The Orthodox
Clergy Wife
by Matushka
Valerie G. Zahirsky
What does it
mean to have a wonderful title, and no real job description? The position
of the wife of a priest is exactly this. The various languages or every
Orthodox country have titles of honor for the priest’s wife. Some
might literally be translated as ‘priestess’, while some mean ‘wife
of the priest’, and in at least one language — Russian — the priest’s
wife is ‘mother’ or ‘little mother’.
So it’s clear
that our Orthodox cultures have always seen the position of priest’s
wife as something special. Yet there really is no “job description”
for what she should do or be. This might be seen as a reason for confusion
and frustration, but I think it’s more true to the nature of Orthodoxy
to see it as the Church’s loving freedom, given to her children. It
leaves a woman free to regard her position as a ministry which can be
carried out in whatever way is most suitable and comfortable for her
own character and personality. If there is no job description, there
is no blueprint, either, to which any woman should feel obliged to conform.
The late Jacqueline
Onassis was asked early in her husband John F. Kennedy’s presidency
what she though her most important role would be as First Lady. She
answered that it would be to take care of the President so that he could
do his job effectively. And despite the differences in “style” of
various priest wives, they, too, have this as their first task. Like
any wife, the priest’s wife must help her husband carry out the demanding
tasks that are his, not by taking part directly in those tasks, but
by seeing to his physical, spiritual, and emotional well-being. If the
family includes children, there are other things to be seen to. The
priest’s family needs to be a healthy unit whose members’ needs
are attended to. The members must also be allowed to grow through their
mistakes and experimental “trying on” of various aspects of life.
Most of all, there should be continual spiritual effort in the family,
involving all its members.
We can say
more about each of these points. First, seeing to a husband’s well-being:
For a priest’s wife, this includes what it does for most wives —
overseeing the diet, activities, and living conditions of her family.
But it can also mean helping her husband feel confident in his ministry,
encouraging him during rough times, and discerning what to tell him
about the things she herself observes in the parish. Because so often
there is little monetary or status-related reward for the priest’s
work — as there is more likely to be in other professions — her
support is particularly important.
The second
point, the need for the priest’s family to be a place in which members’
needs are attended to, applies especially to the children. The demands
of the priestly ministry can be — or can be allowed to become —
so overwhelming that there is little time left for a busy priest to
see to the needs of his own offspring. His wife is often the one who
makes sure he carves out time to attend a son’s concert or a daughter’s
game, and who encourages family conversation at the dinner table, as
well as private talk between father and child at other times. There
are many clergy wives who, while themselves holding down full-time jobs
to meet material family needs, manage also to satisfy the family’s
emotional needs in this way. Their heroic efforts will surely find a
great reward in heaven!
The third point,
that a priest’s family should be a unit whose members can make mistakes
and experimentally “try on” aspects of life applies to children
as well as to their parents. Green hair on the priest’s son or a little
gold ring in his daughter’s naval, for example, should not scandalize
the parish any more that they would if they appeared on other parish
teens’ bodies. Priest’s wives need to work with their husbands to
protect their children’s right to try things out, and not to let those
outside the family put the children into a box of expected, impeccable,
exemplary behavior — different from what is expected of any young,
growing Christian. A clergy wife must also resist the temptation to
impose a certain standard of behavior on her children for no other reason
than “not to embarrass the family.” Good behavior should be encouraged
because it will help the child have a satisfying and God-pleasing life,
not because he or she is a PK (‘priest’s kid’), and therefore
has a special responsibility to make the family look good. If the priest’s
wife can calmly accept her and other children’s quirks and mistakes,
she will by example help other parents to have the same flexibility
and calmness. In fact, this will help them to be more accepting of people
in general — a healthy trait for Christians to develop.
Finally, the
fourth point: The clergy family must be a place in which there is constant
spiritual effort. A clergy wife with small children knows the struggle
of getting little ones dressed and ready for Liturgy on a wintry Sunday
morning with no help from the husband, who left for the church some
time ago to begin the preparation in the altar. She knows, too, that
he won’t be standing with her during the services to hold a tired
toddler or gently quite a baby’s outburst during the sermon — because
he’ll be busy giving it!
Perhaps this
is the place where the priest’s wife has the most important aspect
of her ministry. If she can make the effort — not always successfully
— to get to the services even under difficult circumstances, and if
she can show that she wants to be there, she will do a great deal for
the people around her. We can be tempted to see worship as a beautiful
but inessential adjunct to the “real” parts of our lives: work,
home, school. But the priest’s wife, a layperson like the others in
the parish, has the same responsibilities and temptations that they
do. When she makes the Church and its worship central to her life, other
may see that they also can do so. They may even decide that they
should do so!
If the priest’s
wife can encourage even one person in this way, she will have done the
work of the Lord and will truly be the partner to her husband that her
Orthodox title of honor calls her to be.
A noted
Orthodox speaker, Matushka Valerie Zahirsky and her family live in Steubenville,
Ohio. Fr. Michael Zahirsky serves as rector of St. Andrew Orthodox Church,
Mingo Junction.
Lots of Titles for
the Priest’s Wife
Every “traditionally
Orthodox” country has a special title in its language for the priest’s
wife. In America, we tend to bring these terms into our parishes based
on the ethnic background of the majority of the parishioners, as our
own English language really has no “comfortable” equivalent. Here
are a few:
Presbytera
(pres vee TEAR a) — Greek, for ‘priestess’
Papadiya
or Popadia (PO pa DEE ya) — Serbian/Balkan
Matushka
(MA toosh ka) — Russian, for ‘mother’
Panimatushka
(PA nyee MA toosh ka) or Panimatka
— Ukrainian, for ‘little mother’
Pani
(PA nyee) — a shortened form, common in the Carpatho-Russian tradition
Khouria
(ho REE ya) — Syrian
Kochamma
(koch- amma) or Amma --- Indian/ Malayalam
for “little mother” or “mother”, depending on the age of the
priest’s wife. (Editor)
The wife of
a deacon has a title, too! In Greek, it’s Diakonissa
(for ‘deaconess’). In the Slavic tradition, it’s the same as the
title used for the priest’s wife!
How do you
use the title, once you learn to pronounce it? Just use the title with
your priest’s wife’s given (Christian) name, e.g., Presbytera Helena
or Matushka Mary. This honorific is appropriate when speaking to her
directly, or when referring to her in a conversation with others: “Khouria
Julia is making copies of the recipe for the workshop next week.”
by Nichola
T. Krause
Source:
http://www.theologic.com/oflweb/inchurch/clergywife.htm
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