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FAITH AND WORK BOOK REVIEW:
Dangerous Calling: Confronting the Unique Challenges of Pastoral Ministry by Paul Tripp. Crossway. 2012
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This is a book for pastors. The author tells us that it is a diagnostic book. It is written to help pastors take an honest look at themselves in the heart and life-exposing mirror of the Word of God to see things that are wrong and need correcting and to help them place themselves once again under the healing and transforming power of the gospel of Jesus Christ. Paul Tripp tells us that as a pastor, in this book he attempts to pastor other pastors.
A key theme in the book is the disconnect between the private persona of pastors and their public ministry life. He writes that the grief and concern he has about the state of pastoral culture in our generation, coupled with his knowledge and experience of transforming grace, has driven him to write this book.
In this book he shares stories from his own life and from those pastors that he has counseled. The book is a detailed exposition of what happens in the life of a person in ministry when he forgets to preach to himself the same gospel that he gives to others.
Among the topics he addresses in this book are identity, how we prepare seminary students for gospel ministry, spiritual maturity, living in isolation from the body of Christ, the condition of the heart, fear, preaching the gospel to yourself, Sunday morning, mediocrity, awe, arrival, self-glory, and a pastor’s private devotional life.
I always appreciate the writing of Paul Tripp. I found this to be a bold and honest book for pastors by a pastor who has counseled hundreds of pastors. I recommend that all pastors consider reading the book.

Here are some of my favorite quotes from the book:


Faith and Work Book Club – Won’t you read along with us?
We are reading through Working Blessedly Forever, Volume 1: The Shape of Marketplace Theology by R. Paul Stevens.  In this volume, the first of three, Stevens explores the shape of marketplace theology, its posture and methodology. Marketplace theology is the science of working blessedly forever.
This week we look at Chapter 4: Thinking and Praying about Work. Here are a few helpful quotes from the chapter:

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