Ideally, your journal bearing should be designed for hydrodynamic contact conditions under normal operation. The only time it should operate under boundary contact conditions are brief periods during start/stop. As others noted, the surface of fluid film bearings typically have a thin coating of material that is soft enough to prevent abrasive wear of the mating journal surface during brief periods of operation under boundary contact conditions. However, this coating is normally thin enough that even if it gets locally worn away, it won't have any significant effect on the bearing's fluid film efficiency/performance.
The materials used for journal bearings are selected based on requirements like surface fatigue, metallurgical compatibility, heat transfer efficiency, CTE matching, adhesion resistance, etc. A well designed/manufactured/assembled/maintained journal bearing should not experience any significant "wear". And its service life will normally be limited by surface fatigue capability of the bearing backing material, which is steel for most automotive engine bearing applications.