During war, a minister may find himself between two realities: the safety of his family and the fear of the administrative consequences of leaving. How does God view this decision?
What is more important: years of service or family?
"But if anyone does not provide for his own, and especially for those of his household, he has denied the faith and is worse than an unbeliever." 1 Tim 5:8
The answer of Scripture is clear: caring for one’s family is a spiritual duty that takes precedence over administrative norms. Years of service are paper. Family is God’s assignment.
When the conference advises leaving
If the conference leadership advises temporarily leaving, this is a form of pastoral permission. The conference’s decision is not just bureaucracy. Usually it is made with the real situation in mind. Trusting this counsel is a sign of maturity, not weakness.
A biblical principle: sometimes a time of retreat is wisdom
“Turn from evil and do good; seek peace and pursue it.” Ps. 34:14
Jesus withdrew to a safe place when the situation became prematurely dangerous (Luke 4:30, John 8:59). This is not cowardice — it is wisdom. Protect yourself and your family so that you can continue ministry, not undermine it.
Practical meaning
- Talk with the conference about the conditions for preserving your years of service: often there is an opportunity to officially arrange a “temporary relocation.”
- The administrative issue of years of service can be resolved. A broken family is far more difficult.
- Calling remains regardless of administrative years of service.
God will not cancel your calling because of a passport exit stamp. But He may ask how you cared for those He entrusted to you.