Discover Business Networking in Washington DC

Washington DC is the place where business and government intersect, and there’s no better time than right now for Christian entrepreneurs to meet together to build their businesses. Whether you’re just starting a new venture or want to refocus your priorities after 10 years in your industry, Faith Driven Business Groups are an excellent way to meet other business owners in DC. You’ll be connected with like-minded professionals who share a similar passion for faith and business. 

Our networking groups are about more than exchanging business cards. We encourage everyone to talk about business topics that matter. Build real relationships, not just a larger Rolodex. Let’s get started

Why are Washington DC Networking Groups so Popular?

In America, entrepreneurs are pressured to have everything together all the time. We’re supposed to be driving profit from day one and expanding our networks at the speed of light. But it hardly ever works that way, does it?

Faith Driven Entrepreneur business groups offer real connections with other business owners. It’s a place to be open and honest. To get insights about the real struggles entrepreneurs face. 

We challenge you to rediscover the joy of creating, of reconnecting with your God-given purpose in life. How do I scale my business in a sustainable way? How do I provide employees with the benefits they need to stay with my company long-term? How do I step into my life’s true purpose through business?

We ask these questions and more in our Washington DC business groups. 

How Our Washington DC Faith Driven Entrepreneur Groups Are Different from Other Networking Groups

  • We’re not here to pitch you on referrals or local business ideas

    In some business groups, it seems like everyone has an agenda. At Faith Driven Entrepreneur, we put sales and promotion aside. Nobody is going to pressure you to sign up as a partner or make five referrals. Our only goal is to foster great conversations and authentic relationships.

  • Express your unspoken questions about business, life, and faith 

    Sometimes we don’t have the words for questions and struggles. All we feel are pits at the bottoms of our stomachs, a vague sense that something is off. In a Faith Driven Entrepreneur group in Washington DC, you’ll hear from seasoned entrepreneurs who have gone through the same trials and doubts you’re experiencing right now. This is a safe space to explore the intersection of business and faith.

  • Discover an entire library of entrepreneur resources.

    Business groups are just the tip of the Faith Driven iceberg. From podcasts to video libraries, we are constantly producing content to encourage and inspire business owners like you. One of our business owner/entrepreneur groups is the perfect starting place.

How is a Washington DC Business Group Structured?

  • Commit to an 8-week course

    Newcomers to our business community will join a Foundation Group. These groups meet for eight weeks and are usually led by another business owner in the community. To get the most out of the course, we recommend that you block out regular time in your schedule so that you can make every single session.

  • Join 10-15 other business owners in Washington DC

    We offer groups both in-person and online. Whatever format you choose, you’ll be meeting with business owners from the same city. Groups are never allowed to get too large since it’s so important for everyone to have a chance to give their opinion and engage in discussion.

  • Watch and discuss a short video

    Each week, you’ll meet with your group to watch a professionally-made video on a topic related to faith and business. You can check out our video series here

    These videos deliver an entertaining combination of story and insight. The first half of each video will introduce you to an entrepreneur who is actively living out their faith. Then our hosts, Henry Kaestner and JD Greear, provide rich insights into the week’s topics. 

Are There Fees for a Washington DC Business Group?

Faith Driven Entrepreneur is generously funded by donors and supporters. Volunteers also give of their time to lead our groups. This means business groups are free to join. Please know that our groups are not meant to be lead generators for your business. There are other networking communities better suited to that purpose.

An Overview of the Washington DC Business Environment 

Washington DC is often known as the seat of the US federal government. When you were a kid, you might have taken a field trip to see the museums and monuments. But let’s not foget the city’s incredible business environment.

Professional services is a major cog in the city’s infrastructure, providing business and legal services to various government agencies. Scientific services also make up a large number of businesses. In fact, some statistics say that only one in six workers works for the federal government. 

The city provides unique opportunities for select industries, and if you’re an entrepreneur, then you should definitely join a networking group in order to build your professional relationships.

Columbus Business Networking

Join Faith Driven Entrepreneur for great discussion and connection at one of our Columbus CEO groups. For eight weeks, you’ll meet regularly with other professionals to discuss faith, purpose, and business. Entrepreneurs who feel that they’ve plateaued are always refreshed by the group’s thoughtful content.

Our mission is simple. Faith Driven Entrepreneur exists to connect CEOs and business leaders with like-minded professionals. We seek to better understand how God calls us to be entrepreneurs. 

If that question piques your interest, then you’ll want to find an upcoming group in Columbus. Whether you’re just launching your first business or you’ve been a serial entrepreneur for decades, we promise you’ll come away feeling inspired.

A Summary of Our Columbus Business Networking Groups

Entrepreneurs don’t like to admit they’re struggling. Time management, finances, addiction – these issues aren’t part of the glamorous entrepreneur image we like to convey. Amidst the high-pressure work weeks and drive to succeed, we start to drift. Even if we’re completely committed to building a business responsibly, we lose sight of the ultimate goal. What’s that goal? God’s nudge to create and build up His Kingdom, not ours. But we can’t ignore the difficulties of entrepreneurship either.

Entrepreneurship is lonely. 

Entrepreneurship is stressful.

Entrepreneurship is incredibly rewarding.

It’s OK to embrace all of these things. That’s what we do in Faith Driven Entrepreneur business groups. We honestly discuss the highs and lows of creating businesses. Right here in the Columbus business community.

We’ll ask meaningful questions. No 300 word blog posts answers. Instead, you’ll hear how real entrepreneurs scaled their businesses sustainably, how CEOs have balanced time at work with time with family, and how founders are wrestling with their sense of purpose in life. Yes, wrestling in the present. Because no one has all of life completely figured out.

We encourage you to join one of our Columbus CEO and entrepreneur groups

3 Benefits of Attending a Columbus Faith Driven Entrepreneur Group

  • Meet other business professionals in Columbus 

    Columbus is a thriving city that attracts entrepreneurs and CEOs of all backgrounds. You’ll be surprised how many people share the same values as you do. And after the group, you’re free to continue building relationships at your own pace.

  • Engage topics that really matter to you

    There’s no need to put up a front in one of our Columbus business groups. While everyone is expected to respect other participants, we don’t want to hold back from asking real questions. Share what makes you tick and learn from others as they share as well.

  • Jump into our library of entrepreneur resources.

    During and after your group, you’ll have access to hundreds of relevant videos, podcasts, and blog posts. Some of the world’s most successful entrepreneurs have shared their wisdom on our platform. Have a question about living life as a faith driven entrepreneur? Chances are we have a resource for that.

How is a Columbus Business Group Structured?

  • Sign up for an 8-week course

    CEOs and business leaders who are just joining Faith Driven Entrepreneur will join a  Foundation Group. Foundation groups meet for eight weeks and are usually led by another business owner in the community. 

  • Join 10-15 other business professionals in Columbus

    We intentionally set group sizes at 10-15. We find that this number of participants leads to the best conversations. Everyone has a chance to speak without any one person feeling like they need to carry the conversation. 

  • Watch and discuss a short video

    Faith Driven Entreprneur primes conversation by introducing each session with a 20-minute video. Our team of professional videographers, writers, and editors have produced excellent clips featuring entrepreneurs, authors, and pastors. You’re sure to learn something new from each installation. Explore the video series here

Are There Fees for Our Columbus Business Group?

Faith Driven Entrepreneur is generously funded by donors and supporters. Volunteers also give of their time to lead our groups, which means business groups are free to join. However, we are not your traditional B2B networking group. If you are looking to nurture leads, trade referrals, or make sales, this might not be the group for you.  

A Brief Overview of Doing Business in Columbus

While Columbus might not claim the title for “most popular city,” it has a reputation for being a stable, family-friendly city that’s home to a strong, and diverse economy. In fact, Business.com rated Columbus one of the Top Five best cities for entrepreneurs and startups in 2018.

Columbus has also attracted many large company headquarters. The Ohio State University is a major employer in the area in addition to large hospital networks. Hi-tech research and development and information/library companies such as Battelle Memorial Institute, OCLC, and Chemical Abstracts, and retail clothing and restaurant companies (such as Limited Brands and Wendy`s) also call Columbus home.

If you’d like to learn more about financial incentives for starting a business in Columbus, click the link.

Jacksonville Business Networking Group

Are you looking for great discussion, business mentorship, and excellent online resources? Then join one of our Jacksonville business groups. 

Faith Driven Entrepreneur is on a mission to connect business leaders like you with a wider faith driven community. One of the best ways to get plugged in is to join one of our Foundation Groups. For eight weeks, you’ll meet regularly with other professionals to discuss faith, purpose, and business. 

We seek to better understand how God calls us to be entrepreneurs. What does it mean to lead a team of employees well? How do we make sure entrepreneurship doesn’t overwhelm our lives and take away from what’s truly important? How can we pursue operational excellence?

In our experience, most business networking groups in Jacksonville don’t ask those questions. You might feel the same way. You next step is to sign up for an upcoming group in Jacksonville. Whether you’re just launching your first business or you’ve been a serial entrepreneur for decades, we promise you’ll come away feeling inspired.

What to Expect from a Jacksonville Faith Driven Entrepreneur Group

Faith Driven Entrepreneur appreciates America’s historical reputation as a business incubator. God definitely uses businesses of all sizes to impact the world. But sometimes, entrepreneurship can become an idol. Or it becomes a prison.

Entrepreneurs don’t like to admit they’re struggling either. We’re supposed to drive the newest car and post growing YOY revenues. But underneath the surface, we’re struggling with addiction, burnout, purposelessness, and loneliness. It’s time that someone created a business group that focused on these issues. 

Then again, maybe you’re doing really well in your business. Our Jacksonville business groups are for you, too! Build on that momentum and share your victories with the group. Every kind of entrepreneur and business professional is welcome.

We’re simply setting the stage for honest discussions on the highs and lows of creating businesses. Right here in the Jacksonville business community.

Ready to dive in? Search our database for a Jacksonville business networking group.

Top Reasons Why Jacksonville Business Leaders Join Our Networking Groups

  • Meet other professionals in Jacksonville 

    Jacksonville is one of the largest cities in the US although it sometimes flies under the radar. If you’re feeling isolated as an entrepreneur, know that there are many likeminded people in your city. You might meet a new mentor or you might stumble upon a resource that gets you to the next leve. Faith Driven Entrepreneur communities are life changing.

  • Talk about things that truly matter to you

    There’s no need to put up a front in one of our Jacksonville business groups. The assumption is that everyone has their own unique strengths and weaknesses. We’re called to build each other up as part of the body of Christ. So, show up ready to talk about what matters to you whether that’s family, faith, or new venture ideas.

  • Get access to an entire library of digital entrepreneur resources

    From video lessons to podcasts, you won’t run out of Faith Driven Entrepreneur content. We curate the best voices across the faith and business communities to explore what it means to be a faith driven entrepreneur. A Foundation Group is a great way to get acquainted with everything we have to offer.

What are the logistics of a Jacksonville Business Networking Group?

  • Sign up for an 8-week course

    Each Foundation Group meets once a week for eight weeks. Each group also has a facilitator who will send out updates and come prepared with questions to spur discussion. We encourage each participant to commit to as many weeks as possible since this leads to the best experience for everyone.

  • Join 10-15 other business professionals in Jacksonville

    We limit our Jacksonville business groups to around 12 participants. Studies have shown that this number often leads to peak engagement. Everyone gets a chance to speak, but no one has to speak all the time. You’ll be able to create meaningful relationships with other participants.

  • Watch and discuss a short video

    Faith Driven has interviewed the top CEOs in the world and done extensive research to create our foundational video series. You’re sure to be inspired by these stories. Explore the entrepreneur video series here

Are There Fees for Jacksonville Business Groups?

Faith Driven Entrepreneur is generously funded by donors and supporters. Volunteers also give of their time to lead our groups, which means business groups are free to join.

If you are looking to primarily nurture leads, trade referrals, or make sales, this might not be the group for you.  

A Brief Overview of Doing Business in Jacksonville

Jacksonville boasts a diverse, energetic economy. Located on the Florida shoreline, Jacksonville is home to a major US port and is considered a major transportation hub in the region. It’s one of the main destinations for automobile imports, which attracts a large amount of logistics business.

Military installations also bring in stable government income. The total economic impact of the bases in the community is about $6.1 billion annually. 

