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Jim Belcher, Francis Chan, N.T. Wright, and Others Leave the Pastorate to Write and Speak

Why church planters often quit their congregations.

Jim Belcher announced on Sunday May 2 that he has decided to leave the church he planted, Redeemer Presbyterian Church in Newport Beach, California, to write his next book. Earlier this year, Leadership Journal named Belcher's first book, Deep Church, "the best of the best" for a "Leader's Outer Life." It also won a Christianity Today book award in the church/pastoral leadership category.

Belcher's announcement follows days after that of Francis Chan, who has also decided to resign from the California congregation he planted, Simi Valley's Cornerstone Church. Chan continues to have two books in the top 12 of the ECPA bestseller list and two in the top 9 of the CBA chart. (Christianity Today profiled Chan in October.) He will fulfill some speaking commitments over the next few months, but expects by the end of the year to be doing some kind of urban ministry.

These announcements come on the heels of the announcement by pastor and author John Piper that he is taking a leave of absence for nine months from both writing and his church responsibilities. And N. T. Wright announced on April 27th he is leaving his position as Bishop of Durham to become a professor at St Andrews in Scotland.

Likewise, Peter Rollins left the church community he founded, Northern Ireland's ikon, in October 2009 to move to the United States after his 2006 book How (Not) To Speak of God and subsequent volumes became popular in the U.S.

In January 2006, Brian McLaren left the church he had planted, Cedar Ridge Community Church, to pursue his writing and speaking ministry.

What's going on? Is the local church becoming the "farm team" for full-time conference and book ministry? Normal pastoral transition, pastoral stress, the personality of church planters, and American culture all probably play a role in these type of transitions.

First, pastoral transition is quite normal. According to the 2006-2007 National Congregations Study led by Duke sociologist Mark Chaves, 50 percent of congregations have had a new senior clergy person in the last seven years.

Second, pastoring certainly can be a demanding vocation. But is it a particularly stressful vocation? Sometimes. "The data suggest that the problems are not as widespread or bleak as some reports maintain," Duke Divinity School professor Jackson W. Carroll wrote in God's Potters. "Even so, they should not be ignored, because they can have a significant negative impact on clergy, their congregations, and their families." Pastors may have extremely stressful circumstances but on the whole, they have found the life of the pastor very satisfying.

Third, people who are good at church planting tend to have creative and communication gifts that also make them good writers. Ed Stetzer and Warren Bird write in the 2007 State of Church Planting in the United States, "Aggressive and highly effective church planters tend to be entrepreneurial and find creative means of funding the plant other than with direct assistance from denominational or church-planting agencies." It is not surprising that the entrepreneurial and creative energies of church planters will sometimes lead them to write books describing what they have learned along the way.

Belcher, Chan, Rollins, McLaren, and others were all church planters. So was Eugene Peterson, who left the church he planted after 29 years to become a professor at Regent College in 1991. (Piper's church has been in existence since the 19th century, but he led it to major growth.)

Fourth, American culture expects authors to travel and promote their books through speaking engagements. Outside speaking engagements and further writing often take pastors away from the church they founded. Some pastors, such as Bill Hybels, Rick Warren, Max Lucado, Tim Keller, and Rob Bell, have made arrangements to stay at the churches they founded with other pastors taking on a significant portion of the preaching.


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Comments

Displaying 1–3 of 48 comments

Kenny Clark

May 12, 2010  10:37am

I also find it odd that John Piper is included in this article. His situation is entirely different than all the others. He is taking an extended sabbatical FROM all those things that the others mentioned here are leaving their churches to go and pursue.

Kenny Clark

May 12, 2010  10:36am

I also find it odd that John Piper is included in this article. His situation is entirely different than all the others. He is taking an extended sabbatical FROM all those things that the others mentioned here are leaving their churches to go and pursue.

Jim Belcher

May 12, 2010  12:44am

Hey Friends, I just posted a response on Scot McKnight's Jesus Creed about this article. It is comment #18. I hope it helps shed some light on our reasons and motivations for stepping out of Redeemer at this time. We love Redeemer and her people and will miss them and the church dearly. As a teaching elder in the PCA I will remain under their care and authority for the years to come. http://blog.beliefnet.com/jesuscreed/2010/05/is-the-local-church-the-fa rm-t.html Shalom, Jim Belcher

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