Episode 26 – Why the Institutional Church is a Necessary Part of Community

In part two from the Alpine Inn, Henry, Rusty, and William field more questions from our guests but first gave some background on Inklings, the gathering of faith driven entrepreneurs in the Bay Area who meet regularly in the same vain of the original Inklings gathering of faith driven thinkers C.S. Lewis, J.R.R Tolkien, Dorothy Sayer and others. The team moves on to walk an entrepreneur who is struggling to find his place in the local church through why the institutional church is a necessary part of community, with some ideas as to how his entrepreneurial talents could even serve the local church. The team shares a bit on how diversity of walks and experiences within the church is actually the key to its success because it creates a place from which collective wisdom can be shared.  

 Another entrepreneur, currently a student, asked about what great books the team were reading and we found out Henry is more of a people guy while William and Rusty had to confess to may be over doing it in the book buying department. All gave a few of their favorite and highly recommended titles. Finally, the team calls Josh Banko over, one of the co-creators of the iPad, who shares a bit about how God led and fed his drive to innovate by speaking to the desires of his heart, sending mentors to him to point him in the right direction and choosing to make His presence known in Josh’s life every step of the way.

Photo by Joski Byrne on Unsplash

Great Faith Lessons from the 2008 real estate bust

by Henry Kaestner

It’s Monday…..my new favorite day of the week. The day when we share a great video celebrating the work of faith driven entrepreneurs. Bob Geldof eat your heart out……though I do still like the song, (link here to a video that’ll transport you back in time). But no, the “I Don’t Like Mondays” video is NOT the video that I want you all to start your week with. It’s this one that Kenman Wong sent me from Seattle Pacific. I had asked him about some of the content that had inspired him, and his students, the most and he gave me a short list. This was on it. And it’s really, really good I think. Some great quotes below:

”When I came to Christ, I still had the joy of business, but the world around me I think began to tell me me that business was something less and if you were really serious about your faith you would get involved in church and then you would get involved in ministry.”

“You were telling business guys …take the Gospel to work with you, share the Gospel with people, but still how you did what you did was a complete realm that was untouched by truth”

“I could see where I lost sight of individual intrinsic value of work, of individuals of community that we were trying to service demand. Rather thank asking if the demand was reasonable….we just serviced it and now we had a chance to think about what had we done.”

“The very act of work, this process, is an honorable thing and it pleases God.  Work declares the glory of God…..that’s the challenge for the Christian in the marketplace.”

C.S. Lewis and the Call to Create

by Jordan Raynor

The following post was first published on YouVersion by Jordan Raynor, author of the national bestselling book for faith driven entrepreneurs, Called to Create: A Biblical Invitation to Create, Innovate, and Risk.

“In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth.” Genesis 1:1

“No philosophical theory which I have yet come across is a radical improvement on the words of Genesis, that ‘In the beginning God made Heaven and Earth.’” – C.S. Lewis

As Genesis 1 shows us, the first thing God revealed about Himself in Scripture is not that He is loving, holy, omnipotent, gracious, or just. No, the first thing God showed us is that He is creative! For the first six days, God revealed His creative spirit by speaking stars, animals, and oceans into existence. Then, on the sixth day, He created man “in His own image” and called Adam to create, thus reflecting God’s image to the world.

To call a human being “creative” is redundant. We are all made in the image of the Creator God. But as Romans 12 makes clear, each of us has “different gifts, according to the grace given to each of us.” Some of us have clearly been granted more creative talents than others. Perhaps no Christian in the 20th Century provides a better example of this than C.S. Lewis, the acclaimed scholar, theologian, and author of masterpieces such as Mere Christianity, The Screwtape Letters, and of course, The Chronicles of Narnia.

Growing up in Ireland, Lewis appeared to be most comfortable when buried in a novel. But not only did Lewis consume literature; at a very early age, Lewis had begun writing and illustrating his own stories. Lewis obviously had a passion for writing, and it didn’t take long for others to validate his giftedness at the craft. At the young age of 26, Lewis was elected a Fellow and Tutor in English Literature at the prestigious Magdalen College in Oxford.

By the time Lewis committed his life to Jesus Christ at the age of 32, he was already on the path to a successful career as an academic and writer. While Lewis’s newfound Christian faith didn’t cause him to abandon his work as an author, his conversion clearly caused him to reimagine his work as service to God and others. As Lewis once wrote in a letter, “The question is not whether we should bring God into our work or not. We certainly should and must. The question is whether we should simply (a.) Bring Him in in the dedication of our work to Him, in the integrity, diligence, and humility with which we do it or also (b.) Make His professed and explicit service our job.”

