Posts tagged Ben Kreps
An Interview with Ben Kreps

Church Leaders & the Pastors Conference: An Interview with Ben Kreps

Ben, lead pastor at Living Hope Church in Middletown, PA, is typically the one asking questions as the host of the weekly podcast to connect our global family of churches with our Executive Director, Mark Prater. This time, he was interviewed to share his thoughts on the annual Pastors Conference.

How many Pastors Conferences have you been to?

I attended first in 2010 and, obviously 2020 was canceled, so it’s been 11. My first one, I was not on staff, and my wife and I went, but we didn’t know many people there. We met some people, but mostly just enjoyed the sessions and hung out together. Then, the following year I was in the Pastors College, so my wife and I attended with our class, and then we joined the staff at Living Hope and have continued to attend, obviously, since then and it’s been a lot of fun.

What do you enjoy about the Pastors Conference

Each year, it’s like a big party. The relationships we have and friends we get to connect with while we’re there is a big thing, and definitely the sermons we hear and teaching and worship is so beneficial. My wife and I always come away encouraged and refreshed. We connect with folks we know from doing the Pastors College and with folks we’ve gotten to know over the years and it’s just a good time.

Why do you believe the Pastors Conference is valuable for “non-pastors”?

Taking church leaders - guys who might have an interest in Sovereign Grace or in pastoral ministry, maybe someone who’s newer to the church but has leadership potential, or even a small group leader - and their wives is something that I’ve seen just really serve those couples. It’s a way to invest in them and even help envision them toward our partnership with Sovereign Grace. They always come away encouraged spiritually and in what God is doing through Sovereign Grace that we get to partner in.

It’s refreshing for us as pastors - the messages are great and the worship is great and we’ve found that it’s just as refreshing for our leaders as it is for us.

I mentioned that my wife and I didn’t really know anyone our first time going, so I’m more in tune to that side of things relationally when we bring people, but everybody processes it differently. One of our bi-vocational pastors and his wife went one year and just enjoyed being together and attending the sessions. They almost treated it like a getaway. But to build relationally, for example, this year we got a couple airbnbs and we’ll all be together, sharing space and meals, and I just introduce the folks we bring to a lot of different people. It’s pretty organic, but typically we’ll go out and have a dinner or a lunch and all be together and check in with each other at different times.

How has taking leaders in your church to the conference served you/your church?

One of the main ways is that the people who come back have an increased enthusiasm for being a part of Sovereign Grace and the mission that we share together and the culture that we’re seeking to cultivate in our church. It basically establishes or reinforces more of a sense of connection and understanding of what we’re trying to build.

When our leaders come back, they’ve experienced something that bleeds into what they’re leading in our church and helps them be better equipped and prepared to lead and respond to different needs.

What are you looking forward to about this year?

The main things I look forward to is hanging out way too late and getting meals with friends, but one specific thing is to celebrate the 40-year anniversary this year. I’m looking forward to that happy occasion - 40 years! This and the fact that the international folks are able to come - I know there’s over a hundred folks coming in from outside the US at this point - so to get back to that and to not just celebrate God’s faithfulness over 40 years, but to also see God exponentially growing Sovereign Grace and celebrate that together is something I’m looking forward to. 

It’s also just gratifying to just roll into the Pastors Conference with just a bunch of people - like Living Hope is in the house! It’s just pure joy. 

First Quarter Prayer Requests for Sovereign Grace

Recently, one of our pastors, Tim Kerr (Pastor, Sovereign Grace Church Toronto, Toronto, Canada), wrote a small book about payer entitled, “22 Life Lessons on Prayer.” In Lesson 13, Tim is speaking about praying in the Spirit saying, “To pray in the Spirit is to pray when the Spirit moves in our hearts and helps us to desire and seek God’s will. It is the Spirit imparting the heart of God to us in the moment. When we pray in the Spirit, as John Owen says so compellingly, ‘we see a sight of God as on a throne of grace’ and we know He welcomes our prayers to Him.” Isn’t it stunning that God welcomes our prayers? Oh my, what a good God we serve!

As you pray, please consider praying for Sovereign Grace. Here are a few of our prayer requests during the first quarter of the year:

  • Pray that God would give the members and pastors of Sovereign Grace churches opportunities to befriend unbelievers and share the gospel with them during 2020.

  • Please pray for Bob Kauflin who is leading in the production of the next Christmas/Advent album from Sovereign Grace Music scheduled to be released in October. Pray that God would give Bob wisdom in determining which songs to include on this album that were written at a recent Sovereign Grace Music Song Writers Retreat that he led.

  • Pray for Joselo Mercado (Sr. Pastor, Iglesia Gracia Soberana de Gaithersburg, Gaithersburg, MD) who will be making trips to Costa Rica and Columbia in the next couple of months where he will meet with pastors who lead churches that have expressed a desire to be adopted into Sovereign Grace.

  • Pray that God would continue to provide financially for Sovereign Grace Churches so that we can fund the gospel opportunities He is giving us.


Mark Prater is the Executive Director for Sovereign Grace and serves as an elder at Covenant Fellowship Church. He and his wife, Jill, have three married daughters and a growing number of grandchildren.