Bethlehem Conference for Pastors
January 31st, 2006Pray for this year’s Bethlehem Conference for Pastors which is already in progress (January 30th-February 1st). John Piper, who recently learned that he is suffering from prostate cancer, explains this year’s BCP focus upon pastoral suffering:
The theme for this year’s Bethlehem Conference for Pastors is How Must a Pastor Die? The Price of Caring Like Jesus. It says something about what I think the world needs from the Christian church. It isn’t the power of political influence. It is the power of being willing to take up our cross and suffer with Jesus on the Calvary Road. “If when you do good and suffer for it you endure, this is a gracious thing in the sight of God. For to this you have been called, because Christ also suffered for you, leaving you an example, so that you might follow in his steps” (1 Peter 2:20-22). I don’t think church-growth and church-planting seminars should wave the banner: “Come have fun working for Jesus,” but “Come discover the meaning of ‘sorrowful yet always rejoicing’ (2 Corinthians 6:10).”
This will be the first conference in four consecutive years that I’ve missed. I’m wishing I were there. Anyway, Piper’s biographical message should be superb this year. It is on William Tyndale who was martyred for his passion for the spread of God’s written word. So let us pray for these 1000+ pastors who have gathered to hear the call not to turn from suffering when it comes but to embrace it in the life-giving power of the gospel.



the ministry of caring for orphans in their affliction through adoption finds its basis and ultimate significance in what God has done for us in Jesus. When I read the following paragraph by T.F. Torrance, the flame of my passion for adoption is stoked afresh.
Paul’s day, the world of the Roman church, was passionate about image. What mattered most to the citizens of Rome was attaining a social classification that would provide one with the rights, possessions, and property necessary to secure a prosperous future (cf. Matthew 20:20-28). But here we find Paul introducing himself to people who live in the very heart of the Roman Empire as one who is himself without social standing, as one who, according to the imperial worldview, had no social classification of any value whatsoever. Yet, though he identifies himself as a slave, Paul will not allow his identity as a slave to be defined by the prevailing worldview. Rather, he defines his servitude in terms of who Jesus is, namely, the Messiah. He is “a slave of the Messiah, Jesus,” the one in whom God would rule all the kingdoms of the earth establishing His justice and shalom. The one before whom Paul stands as a slave is none other than God’s Messiah who said, “All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me” (Matthew 28:18). What we have in this first clause of introduction is a gospel-centered view of the world; and it is this worldview that ultimately defined who Paul was.
peace. Dan explained this aspect of the kingdom well in his posting (
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