The Prophet’s Family and the Price of Divine Calling
A.W. Tozer is revered as a spiritual giant, but behind the sermons and books was a man whose calling exacted a heavy toll on his loved ones. Married with seven children (six sons and one daughter), Tozer lived with an intensity that mirrored a monk’s devotion. His interior life was all-consuming, focused on God above all else. But that focus created emotional distance, especially for his wife, Ada.
After Tozer’s death, Ada remarried and reportedly said, “Aiden loved Jesus Christ, but Leonard Odam (her new husband) loves me.” Ouch. It’s a raw admission that highlights the tension: Tozer’s prophetic vocation—marked by radical devotion—clashed with the demands of marriage. He wasn’t absent for selfish reasons like career ambition or escapism; his “absence” was poured into prayer, writing, and ministry that has inspired millions.
This raises a thorny question: Should some men with such a deep calling avoid marriage altogether, or at least delay it until they’ve wrestled with their spiritual identity? In Protestant circles, marriage is often seen as a badge of maturity, but Tozer’s story suggests otherwise. It’s a reminder that not every path to holiness fits neatly into family life.
Drawing from the Hero’s Journey archetype (think Joseph Campbell), the hero often remains single during the quest—marriage comes after transformation, as a crowning achievement. Tozer’s life illustrates the risk of flipping that script: early marriage can stabilize a man before he’s faced his true call, leading to strain or midlife reckonings.
Tozer wasn’t a neglectful husband by worldly standards—many men are “absent” due to jobs, poverty, or distractions. But his was a holy absence, aimed at eternal good. Still, the cost was real, and it challenges us: How do we balance divine pursuit with human relationships? If you’re navigating a similar tension, Tozer’s biography is a must-read. It’s not a cautionary tale of failure, but of the tragic beauty in following God at all costs.
Share your thoughts: Have you seen calling clash with family in your life or others’?
Developed with assistance from Grok and Gemini