Lewis’s faith didn’t change his work. It changed his relation to his work. Lewis allowed the lordship of Jesus Christ to impact his motivations for creating, what he created, and how he created.

Why C.S. Lewis Created

“My old self has been crucified with Christ. It is no longer I who live, but Christ lives in me. So I live in this earthly body by trusting in the Son of God, who loved me and gave himself for me.” Galatians 2:20

“One of the dangers of having a lot of money is that you may be quite satisfied with the kinds of happiness money can give, and so fail to realize your need for God. If everything seems to come simply by signing checks, you may forget that you are at every moment totally dependent on God.” – C.S. Lewis

Do our motivations for creating matter to God? Proverbs 16:2 tells us that, “All a person’s ways seem pure to them, but motives are weighed by the Lord.”

The world tells us that the purpose of work is to accumulate fame and fortune for ourselves. The meta-narrative of work today is that it is the primary means by which we make a name for ourselves in this life and prove to the world that we are important, valuable, and worthy.

For the Christian, the work of Jesus Christ should be the ultimate measure of value of our life, not the relative fame and fortune we accumulate through our work. C.S. Lewis appears to have understood this truth deeply. Even at the height of his success as an author, Lewis never appeared to clamor for the spotlight, and he lived a relatively modest lifestyle. After Lewis’s death in 1963, people came out of the woodwork to share how incredibly generous Lewis was with his wealth. As Lewis’s stepson, Douglas Gresham, put it in his excellent book, Lenten Lands, “No tramp or beggar would be turned away empty-handed by [Lewis]. Although convinced of his own poverty, he would gladly give to anyone who asked.”

Ever since Adam and Eve bit into the forbidden apple in the Garden of Eden, we have been trying to cover up our sin nature, not with fig leafs, but with our accomplishments. We think that if we become a millionaire, sign a record deal, get 100,000 Instagram followers, or write a classic novel like The Lion, The Witch, and The Wardrobe, then we’ll be able to mask our human condition. Essentially, we use our work as a means of saving ourselves.

But as Christians, we know that the work of salvation is complete and that brings an entirely different motivation to our work! Because Jesus said, “It is finished,” we no longer have to use our work as a means of saving ourselves. Like Lewis, the gospel frees us to create for the pure joy of creating, not seeking fortune or fame, but the fame of the One who has called us to create.

“Aslan came bounding in”

“Let the message of Christ dwell among you richly as you teach and admonish one another with all wisdom through psalms, hymns, and songs from the Spirit, singing to God with gratitude in your hearts. And whatever you do, whether in word or deed, do it all in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to God the Father through him.” Colossians 3:16-17

“But then suddenly Aslan came bounding into it…once He was there He pulled the whole story together.” – C.S. Lewis

Today, C.S. Lewis is regarded as one of the 20th Century’s most influential Christian theologians. But this is only because, after his conversion to Christianity, Lewis allowed his faith in Jesus Christ to impact everything he did, including the products he chose to create.

Through works such as Mere Christianity, The Screwtape Letters, and The Four Loves, Lewis used words to paint pictures of who God is and who He is not. The best example of this is found in The Chronicles of Narnia, the children’s fiction series which centers on the character of Aslan, the Christ-like lion who creates Narnia and redeems it through His sacrificial death.

Perhaps contrary to popular belief, Lewis, like most culture-creators, did not lock himself in a room until he came up with an idea for a series of books that would reveal the redemptive character of God. As Lewis once explained, “Some people seem to think that I began by asking myself how I could say something about Christianity to children; then fixed on the fairy tale as an instrument, then collected information about child psychology and decided what age group I’d write for; then drew up a list of basic Christian truths and hammered out ‘allegories’ to embody them. This is all pure moonshine. I couldn’t write in that way. All my seven Narnian books began with seeing pictures in my head. [The Lion, The Witch, and The Wardrobe] began with a picture of a Faun carrying an umbrella and parcels in a snowy wood. This picture had been in my mind since I was about sixteen. Then one day, when I was about forty, I said to myself: ‘Let’s try to make a story about it.’ At first I had very little idea how the story would go. But then suddenly Aslan came bounding into it…once He was there He pulled the whole story together.”

