My friend J.R. Woodward recently posted a notice that had been posted by his friend J.R. Briggs, who lives in the suburbs of Philadelphia. The basic idea had apparently been percolating for awhile, but it's only recently taken shape: to host a conference where pastors can talk about their failures, their identity and their mistakes. The title of the conference is Epic Fail.
I, for one, think it's an absolutely brilliant idea.
I personally will not be able to participate in the conference (as I've already registered for a different conference, during those same dates), but here are the details for those who might:
As Woodward posted on his site, the idea is:
No glossy fliers. No big marketing budget. No rental of a large arena –- just a gritty bar that used to be a church (but failed).
Just purposeful space to tell stories, reflect, pray (a lot), eat meals slowly, connect with other pastors (and former pastors), listen to others and take communion. The goal isn’t to host a conference to celebrate ‘success’ – and we aren’t looking to host a conference that celebrates failure either. Our goal is to celebrate faithfulness in ministry, regardless of what the outcome looks like. We’ll have experts on failure telling stories of their own mistakes, sin, gaffes and screw-ups – and they’ll share how God showed up despite the failure. And space to process our own stories and how the gospel intersects at our brokenness.
We anticipate it being hopeful. Rich. Meaningful. Significant.
I don't know how such an event might strike the average "parishioner," but as a pastor I have to say that it sounds like a beautiful initiative. A refreshingly honest initiative. I hope it ends up being a great conference for anyone who manages to be there.
If you want more information about the conference, the conference organizers have set up an excellent website which is worth visiting just for the scrolling quotes on the front page.