Physical Address: Jamil King Ministries
8745 Gary Burns Dr. Suite 160 #352, Frisco TX 75034
Physical Address: Jamil King Ministries
8745 Gary Burns Dr. Suite 160 #352, Frisco TX 75034
How Role Confusion Breaks Families and Faith
When roles get blurry, relationships get heavy.
And when expectations aren’t clear, the people we love the most can become the ones we resent the most.
For many of us—especially those raised in tight-knit, church-centered families—the lines between love, loyalty, leadership, and control often disappear.
You end up wearing so many hats, you forget who you are underneath them all.
After my father passed away in 2001, everything changed.
My mom—already a woman of great strength—suddenly had to wear every hat imaginable.
She became the pastor, the administrator, the caretaker, the matriarch… and still tried to be mom.
She didn’t ask for it. The weight just fell on her.
But here’s what I didn’t realize at the time:
While she was wearing four hats, I was carrying the confusion those hats created.
She wasn’t just my mother anymore—she was:
She spoke into decisions about my home, my wife, my kids, and my faith.
And because I loved and respected her so deeply, I didn’t know how to say, “That’s too much.”
I felt like I was serving out of love…
But over time, it began to feel like involuntary servitude.
Not because she meant to control me—
But because neither of us had been taught how to set boundaries without feeling disloyal.
In families and churches, boundaries are often misunderstood.
They’re seen as:
But the truth is:
Boundaries are not rejection—they are protection.
Without them:
And slowly, silently, people start to lose themselves in the name of honor.
Unspoken expectations create silent frustrations.
And those frustrations don’t just disappear—they leak:
When the roles aren’t clear, relationships start to feel more like assignments than connections.
And when someone’s presence becomes tied to a performance, we lose the freedom to just be.
Luke 5:15–16 says:
“Yet the news about Him spread all the more, so that crowds of people came to hear Him and to be healed… But Jesus often withdrew to lonely places and prayed.”
Jesus was in demand—by people who loved Him, needed Him, and believed in Him.
And yet… He stepped away.
If Jesus—God in the flesh—had to step back to stay centered,
Why do we think we have to be everything for everyone?
Looking back, I know my mom did what she had to do in a moment of survival.
She led the church. She led the family. She carried it all.
But I also know now that I had the authority, as a man and husband, to set boundaries sooner.
I didn’t have the language then. I didn’t have the tools.
But God gave me the wisdom later to forgive, to mature, and to move forward with both love and clarity.
And that’s the real goal:
You don’t have to wear every hat to prove your love.
And you don’t have to carry someone else’s expectations to keep their approval.
Healing begins when we:
Because relationships can’t thrive when the lines are blurry.
They thrive when they’re rooted in: