Podcast Episode 64 – God of the Second Shift with Jeff Haanen from the Denver Institute of Faith and Work

Join William and Henry in the Mile-High city as they talk to Jeff Haanen from the Denver Institute for Faith and Work. His article, God of the Second Shift, made waves in the faith and work world, and we’re excited to have him on our podcast today to talk more about how we can move this conversation around theology and business from the corner office to the manufacturing floor. Tune in to hear what Jeff has to share about what a theology of work means for those in the working class.

As you’ll hear, Jeff asks and answers the same questions he posed in his article for Christianity Today. Have we been blind to the “daily humiliations” of those whose work we depend on each day? Have we been interpreting Scripture through our own professional class bias and failed to ask how working-class Americans think and feel about their work? The honest answers to these questions may provide the exact conviction we need.

Listen to hear what a whole new side of the conversation around faith and work might sound like.

Useful Links:

DIFW Website

Jeff Haanen Website

The Faith and Work Podcast

Articles/Books Mentioned in This Episode:

God of the Second Shift – Christianity Today

Working by Studs Terkel

Our Kids by Robert Putnam

An Uncommon Guide to Retirement by Jeff Haanen

The Pinkerton Papers

We’re at #61-70 in our Top 100 Video Stories

Top 100 Video Stories

Videos 61-70

As we continue down the countdown of our Top 100 Video Stories for Faith Driven Entrepreneurs, it’s hard to believe that there are this many incredible stories out there. If you feel lonely or isolated in your entrepreneurial journey, we’d highly recommend watching any or all of these stories to be encouraged and reminded that there are other people just like you who have gone, or are going through the exact same things. Here are some of the highlights from this week’s ten videos…

Tegu Toys is a story you may have heard before, but it doesn’t get less inspiring. To see what Chris and Will Haughey have done with the simple idea of magnetic wooden toys never ceases to amaze and inspire. We’re grateful to them for sharing their story with us and hope you watch it to see the way God is working through them in Honduras.

Also, if you’re looking for something a little different our out of the box, we have two great videos for you this week. The first is the story of Yvette Rock. She is unique among artists who in recent years have tried to capture the rise and fall of Detroit. If you’re an artist or creative type of entrepreneur, we really think you’ll enjoy learning about the work Yvette is doing.

Or, if you’re into gardening and working with your hands, we have another entrepreneur who can be considered an artist in her own right. Riet Schumack started a youth-operated garden to put work and money in the hands of those who will shape the future of her town. The results are worth watching for yourself.

As always, these are just a few of the highlights of this week’s countdown. We hope you get a chance to watch them all. Keep an eye out for next week’s post as we close out the first 50 of our Top 100 Video Stories for Faith Driven Entrepreneurs.

Videos 71-80
Videos 81-90
Videos 91-100

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[Special thanks to Sam McGhee on Unsplash for the cover photo]

Church for Monday by Svetlana Papazov

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

Church for Monday: Equipping Believers for Mission at Work

by Svetlana Papazov

Church for Monday book encourages believers to act in an entrepreneurial manner and partner with God in his working the world. It demonstrates through many examples, how the church is uniquely designed to model Creator God, the Ultimate Entrepreneur. It makes the case that a church equipping for Monday is a missional church that fosters the creative streak placed in every one of us, practices corporate public faith, innovatively contextualizes the gospel for the postmodern world, and seeks holistic spirituality by uniting worship on Sunday to mission on Monday.

This type of church, called Church for Monday, have grown in the awareness that as the gap between practicing Christians and the unchurched has dangerously widened, the 8-to-5 window (the work day), has become a mission field as important as the 10/40 window (a geographical area with high concentrations of unreached people for Christ), because at work is where the majority of the unchurched spend the majority of their waking hours.

This book asks: “What type of church prepares for that type of world?” and offers the local church a practical re-tooling to equip believers for the workweek on Monday, regain relevance in the lives of the lapsed and non-Christians in its community, and re-establish the Church’s witness in the public arena.

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


Book Recommendation – “BAM Global Movement”

This article was originally published here on the author’s blog.
Check out his website to see the ‘business as missions’ work around the world!

— by Mats Tunehag

We’re happy to present a new book on BAMBAM Global Movement: Business as Mission Concepts & Stories. Its unique feature is the blend of short chapters explaining the BAM concept interspersed with brief case studies of BAM businesses.

Mats Tunehag writes about BAM from Biblical, historical, global, missiological and conceptual perspectives. He also gives an overview of the development of the modern day global BAM movement.

Gea Gort has written over 25 case studies of a variety of BAM business from various industries on different continents.

Some endorsements and various sales points are enclosed below.

“Business as Mission has become an enormously powerful movement in the transformation of God’s world. This book is an excellent and varied collection of moving stories and biblical insights, showing how business conducted to the glory of God can revive and unite communities. I hope and pray that it will inspire many more innovative projects.” Dr. Richard Higginson Director of Faith in Business, Ridley Hall, UK

“Gea Gort and Mats Tunehag lay a solid foundation for BAM from a biblical and historical perspective, and on this foundation they address a wide variety of topics facing BAM entrepreneurs. The biggest contribution of the book, however, is the rich insight gleaned from the stories of real-life BAM entrepreneurs. Each chapter includes stories from the field of practitioners facing challenges of operating in corrupt, less-developed countries, addressing human trafficking, generating a multidimensional return on investment, and more. Tunehag’s experience within the BAM ecosystem lends credibility to the book and allows for connections with BAM practitioners from around the world.”  —Dr. Ross O’Brien, Director The Center for Business as Mission, Dallas Baptist University

“Thankfully, there are now many authors who have written on the theology of business and its importance in God’s kingdom. However, the variety of examples and stories in this book truly bring it to life in a way that is clear and compelling. It is time that God’s purpose for business becomes a global movement!” Bonnie P. Wurzbacher Former Senior Vice President, The Coca-Cola Company; Chief Resource Development Officer, World Vision International

For more endorsements, click here

You can buy our BAM book – hardcover and Kindle – from the following:

AMAZON

EUROPE

USA

UK

AUSTRALIA & NEW ZEALAND

SWEDEN

HENDRICKSON PUBLISHERS

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[Special thanks to Jeremy Yap on Unsplash for the cover photo]

Restoring Work: Training Courses from Chalmers Center

This content was originally published here by The Chalmers Center, which aims to equip churches to walk alongside people who are poor, breaking the spiritual, social, and material bonds of poverty.

— by The Chalmers Center

What areas of your life do you long to see reconciled and made new?

It may seem like a strange question. But on a summer day in Memphis, TN, a group of people navigating unemployment wrestled with it in powerful ways. One by one, they each described areas of brokenness in their lives that they wanted to see become whole.

“One area is my self-doubt,” shared Isaac.* “Self-doubt makes me not try hard. Self-doubt gives me an easy way out of tough situations. It makes me a quitter and gives me fear.”

Isaac and the others in the circle were participating in a jobs preparedness class at Advance Memphis, a partner of the Chalmers Center. This particular class was testing an early version of Chalmers’ new Work Life curriculum.

Incorporating material already developed by Advance Memphis and Jobs for LifeWork Life is designed to empower low-income people to find work—and to flourish in it.

But Work Life reaches beyond basic skills like writing a resume or navigating a job interview.  At its core, Work Life addresses the worldview questions, individual choices, systemic barriers, and relational complexities that people in generational poverty face.

J. Mark Bowers, Chalmers’ Curriculum Specialist, shares, “While skills are incredibly important, full transformation flows from understanding that God is at work in the world, and that we are uniquely designed to participate in that work through our jobs.”

For one participant, Jemal,* the centrality of Christ became abundantly clear. When describing what areas he wanted to see made new, Jemal shared,  “One area is to be closer to God and stay focused on college. This is important to me because God is who keeps everyone together and without Him everything will fall apart. I also need to focus on college because my education is much required in my life.”

Many of the graduates from the early Work Life classes have found jobs, and in one case, a former participant had the privilege of hiring another graduate.

In conjunction with Chalmers’ partners Advance Memphis and Jobs for Life, Chalmers will train church and ministry leaders to form Work Life classes in their own communities. As Jerilyn Sanders, Director of U.S. Training, explains,  “The goal is to equip local churches with practical ways to address the complexities of generational poverty. Work Life provides an opportunity for God’s people to cross those stubborn dividing lines of class and race and to truly walk with people like Isaac and Jemal.”

After reflecting on the ways self-doubt sabotaged his work in the past, Isaac shared how Work Life empowered him to move forward. “I feel like now with the little bit of knowledge I have gathered, I can believe in myself through Jesus. I can do all things through Him who strengthens me!”

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Find out more about Chalmers Center in this 2-min intro video below:

For more information on their Training Courses, please click here.

  • Faith & Finances Training – By starting a Faith & Finances class, your church can empower the materially poor with money management skills and unpack how our money is part of God’s work in the world.

  • Work Life Training – Through Work Life, your church can empower low-income people with the skills and attitudes to find work—and to flourish in it.

  • Restore: Savings Curriculum – Restore: Savings equips Majority World churches to start savings group ministries where people pray, study Scripture, share life together, and save their own money.