As a major city in the USA, Jacksonville is also home to a variety of industries including finances, tech, trade, and film. And at Faith Driven Entrepreneur, we welcome business owners of all types. No matter your business size or industry, we’re sure you’ll benefit from one of our entrepreneur business networking groups. 

Finally, if you’d like assistance from a local organization, Cornerstone is the economic development initiative of the Jacksonville Regional Chamber of Commerce. It is led by a group of companies and individuals who provide the leadership and resources to foster business expansion and relocation in Jacksonville. Investment dollars are channeled into business recruitment, existing business services, education and workforce preparation, and special economic initiatives.

Missional Enterprise at the Movies – Seven Movies that Relate to the Triple Bottom Line

— by US Navigators Missional Enterprise

Summer is the peak season for movie blockbusters. This week, we take a look at several movies that feature people who honor God in their workplaces through doing excellent work, making a spiritual impact on others, and blessing their communities.

Below, in alphabetical order, are short reviews for seven movies from different eras and in different styles, but with some connection to missional enterprise.

1. All Saints (2017)

This movie is based on the true story of Pastor Michael Spurlock, whose job to shut down a dwindling church in Tennesee is interrupted by the arrival of a group of Burmese refugees (of the Karen ethnic group). Utilizing the excellent farming skills of the Karen refugees, they turn the church land into a farm in an attempt to keep the church from being closed and its property sold.

The four-minute clip below gives an overview of the story.

2. Amazing Grace (2006)

None of us are likely to have a job quite like that of William Wilberforce – he served as a member of Parliament for 28 years. Two years into his time as an MP, his life was radically altered when he became an evangelical Christian. His faith led him not only to seek to influence the moral character of the people of his country but to rid the country of its most despicable practice – the trafficking of enslaved African people.

The movie Amazing Grace tells the story of Wilberforce and features an amazing cast that includes Benedict Cumberbatch, Albert Finney, Ioan Gruffudd, Romola Garai, Michael Gambon, Ciarin Hinds, and Toby Jones.

The clip below shows Wilberforce (played by Gruffudd) interacting with John Newton (played by Finney), a former slave trader and the author of the hymn Amazing Grace.

3. Babette’s Feast (1987)

In Dutch and French (with English subtitles), Babette’s Feast won the Oscar in 1987 for Best Foreign Language Film. It is a slow-moving film with deep and powerful lessons, based on a short story by Isak Dinesen. The movie tells the story of two elderly daughters of the founder of a pious Protestant sect, who spurned suitors in their youth, and now preside over a dwindling congregation.

A French woman named Babette appears at their door one night and asks to work for free as a maid and cook. The excellence of Babette’s work enable the women to live and serve faithfully, even as their aging congregation is beset by jealousies and discord. In the end, however, Babette serves the sisters and their fellow worshippers in a profound act of expertise and generosity that brings grace and transformation.  The clip below features a toast by General Löwenhielm, one of the sisters’ former suitors, reflecting on the infinite nature of God’s mercy.

4. Chariots of Fire (1981)

This Academy Award winner for Best Picture, depicting the stories of runner Eric Liddell and Harold Abrams is not technically about a workplace. However, as Liddel prepared for missionary service in China (where he would eventually die in an internment camp near the end of World War II), his work (albeit unpaid) was that of an athlete. Most of the movie is a depiction of Eric’s training for the Olympics, and how his convictions guided him and impacted others. It also features one of the greatest lines in movie history related to God’s calling (shown in the clip below).

5. The Hiding Place (1975)

The Hiding Place, based on a book by Corrie ten Boom, tells how the ten Boom family hid Jews in their home in the Netherlands after the occupation of the Nazis during World War II. The heart of the story is the harrowing depiction of the experiences and resilient faith of Corrie and her sister Betsy when they were later imprisoned in the Ravensbrück concentration camp. However, we also see how Papa ten Boom proclaimed Christ, blessed his community, and discipled his own daughters while running a watch shop in Haarlem, Netherlands. The link below shows a flashback to Corrie’s childhood when her father taught her about how God provides sufficient grace for the moment.

6. The Inn of the Sixth Happiness (1958)

Starring Ingrid Bergman, The Inn of the Sixth Happiness tells the story of Gladys Aylward, a British missionary to China. Despite significant license taken by the screenwriters and directors, resulting in numerous historical inaccuracies (Gladys Aylward herself reportedly disliked the film), it does capture many inspiring aspects of Gladys’s life and missionary service. Possibly best known for leading about 100 orphaned children out of China when Japanese soldiers invaded in 1938, Gladys also used her workplace to disciple others and transform the community. For instance, she used the platform of a guesthouse to teach the Bible, and the position of foot inspector to bring women freedom from the practice of foot-binding.

In the clip linked below, Yang, the cook in Glady’s guesthouse, tells Bible stories (with less than perfect accuracy) to the overnight lodgers.

7. It’s a Wonderful Life (1946)

It’s a Wonderful Life, directed by Frank Capra and starring Jimmy Stewart, has become a Christmastime classic that many families rewatch every year. If that is true of you, pay attention this year to the way transformation through business features so prominently in the film. While the movie does not include explicit Christian discipleship (despite the abundant Christian themes), it does depict how our choices, including how we run our businesses, impact our friends, family, and community. Instead of traveling the world, George Baily seems stuck in an insignificant position in a small town. In the end, he sees the impact his life made (by seeing what the world might have been like without him) and much of that impact came through the transforming influence of his business – a small savings and loan. This last clip shows a moment when George confronts greedy banker Mr. Potter.

This article was originally published as part of a regular e-newsletter and blog called “M3 Weekly,” to bring fresh encouragement, insights, and connections to help inspire and equip those on the journey of leading a missional enterprise. Visit https://m3weekly.substack.com to subscribe.

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Episode 229 – Alpha Was Just the Beginning with Nicky Gumbel

Entrepreneurs are frontline ministers in the workplace. 

As a pastor and the former Vicar of Holy Trinity Brompton, the largest Anglican church in Britain, Nicky Gumbel believes that it is his task to equip the saints for ministry in the places where they work and live. For the past 3 decades, Nicky Gumbel has pioneered the Alpha course, created as an introduction to the Christian faith primarily for non-churchgoers. The Alpha course has attracted hundreds of young people who otherwise had no interest in Christianity. It has been run in churches, prisons, government institutions, and workplaces around the world. 