Like Lewis, our product ideas will likely not come from brainstorming sessions where we focus intensely on how we can create a product that reveals God’s character. But as we begin to create, and we “let the Word of Christ dwell in [us] richly,” (Colossians 3:16) we will undoubtedly see how we can use our creations to reveal the character of our Creator. If our work is to feel like a calling, we, like Lewis, must be willing to allow the True Aslan to come “bounding into” every aspect of our lives, including our work.

Lewis, Tolkien, and “The Inklings”

“Do not conform to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind. Then you will be able to test and approve what God’s will is—his good, pleasing and perfect will.” Romans 12:2

“What I owe to [the Inklings] is incalculable. Is there any pleasure on earth as great as a circle of Christian friends by a good fire?” – C.S. Lewis

As we’ve seen modeled in the life of C.S. Lewis, re-imagining our work as a calling from God changes our motivations for creating and the products we choose to create. As we’ll see in this last devotional in our study of the life of Lewis, following God’s call to create also changes how we create.

The Bible offers a tremendous amount of insight into how we as Christians should work: We should work with excellence, integrity, diligence, and graciousness. But what’s often overlooked is the need to create in community with other believers. For those of us who choose to follow the call to create, we must surround ourselves with fellow Christian creators who can help “renew our minds” (Romans 12:2) with eternal perspective as we create.

Again, C.S. Lewis provides a model for what this looks like. During the 1930s and 1940s, Oxford was home to some of the world’s greatest Christian minds, including Charles Williams, Hugo Dyson, Owen Barfield, and most famously, J.R.R. Tolkien, C.S. Lewis, and his brother Warnie Lewis. This group of friends, known simply as “the Inklings,” shared a love of the Lord and literature, each of them following God’s call to create through their writings. But they did not create in isolation. For nearly two decades, the group met on a near-weekly basis to read aloud their latest writings, get feedback from the other members of the group, drink a pint of beer at The Eagle and Child Pub, and help renew each other’s minds with regards to their Christian faith.

Without constant communion with other believers to refresh their eternal perspectives, Tolkien may have never completed The Lord of the Rings and Lewis may have never finished The Chronicles of Narnia. Like these creators before us, we need regular communion with our fellow brothers and sisters in Christ to renew our minds and refresh the lenses through which we view the world as we create.

If our work is to feel like a vocation—a true calling on our lives—we must be willing to follow the example of C.S. Lewis and re-imagine our work as service to God and others. When we do, we will find the lordship of the True Aslan, Jesus Christ, changing our motivations for creating, the products we choose to create, and how we go about creating them, in community with others following the call to create.

Special thanks to Joel Filipe on Unsplash for the banner photo.

Chaplains – The ROI of Good Business-Ministry

by Mike Sharrow

I have an allergic reaction to the common dilemma of the “success to significance” paradigm, as if a follower of Jesus could be “successful” for 20 years and then “make up lost time” being “significant” for a latter period.  Eugene Peterson’s paraphrase of Jesus in Mark 8:37 says “What good would it do to get everything you want and lose you, the real you? What could you ever trade your soul for?”  

Beyond our careers, in the businesses we lead, the same tension must be worked out as well. Is it a business that funds ministry?  Is it a ministry that does some business to pay the bills?  Is that perhaps a false dichotomy? Is there a “tertium quid” resolution of tension in doing business AS ministry for the entrepreneur who is primarily a citizen of the Kingdom of God?  I’m pretty sure Jesus didn’t call any part-time disciples and the Great Commission seemed to have an “all y’all, right now” implication for every one of us.

I often find entrepreneurs bouncing off the ditches on both sides of that question.  For the excited “faith driven” leaders, it’s easy to let unbridled zeal birth what we call “sloppy agape” where trying to BE and DO everything themselves.  They try to be the pastor to every staff member, leading every charity project, assuming the role of Bible Answer Guru, and save the world. It can be perilous, prideful, and flat out ineffective!  Just like an entrepreneur must learn to scale by developing, deploying, and delegating to leaders, the faith-driven entrepreneur must devise systems and strategies to scale and reflect the Kingdom of God throughout the business beyond themselves.  

