Beginners Pluck by Liz Forkin Bohannon

We continue to count down the Top 100 Books for Faith Driven Entrepreneurs with…

Beginners Pluck

by Liz Forkin Bohannon

There’s no lack of people out there telling you to find your passion and dream big. But why does it seem like when we try, we so often end up more lost and overwhelmed than when we started?

Liz Forkin Bohannon wants you to rethink everything you’ve been told about finding your passion and following your dreams. Why? Hate to break it to you, but you’re likely never going to “find your passion.” Because your passion and purpose are something you build–actively–day by day. In her signature tell-it-like-it-is fashion, Liz shares 14 actionable principles that will teach you how to do just that.

With total transparency, Liz shares hilarious and heartbreaking stories of her journey of screwups and successes that illustrate the mindsets and principles that will give you a jolt of energy, inspiration, and direction toward your True North. By embracing your Inner Beginner, dreaming small, choosing curiosity over criticism, and so much more, Liz’s story and the principles of Beginner’s Pluck will have you on your way to building a life of purpose, passion, and lasting impact. Ready to rise to the occasion? It’s time to make this life everything you want it to be.

Click here to listen to our podcast with Liz!

Click on the book cover to check out the Reviews and Purchase at Amazon


Top 10 Video Story: JAILHOUSE BUSINESS OF GENEROSITY

We are excited to share with you some of the media and film content from Dealmakers Films as originally published on their website.

We could go on and on about the great, meaningful work that Pete Ochs has been doing but we rather let you hear it & see it from him yourself on our podcast this past Tuesday! But what you should know is that Pete’s approach to business, and to life, has less to do with leadership and stewardship, and everything to do with Lordship.

For more from Pete’s own voice, please check out one of our Top 10 Video Stories on him below.

#8 JAILHOUSE BUSINESS OF GENEROSITY

PETE OCHS OF CAPITAL III

To inmates, seeing someone who had a genuine desire for them to succeed changed everything. According to Pete Ochs, this attitude stems from what he believes Christ has done for us. Watch his story to hear how his entrepreneurial journey took him to jail, but for all the right reasons.

 Watch below!

If you would like to dive in deeper, theres a longer 35 minute version of Pete and Debbie’s story that was produced. You can view a trailer of it here on our Thursday blog post.

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[Special thanks to Carles Rabada on Unsplash for the cover photo]

Four Principles of Biblical Stewardship

This content was originally published here by Two Ten Magazine, the Marketplace Ministry Magazine presenting Purpose, Perspective & Perseverance.

— by Hugh Whelchel

Every faculty you have, your power of thinking or of moving your limbs from moment to moment, is given you by God. If you devoted every moment of your whole life exclusively to His service, you could not give Him anything that was not in a sense His own already. 

C. S. Lewis, “Mere Christianity”

What does stewardship look like in our lives today? What does it look like in our businesses? Unfortunately, many Christians today only associate the idea of stewardship with sermons they have heard about church budgets and building programs. The idea of biblical stewardship is much more expansive. It is where the concepts of faith, work, and economics intersect. There are four important principles about biblical stewardship we must understand if we are to lead our businesses, our churches, our communities, and our families in a way that honors God. In developing this framework for unpacking biblical stewardship, I’ve learned in part from ideas set out by Bill Peel, founding executive director of the Center for Faith and Work at LeTourneau University, in his excellent essay “Leadership Is Stewardship”.

Learn more about stewardship through our newsletter.

The Principle of Ownership

 The psalmist begins the 24th Psalm with,“The earth is the LORD’s, and everything in it, the world, and all who live in it.”

 In the beginning of Genesis, God creates everything and puts Adam in the Garden of Eden to work it and to take care of it. It is clear that man was created to work and that work is the stewardship of all of the creation that God has given him. This is the fundamental principle of biblical stewardship. God owns everything, and we are simply managers or administrators acting on His behalf.

 Therefore, stewardship expresses our obedience regarding the administration of everything God has placed under our control, which is all encompassing. Stewardship is the commitment of one’s self and possessions to God’s service, recognizing that we do not have the right of control over our property or ourselves. Echoing Deuteronomy 8:17, we might say: “My power and the strength of my hands have produced this wealth for me.” But Deuteronomy 8:18 counsels us to think otherwise:

 “Remember the LORD your God, for it is He who gives you the ability to produce wealth.”  The fact that we are managers doesn’t mean we merely preserve creation, like a park ranger. Instead, we are gardeners, cultivating the areas of creation placed under our responsibility. Your work is the area of creation God has given you to manage on His behalf. He’s given you the ability to steward it well. 

The Principle of Responsibility

In explaining responsibility, Peel writes, “Although God gives us ‘all things richly to enjoy’, nothing is ours. Nothing really belongs to us. God owns everything; we’re responsible for how we treat it and what we do with it. While we complain about our rights here on earth, the Bible constantly asks, ‘What about your responsibilities?’ Owners have rights; stewards have responsibilities.”