Nicky joins us at Faith Driven Entrepreneur to talk about uniting the church through the goal of activating believers and making the gospel accessible to all. 


All opinions expressed on this podcast, including the team and guests, are solely their opinions. Host and guests may maintain positions in the companies and securities discussed. This podcast is for informational purposes only and should not be relied upon as specific advice for any individual or organization.


Episode Transcript


Transcription is done by an AI software. While technology is an incredible tool to automate this process, there will be misspellings and typos that might accompany it. Please keep that in mind as you work through it.

Rusty Rueff: Welcome back, everyone, to the Faith Driven Entrepreneur podcast. I am so excited about today’s guest. Our guest is Nicky Gumbel. Nicky is Vicar of Holy Trinity Brompton, the largest Anglican church in Britain. And while his name may not be quickly recognizable, you more than likely have heard about some of his work. He is the pioneer of the alpha course. An introduction to the Christian faith now running all over the world. Since 1993, more than 15 million people have completed the Alpha course in 163 countries. There are over 7000 courses running in the UK and more than 44,000 worldwide across all denominations. Nicky has also written a number of bestselling books Questions of Life. The alpha course in book form has sold more than 1 million copies worldwide. The booklet Why Jesus and its sister publication, Why Christmas, have sold more than 4 million copies. In 2007, Nicky received an honorary doctorate for his contribution to church life from the University of Gloucester. More recently, Nicky has written Bible in one year, a commentary that has been transformed into a smartphone app with over 3 million subscribers worldwide. We’re excited to sit down with Nicky on today’s episode to talk about how Alpha was just the beginning.

Henry Kaestner: Welcome back to the Faith Driven Entrepreneur podcast. I’m here with William. We’ve got Nicky Gumbel in the house, which is a big deal for me.

Nicky Gumbel: It’s so lovely to be with you all.

Henry Kaestner: So, Nicky, thank you. And one of the reasons there are lots of different reasons that this is a big deal for me as an entrepreneur, I love leveraging scale and what God has done through your ministry with Alpha is nothing short of awesome, but it’s so funny. So we have one of the things that’s always been important for us is family dinner. And I’d say half of our family dinners start off with Kimberley saying, well, you know, Nicky Gumbel said this today in the Bible one year, and my three teenage boys will roll their eyes. And then on occasion, she’ll mentioned something about Pippa, too. Yeah, my boys think that is so funny because Pippa, of course, is a very British name. And so Nicky is a local celebrity in the house. And so it’s a great honor for you to be here. And so, first off, thank you from my family, but then also on behalf of so many other people, because you’ve been able together with Pippin, I want to talk about that collaboration you have here in a second. But you have given us all an incredible service to make God’s word. Well, on one level, God’s word doesn’t need help and coming alive. And yet you’ve done that. You’ve been able to provide context and a discipline around it that is super important. And so thank you. Anytime you can help somebody to get more in line with God’s word and make it relevant. And as I was talking about this interview today, Kimberley said please ask him about how he’s able to get these common themes every day. How do you do that? How are you able to put it together? Do you have some sort of like artificial intelligence, like computer program that allows it to kind of sort through? But every time you’re able to find a common theme across wisdom, New Testament and Old Testament, how do you do that?

Nicky Gumbel: Well, I’m involved in one year. I started because someone in my alpha small group in 2006, so he did Alpha, his name is Ramez, he was a Goldman Sachs banker, and then he set up a private equity business and he came on Alpha and encountered Jesus. And he said to me, I’m trying to read the Bible, but I’m really struggling. Could you help me? So I said, Well, I do the Bible in one year and I will try and send you my comments every day. And then I thought, Well, why don’t I send it to all our congregation every day? So we just started doing it in 2009. We started doing it every day and [Pip] did it as well, and they just called it paper ads. And so we sent it to the congregation. And the first year I just tried to find a common theme and I could only expense the Holy Spirit because each day I managed to find a common theme. And then one year I tried to find a story to start with that I wanted to find titles together. So I’ve done since 2009 and I’m still sort of developing it. So initially it was just for Ramez and then it was for our congregation, and then it became an app and then new version took it, and then people translate in different languages. And then to our amazement, it went all over the world. So and we’re still developing. It changes every year. And I did it this morning. I’ve done it every day for since 2009. So, you know, now obviously now this week I’m thinking about Ukraine. So it’s developed all the time.

Henry Kaestner: So it’s incredible. And for those listeners who have yet to download the app and get involved with it, one of our favorite things is the way that you start off every day and you’ve got a story. And one of my favorites is you’ve got stories from Freddie Mercury and Madonna. So it’s always culturally relevant. It comes in and really captures and sets up, sets the stage. My favorite one was one that you had recently talking about how you were brought in and commissioned to be a football referee and without structure. And I’m thinking as I’m reading this and want you to actually why don’t you just tell just the brief lesson if you remember it. Now, I had known that you do a different one every year since the last 15 years. That’s 15 times three. So that’s a lot. So you may not remember this particular deal.

Nicky Gumbel: No no no It’s not totally different. That story is a story about when my son was eight years old. So it’s like that happened. He’s now 42. So but the point of the story is it’s in the one talking about boundaries that you will need boundaries in life and the boundaries that remove our freedom that actually set us free. So it’s a story about a football match that I got press ganged into referee because my friend Andy Baskin was meant to be referee and didn’t turn up and I didn’t really know the rules of football. So there was absolute chaos and people start to get hurt. And then Andy turns up, blew the whistle, set where the boundaries were, and they had a great game. And the point is where they’re more free. When I hadn’t got a clue, there was no one in charge. There were no boundaries, actually, there was chaos and they didn’t really enjoy it. But when there were boundaries and rules, actually they were more free. And the point is that because people think that, you know, God’s rules, God’s sort of guidelines for life removed, that freedom was actually they give us freedom because they’re designed to make us have fun. And it’s actually when people are committing adultery and killing each other, it’s chaos. And that is not fun. But when people keep within the boundaries, then you can enjoy life to the full. It may sound boring, but actually it’s far more exciting.

Henry Kaestner: So I could identify with that as so many of our audience can. And then I’m a father of boys, and I can imagine if I was pressed into being a referee and all of a sudden it just devolved into bedlam and kids getting hurt, the stress and the pressure. I would had and says, I’m reading the story. I’m thinking when Andy finally showed, he’s late. I mean, did you feel like wringing his neck? I mean, do you have to repent of that way? How did that go?

