Joseph Dimitrov

(Bulgaria)

President,
Continental Theological Seminary

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About The Speaker

Joseph Dimitrov holds a PhD in theology from the Evangelical Theological Faculty in Belgium. He also earned his BA and MTh at Continental Theological Seminary, as well as a BSc and MSc from Sofia Technical University. Additionally, he has completed postgraduate studies in intellectual property and law.

Dr Joseph is the 11th president of Continental Theological Seminary in Brussels, a position he has held since 2008. His leadership has focused on academic excellence, fiscal stability, and engagement with the European Pentecostal community.

Dr Joseph has been an active spokesperson for Pentecostal theology at both national and international levels and is frequently sought as a public speaker to comment on major societal issues due to his deep grounding in theology, history, and leadership studies. He has also worked as general editor and translator of the Bulgarian edition of the New Testament Open Bible. Since 2010, he has served as the chairman of the Theological Commission of the World Assemblies of God Fellowship.   

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A Spirit-Driven Ecclesiological Tenacity: Tested and Proven Response to Hostility and Afflictions (EAPS 2025)

The Church is the spiritual community of the seeing ones. It has been called “out of darkness into his (God’s) wonderful light” (1 Pet. 2:9). This community consists of “children of the light and children of the day” who “do not belong to the night or to the darkness” (1 Thess. 5:5) but have the obligation to “live as children of light” (Eph. 5:8). The one who provides this environment of light, enabling the church to see, is the person and work of the Holy Spirit. In contrast with the previous state of blindness, the Spirit guides, speaks, teaches all things, reminds what was said, and reveals what is yet to come (John 14, 15, 16). Therefore, the scriptural contrast between darkness and light is not simply implying the transition from the state of unbelief to the state of belief. Instead, this enlarged perspective rather reveals the effect of a Spirit-led sight empowerment. This ability to walk with insight and discernment could be defined as pneumatological quality. Scripturally and in practice, we find this truth especially important for times when this “light-and-day” defined community goes through adversity and persecution. Ecclesiological seeing is possible through a pneumatological mindset. From its conception until modern times, this mindset has helped the church not only to survive afflictions but thrive spiritually. This is how the three painful effects of persecution—“the split consciousness,” “the split faithfulness,” and “the split leadership”—have been and will be overcome.

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