We are called as God’s stewards to manage that which belongs to God. While God has graciously entrusted us with the care, development, and enjoyment of everything He owns as His stewards, we are responsible to manage His holdings well and according to His desires and purposes.

The Principle of Accountability

A steward is one who manages the possessions of another. We are all stewards of the resources, abilities, and opportunities that God has entrusted to our care, and one day each one of us will be called to give an account for how we have managed what the Master has given us.

This is the maxim taught by the parable of the talents. God has entrusted authority over the creation to us and we are not allowed to rule over it as we see fit. We are called to exercise our dominion under the watchful eye of the Creator, managing His creation in accord with the principles He has established.

Like the servants in the parable of the talents, we will be called to give an account of how we have administered everything we have been given, including our time, money, abilities, information, wisdom, relationships, and authority. We will all give account to the rightful owner as to how well we managed the things he has entrusted to us.

The Principle of Reward

In Colossians 3:23-24 Paul writes: “Whatever you do, work at it with all your heart, as working for the Lord, not for men, since you know that you will receive an inheritance from the Lord as a reward. It is the Lord Christ you are serving.”

The Bible shows us in the parables of the kingdom that faithful stewards who do the Master’s will with the Master’s resources can expect to be rewarded incompletely in this life, but fully in the next. We all should long to hear the Master say what He exclaims in Matthew 25:21: “Well done, good and faithful servant! You have been faithful with a few things; I will put you in charge of many things. Come and share your master’s happiness!”

As Christians in the 21st century, we need to embrace this larger biblical view of stewardship, which goes beyond church budgets or building projects, though important; it connects everything we do with what God is doing in the world.

We need to be faithful stewards of all God has given us within the opportunities presented through His providence to glorify Him, serve the common good, and further His kingdom.

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[Special thanks to TwoTenMag.com for the cover photo]

Dealmakers Film Series: “Pete Ochs – A Triple Bottom Line”

We are excited to share with you some of the media and film content from Dealmakers Films as originally published on their website.

Dealmakers Films

The DEALMAKERS Film Series was created to entertain, inspire and connect audiences to look at faith and work differently. They aim to go beyond literature into real life examples of success and failure to help inspire people to become who God created them to be. Their first episode features this week’s podcast guest Pete Ochs discussing his radical idea of a triple bottom line.

Episode 1: Pete Ochs, “A Triple Bottom Line” 

Pete had a crazy idea. What would happen if we put a manufacturing business inside a maximum security prison, pay employees fair market wages, and help them find their purpose? What started out as a crazy idea turned into reform, relationships and ultimately transformed lives.

Watch below!

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[Special thanks to Dealmakers for the cover photo]

Looking for Volunteer Marketing Coordinator to Advance the Mission of Faith Driven Entrepreneurs

We’re on a mission is to encourage, equip, empower and support Christ following entrepreneurially minded people worldwide with world class content and community.

The primary ways we do that is through our daily blog, monthly newsletter and weekly podcast that is being listened to in 100 different countries and downloaded more than 100,000 times. Previous guests have included pastors like Tim Keller and business leaders like Nancy Duarte, Phil Vischer of Veggietales, Steve Green of Hobby Lobby, Norm Miller of Interstate Batteries and more.

This a ministry venture to advance the movement and through a generous gift, we’ve been given $2,000 a month to invest in SEO, PPC Campaigns, Facebook Ads or other targeted paid media opportunities. But we need someone who is passionate about the mission to effectively coordinate where we invest these resources. We’re looking for someone who is in the industry, passionate about the movement and might be able to volunteer some time to guide us as we test and develop a strategy.

If you know of anyone that might be interested, please have them reach out to us at https://www.faithdrivenentrepreneur.org/socialmediacoordinator

How to practice Gleaning & become a leader in Corporate Responsibility

What can companies learn from the Old Testament practice of gleaning?

Corporate Responsibility is a hot topic right now with the restatement of the business roundtable definition of a corporation. From familiar CSR programs like education, health, and other community initiatives, the term has evolved into different movements like social enterprise and impact investing. What many people don’t realize is that the Bible offers a glimpse into how to do it well in Book of Ruth. We really enjoyed how Christianity Today’s article, “The Book of Ruth Can Transform the Way We Do Business Today” approaches the topic. Within the article, they give many great examples of companies and policies for us to learn how to practice the philosophy of gleaning.

Gleaning, the Old Testament practice whereby farmers left an unharvested margin around their fields and the poor came and picked from it, was at the heart of the Book of Ruth. Was gleaning only an ancient agricultural regulation, Stumberg wondered, or did it also apply to how he should steward a modern-day tech business?

“I was contextualizing what Boaz did,” said Stumberg, who sees God as the ultimate owner of his business and its office space. “The story of Boaz helped me name something the Lord was moving in my heart.” …

Please click here to read the whole article on Christianity Today. ENJOY!

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[Special thanks to Katrin Rodegast & CT for the cover art]