Nicky Gumbel: No, I was so relieved. I was so relieved to see him. So that must have been nearly 25 years ago. But Andy is still a great friend, wonderful guy, and very good at refereeing football matches back in the day.

Henry Kaestner: Okay. Well, okay. Back to our regularly scheduled programing. One of the things we like to do with all the guests that we have on the program is to get an autobiographical flyover and tell us in the audience about who you are. Like myself and many folks listening to this, you’re a bit of an adult convert. You came to faith at university, so just maybe touch on that, too. But who is Nicky Gumbel? And then later on, William and I are going to want to flesh out some of the things that I talked about at the beginning alpha scaling and then just lessons and encouragement that you might have for our audience of Faith driven entrepreneurs. But who is Nicky Gumbel?

Nicky Gumbel: Oky, so my father was Jewish and he was German, although I didn’t discover that until I was 14. My mother took my sister and I for a walk and said, Your father is German and Jewish and you’re never to speak about it and you’ll never tell anyone. And so,

Henry Kaestner: Well here you are on a podcast. I mean, you want us to redact it?

Nicky Gumbel: So I waited until only in recent years I started to say, Wow, because in recent years. So both my parents are dead and I’ve discovered that my sister is happy for us to talk about it. And I started to discover about my family because I was contacted by a museum that was investigating some of my family and they sent me my family tree. And when I saw my family tree, I understood why my father was I think with him was suffering from post-traumatic trauma because I saw the concentration camps in which his family died. And it was horrific. They were murdered. They were tortured. They died in the most horrible way. And so he was traumatized. He was a lawyer in Germany, and he was stopped from practicing as a lawyer in 1933 because he was Jewish. He’d already seen what was coming and it qualifies it past. In England, he joined the Army in the war as a private in 1942. He was a lieutenant colonel by 1945 and now I have discovered interrogating senior Nazi officers who had the job of taking them out to dinner, apparently in London, to show them that actually London was not destroyed. And because he was German and German speaking. Anyway, I discovered all this about my father, but he was so he was an agnostic. My mother was not a church goers, she was also a barrister. They met on opposite sides of the case. And my mother didn’t go to church. I wasn’t brought up going to church.

Henry Kaestner: What was the case, there were in court?

Nicky Gumbel: I’ve no idea what the case was, but I know. It was in Chelmsford because they used to work Chelmsford Day, which is the day that they met. She was a pupil and he was on the other side. He was more senior to her and that’s how they met. And my father was 49 when he got married. My mother was 36 and my sister’s a QC. I mean, she’s been a QC for 20 years, Queens Council, so she’s a senior lawyer and I practice as a barrister for ten years. And then I encountered Jesus when I was at my first year at Cambridge University through reading the New Testament. It was like when I read the New Testament, it was as if the person I was reading about Jesus so emerged from the pages and I encountered him and it changed my life. And from that moment onwards, I wanted more than anything to pass that message on, because I knew the difference between living life without Jesus and living life with him . Jesus said, I came that you might have life and have it in all its fullness. And to me it’s like the difference between, I don’t know, black and white television color or a normal television HD or whatever analogy you like to use is the most loving thing I decided I could do with my life was to tell other people cause is loving to give them food and that’s a really important thing and feed the hungry and to clothe those who need clothing and all that is part of what Jesus calls us to do. But the most loving thing that you could do, those permanent life changing, is to introduce them to Jesus. So that’s what I wanted to do with my life. So I did ten years law, I left the bar in 1983. I visited Danger 1986 to 19 years as assistant pastor running Alpha around the world. And then the last 17 years I’ve been kind of like we call it the Vicar of Holy Trinity, Brompton, senior pastor there. And yeah, I love my life, but we’ve had a lot of fun. Married Pippa. We’ve got three children, three grandchildren, nine grandchildren. And I think I take my hat off to all the entrepreneurs because I think that is fun sort of starting things, seeing how they develop. That’s an amazing, amazing, fun thing to do.

William Norvell: Well, speaking of that, I mean, Alpha has one of the greatest stories and how it’s been circulating around the world. It keeps popping up all over the place. And I’ll confess, I don’t know the entrepreneurial story of where Alpha came from and how it came to be and how it found product market fit, for lack of a better way to put it. Could you tell us a little bit about the curriculum and where it came from and maybe what you’ve seen as it’s continued to grow?

Nicky Gumbel: Well, I didn’t start Alpha, it started in 1977 and it was a six week course for new believers. And then in 1982, when John Wilbur visited the UK, someone took it on and developed into a 15 session course with a weekend. And then Nikki Lee ran it for about five years and then I inherited it in October 1990. And what I found was this course, which was designed for people who were already Christians, was attracting a whole lot of people who were not Christians. So we changed the course and aimed it at people outside of the church. And at that moment it took off because in the UK there are so many more people outside the church than inside the church. So suddenly it started to grow. Other churches got interested, and by the time there was one within striking distance of everyone in the UK, we started to invite people. We put out an advert, an opportunity to explore the meaning of life starting soon at the church near you. And it was running in all the churches Catholic, Orthodox, Protestant, Pentecostal. And the question was, what is it that everyone agrees about? Like the all the churches were running the same course that said you could go into a town or a city and you could see the Catholic Church offering it, the Salvation Army offer it, the Methodist Church, and they could put a joint advert in their local paper, Alpha an opportunity to explore the meaning of life starting soon in a church near you. And so it spread. And we did national initiatives every year, inviting the whole nation to come on the course and then it spread to other countries. And now I think it’s in 169 countries, in 110 languages or something, and it’s spread around the world.

Henry Kaestner: That must have been really attractive to folks that otherwise might see Christianity from the outside looking in, seen all this fragmentation, all this segmentation. But to see a newspaper advertisement that says you could go to a Catholic church. And so people that have a familiarity with the faith tradition, they can explore it. And boy, this is something that’s inclusive. That must have been really, really attractive in part of your growth.