We have found there are a few things that can create “hyper growth” of Gospel impact through a business that a leader holds the keys to.  These include some simple (yet uncommon) things like:

Having professional, third party people available and present with your people, accessible 24/7.  Is it realistic to think your customer service agent is going to seek you out to get counsel on navigating an addiction, an aspiring exec team member divulge a gambling debt, a remote employee call their boss’s boss to express anger at God rooted at the loss of a loved one?  Chaplains can be game changers!

Not only is it good ministry, it’s good business!  Many companies have “EAP” benefit which are rarely utilized and lack an eternal perspective.  Engagement with chaplains is exponentially higher and drives eternal outcomes. So much so, we worked with some friends to put together the attached ebook on the ROI of Workplace Chaplaincy!

Get your FREE copy of

ROI of Workplace Chaplaincy eBook

Strategic care strategies (case study) drive turnover down, increase engagement, foster healthy teams and drives real results.  We see 2-2.5X the ministry fruitfulness in companies where chaplaincy is engaged versus all of the right programs/elements without chaplains.  

At our 2019 global conference (“Current ’19”) we’ll be recognizing a CEO of a publicly-traded company who through decades of workplace chaplains will have seen 10,000 people come to saving faith in Jesus at work.  10,000, in 1 company, in 1 country, in 1 lifetime. It’s often about what happens when you have a crisis (powerful example), but often about the daily care you may never know about.

Good ministry is often good business.  For a faith-driven entrepreneur, can it be a “good business” if it is not a God-honoring, Kingdom-proclaiming, Gospel-expressing, eternally significant goodness?

A friend running a small company of 16 employees hired chaplains at my encouragement. He was cynical as it was a small shop and he knew everyone – even their spiritual condition.  At the 6 month mark he received his first chaplaincy engagement report, which reflected 3 Salvations. He knew it – “this is a sham!” There were not 3 lost people on the team and he had heard NO reports of an employee coming to Christ.  He demanded an explanation of the data from the area chaplain director. “Certainly, you see, an employee called our chaplain for a family distress situation and the chaplain went to their home. The chaplain ended up leading the spouse and 2 teenage children to Christ through the process.  It wasn’t what happened here where you see it, sir, but what happened where you don’t and when you couldn’t.”    

additional blog by Mike Sharrow – “Beyond God Bless You and Merry Christmas” (an FDE Top 10 read)

Special Thanks to Razvan Chisu on Unsplash for the cover image.

Corporate chaplaincy can have many benefits for your business. You may like to know how chaplains can help reduce employee turnover. Learn more!

Purposed worKING: Short Sellers

by Rusty Rueff

Many of you know Rusty Rueff as a co-host of the Faith Driven Entrepreneur Podcast. We’re approaching 25 episodes together! 25 seems like a decent amount, until you realize that Rusty is now on to DAY 2519 of his daily devotional on faith in the workplace. That’s more than 2,500 entries. Here’s one from last week that I liked alot (I actually like all of them). I hope you’ll enjoy it too, and look to subscribe.

purposed worKING | day 2519: Short Sellers

“When doubts filled my mind, your comfort gave me renewed hope and cheer.”

When you run a public company there is no group of people you dislike more or who cause you a greater headache than the “short sellers”.  These are the people who own your stock but bet against you in hopes that the stock will go down, versus up. The pressure they put on the stock price and the company can be beyond a distraction, they can become a negative obsession of time and energy.  We all have detractors that we have to work against and it is in how we deal with these people and forces that shape us and our actions.  When they go negative, we must remain realistic and positive in intent and action.

I am convinced that the closer we get to doing God’s work and walking in His purpose and His will, the more we will be challenged with fears, doubts and naysayers around us.  It is the other side of good that also works against us, trying to get us to short-sell ourselves.  It is God’s promises that can keep us in the positive.  To that we can have confidence and assurance.

Reference:  Psalm 94:19

Special thanks Alex Woods on Unsplash for the cover image.

Podcast Episode 25 – Honoring Family with Our Presence

In this week’s episode, we take the show on the road. In the first live broadcast, Faith Driven Entrepreneur sets up at the Alpine Inn in Portola Valley, California. This Q&A took place before our Inklings gathering of faith driven entrepreneurs.

We tackle questions about how to honor family and loved ones with prescene, our individual learnings from our own entrepreneurial journeys and how the Fear of Missing Out (FOMO) can follow you anywhere.

Tune in as we answer these questions and more from entrepreneurs in the Bay Area!

Photo by Luis Quintero on Unsplash