At , held Aug. 3-5 in Detroit, Mich., four keynote speakers and more than a hundred other participants shared their learnings from ministry with others at work in the Christian Reformed Church.
Here is some of what was heard from the conference floor:
āThe CRC was a place of transformation for me, and I think that as we look back at this occasion we might see that this was a moment of turning for us.ā āDarren Roorda, director of
āGod is longing for the day when it will be well with the whole creation. We are called to grieve with God, but we have to do that with the background of Godās delight in the well-ordered creation. . . . We know we donāt have to solve it all. . . . We donāt need to be messiahs. . . . Jesus is coming again and he will make all things new.ā āRichard Mouw, theologian
āDonāt complicate the gospel. Itās simple: My name is Liz. Iām a sinner and I need a Savior whose name is Jesus.ā āLiz Curtis Higgs, author
āChristian Reformed Church: you are in a time in American and global history that the Lord is calling you to stop over-processingā and love and minister as God leads. āWeāre talking and meeting and the world is dying.ā āHarvey Carey, pastor of in Detroit, Mich.
If we miss engaging with a Jesus-follower of another race or culture, āitās not just that weāre missing each other, weāre missing another picture of our Father.ā āKizzy Thomas, liturgist and Inspire 2017 worship team member
āGodās people are sent in the power of the Holy Spirit, not only to do and say, but to be. We are sent as a reconciled and reconciling community. ā āRuth Padilla DeBorst, with and director of Center for Interdisciplinary Theological Education in Costa Rica
About the Author
Alissa Vernon is the news editor for The Banner.