  • Business, Home, and Health Curriculum Business, Home, and Health addresses the economic, health, and worldview issues of people living in poverty throughout Africa, Asia, and Latin America.

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[Special thanks to Chalmers.org for the cover photo]

3 Hopeful Signs of Ending Poverty

Hope International shares some wonderful stories like the one below from their blog.
Check our their website to hear more about their work providing Christ-centered financial services to families and individuals around the world. And thanks to Chris Horst for pointing us toward this content!

We love hearing about content like from YOU, our FDE community! Please send them in 🙂

— by Peter Greer

Just two hundred years ago, almost the entire world’s population lived in extreme poverty. Today, less than 10 percent do. In the past 40 years alone, the percent of people living in extreme poverty has dropped by over 30 percentage points.

In my years of work in Christ-centered economic development, I have had the privilege of visiting places ranging from the small towns in Haiti to remote villages in northern Afghanistan. And I have come to realize that while poverty runs rampant in our world, the situation in so many communities is unquestionably getting better. The depth and complexities of poverty are not hopeless. The Church is on the move.

Love in Action

Jesus said that the world would know that we are His followers in how we love (John 13:35). And throughout His ministry, we consistently see His steadfast love and care for some of the most marginalized in society: widows, orphans, foreigners, and those living in poverty.

For generations, the Church has recognized the importance of following in Christ’s footsteps to love and care for those on the margins. The Church has run toward those in poverty—showing the world what it stands for and not only what it stands against. Today, there are growing numbers of people and organizations committed to bringing the love of Christ to individuals around the world and empowering whole communities to flourish.

Here are three hopeful trends as the Church addresses global poverty:

1. Stand for local leaders.

Our culture is obsessed with superheroes. In ten years, Marvel movies alone have totaled over $17 billion in the box office worldwide. Unfortunately, this hero-centric perspective translated into our early poverty alleviation efforts as well.

When the Church first came onto the scene of global poverty, we were foreigners trying to play the part of the hero. But in the last few years, there has been a growing realization and repentance for massively underestimating the capacity and competency of the global Church. We’ve seen how infinitely more capable the global team is to engage in long-term effective poverty alleviation.

We celebrate the fathers and mothers, businesspeople and church leaders affecting change in their neighborhoods. We celebrate the expertise and passion of our brothers and sisters around the world who seek to love and serve their communities with excellence. (Since they know their culture, their resources, and their people better than we do, they tend to do the work better anyway.) And we celebrate because the Church is recognizing its identity as a global Church. We need each other in this mission!

2. Recognize assets.

Although we might have looked at a person or community in poverty through a needs-based lens in the past, recently we have changed our focus. Instead of seeing “not enough,” we see an individual’s assets, skills, and dreams. Instead of seeing “the poor,” we see a mother with a sewing machine, a passion to make clothes, and a firm determination to provide for her children. Instead of seeing a “needy person,” we see a father with a small field, a knack for farming, and a dream to build a home for his family. We see people as the solution.

The greatest Gift-Giver of all time entrusted each of us with unique gifts, skills, and abilities. In Romans 12:6, Paul writes that “we have different gifts, according to the grace given to each of us.” What a mistake it would be if we didn’t recognize them in ourselves and in others!

We celebrate the shift from seeing needs to seeing capacity. We celebrate the resourcefulness, diligence, and creativity of our brothers and sisters around the world to transform their communities. We have much to learn from them.

3. Champion employment.

It’s been said that “the world’s best welfare program is a job.” And today, there is a growing cadre of organizations who understand the importance of work.

In their new initiative “Flip the List,” Jobs for Life seeks to transform the way the American Church fights poverty. Right now, the Church pushes back against poverty by handing out food (62 percent), providing housing (55 percent), and giving away clothing (22 percent). Only two percent of the Church’s poverty-alleviation efforts are geared toward employment.

With a mission to equip the Church to prepare individuals for meaningful work, Jobs for Life wants to see all people flourish in their work and relationships.

New Approach, Lasting Change

The Church is beginning to combat extreme poverty in a more complete way. It focuses on long-term systemic change and lasting employment patterns, not short-term quick fixes. It emphasizes the importance of partnerships and local champions, not external “saviors” descending to solve the problems of those considered less fortunate. The hope of the Gospel is integrated through tangible acts of compassion that have long-term reach.

This is a movement where discipleship, job creation, training, and financial services are building on local relationships to empower communities to break free from poverty.

Watch this short video to see how families living in poverty can put their gifts and talents to work and flourish.

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[Photo credit to Hope International blog]