Ann said she needed to have a heart-to-heart with Jesus after that conversation. She felt the Lord telling her, “Yes, listen to yourself and calculate the thoughts in your head. Are you complaining or comparing?” She started reading about respect and changing the words she let escape from her mouth.
“I would go to God first and say, ‘Should I say it? If so, how and when?’ It took a lot of self control,” she said realizing as women, “We have so much power and influence how we speak to our husbands and sons.” (The Wilsons’ sons are now all in their 30s, several have followed their parents into ministry).
Other takeaways from the book: Dave and Ann realize it is one thing to say to prioritize God in your marriage, it’s another to show what that actually looks like.
“It is the surrender of our will to His will, and the marriage becoming His, not ours,” Dave said.
They’ve found marriages of those in ministry are often not very good. “Ministers don’t want to admit it. There have been some real tragedies with some of the Christian leaders,” Ann said.
“There’s still a stigma that pastors don’t go to a counselor,” Dave echoed. “I went to a counselor when I retired from my church. It was hard.” How do they thrive? Start with where you are, Dave said, and be honest. So many pastors live in isolation and their wives want to honor their husbands, so they don’t share with anybody.
“People in ministry are just normal people,” he added. “We struggle like everybody else. There’s spiritual warfare going on.”
“When you are in ministry, you need a team of people praying for your marriage, your kids and your family,” Ann said, “because that’s the first place Satan goes. He knows if he annihilates those, you are disqualified. Husbands need other men; wives need other women. You have a target on your back. If you become isolated, you are heading for disaster.”
Stories from NFL Chaplaincy
Dave grew up with a rocky home life, with alcoholic, divorced parents. His life changed when he came to Christ his junior year of college. He played football at Ball State in Indiana, where he was inducted into the Hall of Fame for his prowess as a quarterback. After the Wilsons married, they served with Athletes in Action at the University of Nebraska for two years, then Dave was named Chaplain to the Detroit Lions in 1985, the youngest in the league.
Ann had the opportunity to take classes alongside Dave as he attended seminary at the International School for Theology with Campus Crusade, knowledge that came in handy as she began disciplining player’s wives. The Wilsons settled into a weekly rhythm, leading a couples’ study every Monday night together, while Dave also held a players’ study at the facility.
After 33 seasons, Dave holds the title as the longest serving chaplain in the NFL. He saw some of the greatest spiritual breakthroughs the years the team performed the worst athletically. “One season we went 0-16, 27 guys came to Christ and got baptized,” Dave said. “That’s a revival!”
One of their sons played in the NFL briefly and joined Dave in the Lions locker room.
“So many of these kids are young millionaires,” Ann added. “Their girlfriends and wives are young, beautiful, they move to follow these guys. They are so lonely, so lost. There’s a lot of infidelity. They just want to have a group to know and love. Sometimes broken and lost is the best time to know Jesus, and then they impact their men.”
She remembers one sweet wife who shared with the group that her husband had planned a special night out including a hotel room for their first anniversary. Ann counseled her to buy some new tasteful lingerie as a treat for her husband. After some convincing, the wife agreed. When she told her delighted husband she had gotten the idea from her Bible study leader, he told her he didn’t want her to miss a meeting. He eventually joined Dave’s group, and today, the two have six children and serve in ministry together. All due to a nightgown!