Nicky Gumbel: Yeah, I think Jesus prayed that we would be one in order that the world will believe. And if we’re disunited, the church is not going to believe. I have a friend who’s not a Christian, and he said to me, You know, you Catholics, you Protestants, you look the same to me. You will have churches. You say the Lord’s Prayer. You do this thing with bread and wine, whatever it is you disagree about, and I’ve no idea what it is. It’s got nothing to do with my life. But while you’re arguing, I’m not interested. And I just thought that’s it, there must be so many people out there who don’t articulate that, but actually that’s what they feel. And the reverse is true when everyone is united, that alpha opportunity to explore the meaning of life. Starting soon in the churches and all the churches are running in the town. People go, Wow, what is it everyone’s agreed about? And that’s what Jesus prayed that you may be one in order that the world will believe, the world won’t believe unless we are united. So Alpha is in a way. I mean, C.S. Lewis called it mere Christianity, but it’s like, what do we all agreed about? This is what we teach. But really, the course is an opportunity to explore. So it’s not like presenting just the Christian faith. We do do that. But the second half is listening that we’re listening. So people are in groups of ten or 12 people, and I’m a helper in a small group. So, you know, sometimes I’ll of course, might have 50 small groups here, but most courses it might just be one small group, but a couple of hosts, a couple of helpers Pippa and I always help us. We’re a 95th Alpha small group in a row, so we’ve been doing it for over 50 years and we just listen. And the principle is this there’s a proverb which says, in the heart of every human being is a deep well. The wise person draws it out. So the task of a small group leader is to draw out from what is in every human heart as a well of wisdom and stories. And no one is boring. Everyone has. That’s what it says. It’s a deep well, and the skill is not to preach at them, but to draw out what they’re thinking. And it’s fascinating. Every time you’re in this group that I’m in, the one person says, well, you know, I lost a child. That’s why I don’t believe, you know, I lost my child and I lost my mother in the same year. I just don’t believe another person say well I do not believe because I was brought up in India. I saw all the different religions fighting each other. And you get this discussion. It’s fascinating, absolutely fascinating discussion. People talking and we never sort of say, wow, you know, the answer to that is three points. We just listen and they interact and we end up last night the same group. Everyone receive prayer, including the two people who said we’re total atheists, but gradually they’ve got to know each other. Their stories have come out. They’ve grown to love one another. They become more open. And at the end of the course, they usually say, we might know what we do now as long as we stay together because they’ve made friends. Everyone is looking for three things. Everyone is looking for love. And you know, the good news is that the son of God loved me and gave himself to me that you are loved. And that’s the message of the gospel from start to finish, you are loved. Second thing everyone is looking for is purpose. What’s the purpose of my life? What’s the point of my life? And the answer is we are created for a relationship with God through Jesus. And that’s what they find. And then everyone’s looking to belong. And that’s what happens. By the end of the course, they formed a community and they say, Yeah, I’ve only been this group for ten weeks, but I feel closer to all of you than two friends I’ve had for 20 years. Because there’s this community, this, this. Something about Jesus brings us closer together than in any other relationship.

Henry Kaestner: So we’re going to do something on the podcast now that we’ve never done before, and it’s very much off script, but I’m fascinated by what you’re talking about and what we gonna do is this. So Faith Driven Entrepreneur is a ministry to serve Faith driven entrepreneurs, and every entrepreneur is about trying to solve a problem or lean into an opportunity. And ours is that we believe that Faith driven entrepreneurs are looking for a community, that it can be a very lonely journey to be a Faith Driven Entrepreneur, but it doesn’t need to be. And there’s an opportunity to come together in groups. Something we’ve only recently discovered. We’re encouraged that we have something that William I think maybe 1600 people from 88 countries are going through these small groups like you have, and we’re excited about it. And like you, we have these volunteer group leaders, but we are a distinct fraction and I hope that you’re okay with me sharing this. But you guys, in 2000, I think we’re well north of 500,000 people going through alpha courses like you. We want to distribute and are and have an intentionality about partnering with the local church as an entrepreneur, as you led this because you went ahead and you transformed it from something that’s more of a discipleship to something that is an outreach. But as you’ve grown this and you scaled it, what is some of the entrepreneurial lessons that you’ve learned in partnering with the local church that might be an encouragement to us, or just some wisdom that you’ve learned? Because churches are a great distribution channel, it’s a great institution, but it can be hard to partner with the church. And yet you’ve cracked the code.

Nicky Gumbel: Yeah, I mean, were are not a para church organization. So we just do it. It’s like the Bible.

Henry Kaestner: Great answer. Just do it

William Norvell: Amen.

Nicky Gumbel: We do it for one person. I did it for one person in the Bible in one year and Alpha is the same. I’m in a small group for 95 courses in a row, and I do it for the people who are in that small group. And then it’s just I think so often people think I’m going to try and reach 10 million people and they reach no one. But if you aim to reach one person, if you can reach one person, you can probably reach 10 million. But if you aim to reach 10 million, you won’t reach anyone. So we just aim to reach the people that were in front of us.

Henry Kaestner: That sounds like Matthew 6:33.

Nicky Gumbel: So we aim to create something that works for the people that we have and we find it what you know. Then it works for like 50 churches, and once it works for 50 churches, it will work for everyone. And now I have traveled to 70 countries around the world, and I haven’t found a single country where the same thing because people’s needs of the same all over the world. I think it helps that we are a very diverse congregation. Our morning service here is 33% Chinese, 25% African. So it’s a very diverse group of people that we’re meeting. And the growth of it is about I mean, that’s the easy bit really is the building, the infrastructure is something works. And if you find something everyone needs, then building an infrastructure is relatively easy. I mean, that’s about finding good people, isn’t it? Because I can’t build an infrastructure, I can’t building organization, but all you can do is [….] and every organization is the same. It’s all about people. You find good people. You can delegate, you can trust them and let them go. If you don’t find good people, you’ll end up micromanaging and out of them actually micromanage your work. So it’s about, first of all, you know, product, of course, and the gospel is the greatest product in the world because it’s one that every human being needs. And then it’s about finding good people. And we’ve been blessed by an amazing team of wonderful people. And as a pipeline, you how do you get it out? How do you get those people produce the pipeline that get it out to those different countries around the world? And we find people who set up offices in different countries. We have I don’t know how many offices in the US alone, but the offices across the world. And then those offices, you’ve got to find good people to run offices. They’ve got to find good people to work for them. And then, yeah, that’s it.

