Why Piper Left (and I Won't)

By | October 18, 2005

Various people have been influential in my life and thinking. The one whom has had the most impact but whom I have never seen in person (and is still alive) is John Piper. Like many well-known pastors, Piper does not give lots of personal details in his messages. So while I’ve long known that Piper was a professor at Bethel College before he became a pastor, I never knew why he left. The reason why this was so important to me was because I wondered if I would ever do the same.

Piper gives his reason in a sermon recently sent out by his list and the answer is quite helpful to me. I excerpt a longer portion for a reason:

I was on sabbatical from teaching at Bethel College. My one aim on this leave was to study Romans 9 and write a book on it that would settle, in my own mind, the meaning of these verses. After six years of teaching and finding many students in every class ready to discount my interpretation of this chapter for one reason or another, I decided I had to give eight months to it. The upshot of that sabbatical was the book, The Justification of God. I tried to answer every important exegetical objection to God’s absolute sovereignty in Romans 9.

But the result of that sabbatical was utterly unexpected—at least by me. My aim was to analyze God’s words so closely and construe them so carefully that I could write a book that would be compelling and stand the test of time. What I did not expect was that six months into this analysis of Romans 9 God himself would speak to me so powerfully that I resigned my job at Bethel and made myself available to the Minnesota Baptist Conference if there were a church who would have me as a pastor.

In essence it happened like this: I was 34 years old. I had two children and a third on the way. As I studied Romans 9 day after day, I began to see a God so majestic and so free and so absolutely sovereign that my analysis merged into worship and the Lord said, in effect, “I will not simply be analyzed, I will be adored. I will not simply be pondered, I will be proclaimed. My sovereignty is not simply to be scrutinized, it is to be heralded. It is not grist for the mill of controversy, it is gospel for sinners who know that their only hope is the sovereign triumph of God’s grace over their rebellious will.”

I turn 34 years old in a few months, but the reason why I don’t think that I will leave teaching is because in my situation I teach about a God who is adored. Yes, we analyze, but we also worship. Sometimes maybe I “cross the line” in preaching (vs. teaching), but the students don’t resist; they respond. If it were not so, I cannot see enjoying my job.

I don’t know what Bethel College was like in 1980 (when Piper left), but I know what it was like in 1990 when my girlfriend (now wife) attended and graduated from there. I would say this: there are Christian colleges and there are Christian colleges. Do not trust the glossy flyers they send you in the mail. Be very careful where you choose to go to school, where you choose to teach, or where you choose to send your kids. After a while of observing graduates, you start to see patterns. School X produces spiritually confused graduates; School Y produces students with more freedom than the pagans; School Z produces narrow-minded, angry fools.

The Master’s College isn’t perfect, but it’s right on the main thing: we exist to proclaim Christ as Lord and to live for him. And the students at TMC know that and they’re there because of that. If they want the beach, or the big-city life, or the intellectual snobbery, they go to other schools. So I never have to fight students who want to scrutinize to the exclusion of submission, or to deliberate without delight.

0 thoughts on “Why Piper Left (and I Won't)

  1. Geoff

    Todd,
    This is an excellent blog. I think you nail the point exactly. The teaching at IBEX (and at TMC and in general) can be very pastoral and shepherd-like in many different ways, and I think that you exhibit that often. Keep it up. Keep up the hard work. Oftentimes I know it can be hard, frustrating and discouraging, but hang in there and pursue the students to better love, serve, honor and live for Christ as their Master and Lord! :-).

    Reply
  2. Anonymous

    Todd~ Your “preaching” in class and all throughout our semester is one of the reasons that you are my favorite professor! ~Bethann FA02

    Reply
  3. Happy

    Todd, what does this mean for your future? Are you still considering Dallas? How will that affect IBEX and bringing in another teacher, etc.?

    Thanks for all the blogging this semester. I know it takes up time, but I really think your blog is reaching a lot of people, as evidenced by the comments by so many different people. My blog has a link to yours because I think it is not only fun to check up on, but useful!

    Reply
  4. Anonymous

    I remember spending our last Land and Bible class singing Sovereign Grace songs. I was quite amazed that you would give up precious lecture time, but you said that the result of our studys in that class should be one of praise and giving glory God. That was what my heart was led to do in that class and in many of my classes while there and while at TMC. What you teach does affect more than our minds. I am most thankful for the devotional times in class. It is evident in these moments that you care about more than students in the classroom but you want to help us live a life worthy of the calling. Thanks.
    -Kintner

    Reply
  5. becca boone

    Todd – just wanted to say thanks for one of the highlights of ancient israel class: you stressed not taking for granted our passion for the Lord, to not take for granted the knowledge that we have of the Bible and of God, to treasure our relationship with Him and not to let it grow stagnant. you told us to not let our environment make our passion for the Lord decrease. you told us to make sure our passion for God and His glory and His work is genuine now, to have a serious approach, to be diligent, and to have a careful approach to life and faith. that’s really been a great reminder. thanks!

    Reply
  6. christian burkhardt

    Thanks for the reminder, Todd. In your experience, was this mindset easier or harder to maintain in your graduate studies? It seems that in Seminary it is so easy to get swallowed up in analyzing to the neglect of adoring. What are your thoughts? I mean, as a teacher you can be there to remind your students to stop and worship. But as a student, how do you personally avoid losing sight of God’s awesomeness?

    Reply
  7. Todd Bolen

    Christian – great questions. I’ll plan to address that in a future post. I don’t know that I have the answer but I have a few thoughts.

    Reply

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