Megachurch pastor Dr. Jay Strother steps away from the pulpit after a stomach cancer diagnosis
Dr. Jay Strother, the senior pastor of Brentwood Baptist Church on the outskirts of Nashville, Tennessee, has announced he will take an extended break from ministry after being diagnosed with stomach cancer.
The 50-year-old pastor, who has been leading the roughly 6,500-member multi-campus church since 2023, revealed that doctors first discovered a large mass in his right abdominal area back in December. Medical testing confirmed it was a malignant tumor. He has been processing the diagnosis privately for the past two months and expects to receive his official diagnosis and treatment plan on March 3.
His first request to his congregation was not for sympathy. It was for prayer.
"First, pray! Pray for my health and healing, pray for my wife and kids, pray for the doctors that they'll have Spirit-led wisdom. Please pray that I'll be a good witness to them. Pray for our staff and leadership teams. Pray that, if this is spiritual warfare, the enemy be stopped and that God get all the glory."
A Pastor Who Leads With Scripture, Not Self-Pity
What stands out about Strother's announcement is its tone. There is no bitterness in it, no anger, no "why me." In a culture that treats every personal crisis as an occasion for public grievance, Strother pointed his congregation to the Bible instead of himself, as CBN reports.
He shared with his church that he has been anchoring himself in Matthew 6:33-34 during the agonizing wait for answers:
"Seek first the kingdom of God and his righteousness and all of these things will be provided for you. Therefore, don't worry about tomorrow, because tomorrow will worry about itself. Each day has enough trouble of its own. By God's grace, I've been taking it a day at a time and a step at a time."
That kind of composure is not performance. It is the product of a faith that has been tested before it was announced. Two months of private wrestling with a cancer diagnosis, and the man's public posture is to hold onto Scripture and ask others to pray for his doctors.
An Honest Reckoning With What Lies Ahead
Strother was candid about the uncertainty he faces. He acknowledged that the road ahead will not be simple, and that his medical team has been straightforward with him about the difficulty of what's coming.
"Like many of you who have dealt with medical issues, the answers have not come as quickly or been as clear as I would have liked. There are additional complexities to my condition for which we're still awaiting results. I have no doubt that God has placed me in the hands of a well-trained medical team, but they've been honest that the road ahead will not be easy."
The treatment plan has not been finalized, but Strother said it is "almost certain" he will need to step away from ministry for treatment, major surgery, and an extended recovery. For a pastor who has been shepherding a congregation through its 50th anniversary season and beyond, that is no small sacrifice. Brentwood Baptist is not a small operation. It is a multi-campus church with thousands of families who depend on its leadership.
But Strother is not framing this as his story. He is framing it as Christ's.
"Last, but certainly not least, never forget that in any trial, Christ is the main character, not the diagnosis, not the cancer, not the treatment. It's Christ who 'bore our sins in his body on the tree so that, having died to sins, we might live for righteousness. By his wounds you have been healed' (2:24). I believe in that promise."
What the Church Still Gets Right
Stories like this rarely break through the noise. They don't generate outrage clicks or fuel cable news panels. But they matter, perhaps more than most of what dominates the national conversation.
There is a reason tens of millions of Americans still fill church pews every Sunday. It is not because they are naive about suffering. It is because they have a framework for meeting it. When a pastor tells his congregation that suffering is "not abandoned by God, but proof we've been called by God," he is drawing on something deeper than therapeutic positivity or self-help slogans. He is drawing on a tradition that has carried people through plagues, wars, and personal devastation for two thousand years.
Strother and his wife, Tanya, are raising five children. The weight of a cancer diagnosis does not fall on one person alone. It falls on a family, a congregation, a community. Strother knows this, and his letter to his church reflected it. He asked for prayers not just for himself, but for his wife and kids, his staff, and his leadership teams.
He also turned the moment outward, addressing anyone in his congregation carrying their own burden:
"Peter tells us that suffering means we're not abandoned by God, but proof we've been called by God (2:21). Our God is good, even when everything doesn't feel good to us. Whatever you are facing, I pray that God's Word will continue to give all of us both truth and strength."
A man staring down cancer, and his instinct is to pastor the people around him. That is not a headline designed to go viral. It is something better. It is faith doing exactly what it was built to do.