William Norvell: That’s fascinating. Fascinating. And such an amazing entrepreneur story embedded in there. Right. You know, you built the product for one person. You had a great product, you scaled to the UK, then you scaled outwardly the you honed it in. And I just love hearing that. The couple of questions that are coming to mind to me are one, and I think they work together. I’m really curious with all the churches. I mean, I feel like I’ve been part of a church that broke up because of, you know, disagreements over what type of coffee to serve in the morning. Yeah, right. Much less, you know, theological issues or I don’t know if it’s a Nicene Creed. I don’t know what it is that bonds people together and says we are unified. I agree with you. Disunity is just a plague on the big C church around. I’m curious, a two part question. One, what are those unifying principles that have brought people together that said, yes, we can all stand under that banner together. And then two as you grow an organization, how do you find great people that agree with those unifying principles? Because I assume now I don’t know. I don’t know if everyone on your staff is a believer or not or if you have others. I’m just curious how the staff was built and also what the unifying principles are that so many people all around the world have said yes to that, because I want to see that grow.

Nicky Gumbel: So there’s someone who’s influenced me a lot is a man called Father Raniero Cantalamessa. He’s a Franciscan, a Capuchin monk, and six months ago, the pope made him a cardinal. So he went from being I didn’t never went through all the stages. He just went because he being the preacher to the pope for the last 40 years, he’s been preacher to the pope. John Paul, the second Cardinal Ratzinger, Pope Francis, he’s been the preacher.

Henry Kaestner: That’s fascinating. There’s a guy that preaches to the pope and has been doing it for 40 years.

Nicky Gumbel: Since 1980. Now 42 years, he’s called. Now, in the last six months, Cardinal Raniero Cantalamessa And he’s absolutely brilliant guy and he’s a great friend of ours. One of the things he says is what unites us as Christians is infinitely greater than what divides us. And so the things that unite us. What does it mean to be a Christian? It means to be a follower of Jesus. We all love Jesus. What does it mean? It means to be a child of God. We’re brothers and sisters because we’re all children of the Father. We all have the Holy Spirit living in us. So the Trinity unites us that is a right at the heart of. And those things are far more important than some sort of minor doctrinal differences. So we focus on what unites us. So what keeps people together? Purpose. So Jesus said, go and make disciples of all nations. So evangelization. Is primary. That’s what the Catholic Pope Paul the second have said evangelization is primary is preeminent. It’s the most important thing. If you make evangelization primary, then you will be united. If you make anything else primary. You’ll end up disagreeing. If you make unity primary, you’ll end up fighting each other. But if you make evangelization primary, you have to be united because no one is going to believe if you’re fighting each other. If you make renewal primary, you’ll go on being renewed and renewed and you become likee the Dead Sea. You just get more and more filled and more more salty until you die. But if you make evangelization primary, then you have to be filled with the Spirit because Jesus said You will receive power and you will be my witnesses. If you make discipleship primary, you just fill your head with knowledge and you get faster and faster. But as John […] said, the meters on the street, if you make evangelism primary, you have to grow in discipleship because no one is going to be interested unless you are full of love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, all the fruit of the spirit in your life. No one’s going to be interested unless you’re becoming more like Jesus. That’s what attracts people. So if you make evangelism primary, you will have to grow. And if you are helping in an Alpha group or hosting an Alpha group, you’ll be asked questions all the time and you’ll then have to go and investigate. What is the answer to those questions? Not that you’re going to give them in the small group, but at least you know what you’re talking about. So if you make evangelization primary, you will grow in discipleship and you’ll be united and you’ll be filled with the spirit. But it’s a common unity of purpose. 80% of our congregation spend 80% of their time in the workplace. So if all we’re focusing on is the 20%, the time they spend on Sundays, we’re missing most of their lives. And it’s not relevant to where they are and what they’re doing. So the workplace and I was a barrister for ten years, I understand what it means to be a Christian in the workplace. You know, it’s tough. It’s not easy and it’s not easy in business. It’s not easy in law. It’s not easy in any profession to be a Christian. But you’re on the front line and we who are like now. My job is I’m a pastor, so I’m on the back line. I’m supporting people on the front line. The task of us, the apostles, teachers, prophets, evangelists, is to equip the saints, the saints are all Christians for the work of ministry. The ministry happens in the workplace. You are the ministers, entrepreneurs are ministers, the ministers of the Gospel in the workplace. And it’s not just that you do a job in order that you can give to the church and come to church on Sunday. But your work is your primary ministry. So yes, we want to equip people. So the Bible in one year is designed to feed people at the start of a day. So to help people to connect with God at the start of their day, it’s more important to listen to God than to speak to him. So that’s why I want to start the day reading the Bible. And then I pray because first of all, I want to hear what God has to say to me. So we want to equip people like that. We want to equip people to reach their friends with the good news. So Alpha runs in the workplace, Alpha runs in prisons and in the houses of Parliament and in the White House. It’s run. It’s run in every different context. It runs in number ten Downing Street. It’s been run in the Cabinet Office. It’s like this is this is a way that you can pass on the good news to your friends. But yeah, businesses have such power to make change. So one of my sons worked for IJAM International Justice Mission, which does a fantastic job around the world. But getting people out of slavery in the workplace or often actually business can do as much, if not more, by going in if you can create jobs. So much of the problems of the economic slavery of workplace, these brick kilns or whatever, comes from the fact that people can’t get jobs that provide a decent wage. If you can create businesses where people can get good jobs and be able to feed their family, actually you can do as much just as any NGO does in I mean, what they’re doing is basically coping with the casualties. But if you can avoid the casualties by creating business. So it’s a bit like, you know, you can either have a program that helps people recover from divorce or you can invest in marriage. I mean, we need to do both, actually. Or you can have you know, if you’re investing in your children, making sure that children have good education, they’re much less likely to commit crime. But you can also have, you know, how do you help people who’ve leaving prison and so on. But what you really want to do is stop them going to prison in the first place. And so, you know, you take that same analogy. If you can create good jobs, healthy work conditions where there’s justice and equality and, you know, there’s the principles of the kingdom so that people are able to earn a living in a healthy way that is part of the kingdom of God. And it’s prevention rather than cure. So there’s so much that can be done through entrepreneurs in the business world that is part of the kingdom. It’s doing the work of the kingdom. You know, it’s dealing with issues of poverty, dealing with issues of justice, because where are the principles of justice worked out? How do we deal with racial injustice? Well, it’s in the workplace through equality of opportunity, through intentional action. It’s interesting. We do it. So I’m passionate about racial justice because, as I say, my father’s family was a victim of racism. Anti-Semitism is a form of racism. And so I’m really passionate about racial justice. So what we saw, our congregation is very diverse, but the leadership was not. And we could get the lay leadership to be representative of the congregation relatively easy. But the clergy, we couldn’t because in the Church of England, there’s been so much injustice, has been the church was involved in the slave trade. Church of England was involved in the Windrush generation, turning people away because of the color of their skin. So people didn’t want to get ordained in the church because they can’t see anyone like them. So what we started doing was intentional action, recruiting so much talent trapped underground by racism, intellectuals, men, elitist. So we started recruiting people who were trapped, brilliant people who left school at 13, trapped by intellectualism. Some brilliant people brought up on what I think you call in the states projects, people who brought up in poor inner cities, brilliant, high IQ, not necessarily high educational standards, and then people trapped by race, people who, because of the color of their skin, didn’t think they could go into church leadership in the Church of England. And we started deliberately recruiting them, and we found four absolutely brilliant ones. Next year we had 19. Now we have 70. And if it wasn’t for the pandemic, we’d probably have about 250.

