the truths reviewed in this book will be familiar to its audience, but there is something particularly encouraging about hearing them applied by someone who has experienced similar trials and temptations. With 50 meditations not every topic will be relevant to every reader--but a good way to tackle the book might be to read all of the “Joys” in order to be reminded of things you may have grown dull to, and to pick and choose which “Challenges” feel most relevant (the chapter titles are descriptive enough to clue you in).
If there is a criticism I might give of this book, it’s that 2-3 pages isn’t enough to address some of the topics. Some, such as “When You Are Snared in Sin,” are really just too complex for that amount of pages. Other topics struck such a chord that I longed to read more. It is what it is, and I understand that the organization of the book demanded brevity for each topic; my hope is that more will be written (perhaps by Megan Hill!) geared towards the encouragement of elders’ wives. In the meantime, I recommend this excellent book as refreshing, real, and faithful to Scripture.