I am almost overwhelmed by the abundance of high quality church and theology conferences that are being held these days. It seems that the bar has been raised at least 2 notches in the past year. I hope to get on the bandwagon by presenting a conference in the Tri-Cites, but that take money that I don’t have right now. If you know someone who would like to contribute to this effort, have them contact me.
The book business (even the big boxes and the big online stores) has been in the dumper for quite a while but it took a significant nosedive about mid February of this year. I’ve been doing it so long (going on 42 years) that I have seen many cycles come and go… and I am finally beginning to learn to go with the flow. Not so much in the past……during the mid 80′s I went on an expansion spree and opened retail stores in each of the Tri-Cities and a warehouse/office complex near where the 2 interstates intersect.
I thought things would continue to grow then and they most likely would have if the moral failings of Jim Bakker and Jimmy Swaggart had not been of such significance. As a result of those things, the mergers and acquisitions mania of the book industry (consolidation), the Gulf War, and the biggest economic recession since the Great Depression in 1981, my retail book empire came tumbling down. I lost a lot of money (nearly everything I had made in the previous 17 years) and closed all locations except the main location in Kingsport.
Since then, I have run a single theological bookstore, I rebind (by hand) personal and heirloom Bibles for folks, and sell Bibles, and new and used theological and homeschool books online. I have around 150,000 new and used Christian and theological books, mostly published since the 1960′s. Fortunately for me, my wife went back to college for the past several years and got a couple of marketable degrees…..hey who wants to pay real money to bookseller-theologians? We’re just workin’ for eternal benefits.
My point here is that since the book business is once again in a lull, I decided around the first of the year to begin occasionally attending some really good theology conferences when I could find them. This began with a trip to Albuquerque in mid January (it was cold there too) to attend the Evangelical Free Church Mid Winter Ministerial Conference. It was a great conference which lasted for several days. I attended a multi-session Church History and Polity class for the EFCA and thoroughly enjoyed it. I was able to meet several pastors and leaders for the EFCA and several of the denominational agency heads made presentations to the Polity class.
The highlight of the Albuquerque meeting (besides Polity) was a full 12 hour session led by Ed Stetzer of Lifeway fame. This guy is an incredible dynamo like the Energizer Bunny (but much larger). Ed is a missiologist, has 2 masters and 2 doctorates, works full time as head of Lifeway Research, travels the world on a daily basis, and in his spare time pastors the huge 1st Baptist Church of Hendersonville, TN (where country stars like the Oak Ridge Boys attend) as an interim pastor after the pastor there died last year. When we chatted, he mentioned that he would be in Abingdon, VA soon.
When I returned from Albuquerque, I Googled to check Don Carson’s itinerary (which I do regularly) and found that he was going to be the keynote speaker of a new conference (called The Church and Theology—right up my alley) in Nashville during February. Well I couldn’t pass that up, with him being that close (and I needed an excuse to go to Nashville to swap some hymnals at Word Music) so I was able to attend that wonderful conference and to chat briefly with “the Don.” Community Bible Church of Brentwood was the host of the conference with their terrific young pastor Byron “Boo” Yawn, a Master’s Seminary graduate. I was also able to meet and hear both pastor Steve Lawson of Mobile and blogger Tim Challies speak at that conference.