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October 3, 2011 Posted by Mark Oestreicher


By way of clarity, I’ve been a full-time youth pastor for more than seventeen years, serving in two churches. I started in April of 1994 and got married in June of that same year, so all but three months of it have been as a married man too. My wife, Shannon, and I have now been in San Diego for six and a half years and have five kids ranging in age from 8 to 14. So keeping my marriage a priority is constantly in tension with the pull of work, family, and life.


After a busy summer month, I received a call to go on an expenses-paid study trip to Africa, giving me the opportunity to see firsthand the fruits of efforts raising money during the 30-Hour Famine. What a great opportunity.

One problem: The trip was only a few weeks away. I had been gone from my family for more than three weeks. And I’d be missing a major milestone in our family—the launch of a project my husband had been working on for months.


First thing I should say is that I am a bit terrified to write this post because my wife will be reading it. You should ask her to write the rebuttal.

My perspective for answering this question is shaped by the fact that I’ve never done full-time youth ministry without being married. Although I started doing youth ministry at a camp when I first started working part time in the church, I came into it with my girlfriend who then became my fiancée. It wasn’t until we got married that I became a full-time youth pastor. So I’ve never really known youth ministry without Danielle.

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