Henry Kaestner: That’s very, very good. And as you’re talking about that, it makes me think that there’s one thing, another thing that uniquely equipped to talk about your unique spot where hundreds of thousands of people are coming through alpha courses every year. Well, more than half a million and a good number of them are business owners and entrepreneurs that don’t yet have an act of faith. What is it about faith that gives us a new world and life view that shapes the character of our work, that is applicable to these men and women that come to Alpha who are already business owners but now have this new vision. You’ve talked about this a bit more on justice, but how is it that they might come to know God more fully? And how do they bring their faith in working? My hope, of course, is that this answer is going to be an encouragement to our audience that already know Christ. But how do you see that happening? People from Alpha don’t yet have a faith. They do have a business. How are their lives changed as they have this new perspective of God and work?

Nicky Gumbel: I think as you start to have a relationship with God. Relationship with God is like any other relationship is built on communication. And as you start to pray, it affects your decision. David Suchet, who does the readings for the Bible in one year? You know, the readings by a very famous British actor, a Shakespearean actor, David Suchet, who reads those passages. He also is Jewish, and he encountered Jesus through a Gideon Bible in a hotel when he was traveling. And he was asked, what difference does it make for you as an actor? And he said, You know, when I’m invited to do a role, I pray about whether to accept it. Whereas before, the only question was how much? And, you know, there’s a difference in perspective and there’s certain roles he won’t play now. So it affects the way you make decisions. And I think it affects the way that you run your business as well, because the principles you’re going to run essentially love is the key. Now love doesn’t mean you don’t take tough decisions, but it means it’s a different principle. It means that every human being is to be respected. And of course, if you follow the model of Jesus, it’s the most effective leadership that you can have, because it’s servant leadership. And increasingly, the world is recognizing that that is the most effective form of leadership, because people don’t want to be in a sort of hierarchy like that. They want to be in something like that where the leader is empowering people who are empowering others, who are empowering others. And the people out on the island in, say, a retail situation, the people on the shop floor are supported by people. Ultimately, the leader of the organization. Is that the bottom? Not at the top. And that’s the model of Jesus is servant leadership. You’re there not for what you can get out of it, but how you can help other people. So Jesus is the greatest leader in any organization. So, I mean, actually, I actually think that being an alpha small group leader is the best leadership training you can get for anything in the world. So I interviewed Tony Blair, who was our prime minister one time. You may remember Tony Blair. I’ve interviewed him twice, once in our church, once at the Royal Albert Hall. And he said to me, Every small group is the same. Whether it’s the Workingmen’s Club or the G12, the G8, the G20 or whatever it is in every small group, there are people who are quiet and you have to draw them out. And the people who talk too much and you have to. So the skill of an alpha small group host is to draw out the guests, not to talk too much, but to draw out all the guests, the quiet ones, as well as the ones who talk too much. And to really draw out from that deep well that I was talking about earlier. Now, if you can do that, well, you will be able to run a board meeting. You’ll be able to be chair of the board because you will draw out all the skills that are on your board. You will be able to be prime minister or president because you will be able to draw out from the Cabinet all the skill and wisdom that is in that room. You will be a listener. You’ll be someone who listens and draws out skills of other people. The best leadership training you can do is to run a small group an alpha. And people have said so many people who’ve come on and alpha have ended up see as organizations because they’ve learned how to listen and how to draw out people’s skills. And it’s like it’s Jesus. Jesus asked questions. He asked more questions than he said things, and he drew out what was in people. So there’s so many overlaps between the Ministry of Jesus, encountering Jesus and running a business.

William Norvell: Hmm. That’s a good pitch right there. So I think you’re going to you might or might be flooded with a lot of FDE alpha small group leader. So just get prepared for that. Just hold tight. Prepare for that onslaught. Nicky, it’s been so much fun to have you on here and talk through so many things. We always close our episodes with trying to bridge our guests and our listeners through the Word of God. And we can’t think of someone more equipped to do that than someone who’s in at least Henry and Kimberly’s home every morning. But I’m pretty sure it’s a lot more homes. That is the first Kimberly Kaestner request we’ve had on the podcast. I’m pretty excited about that. We love to see that. And so we would love to just invite you to tell us, you know, where does God have you today?

Nicky Gumbel: Okay. So I do the Bible in one year like this and I have to be about 17 days ahead. So I read a bit of a psalm, a bit of the New Testament and a bit of the Old Testament. So from the Psalm today, what I was really struck by is blessed are those who have regard for the week. The Lord delivers them in times of trouble. And I was really struck by that. The Catholic Church emphasized this a lot, but our calling is to the poor and to the weak and has to be a primary. And it goes on verse four all it’s Lord have mercy on me, Lord heal me, for I have sinned against you. So I was thinking that’s what I should be doing. But Lord, our goodness, I have sinned. I have failed in all those areas. So please forgive me. The New Testament. What I was strucked by is that there’s this verse where Jesus says to them, I have given you authority to trample on snakes and scorpions and to overcome all the power of the enemy. Nothing will harm you. And we’ve been talking about some very bad things that were being said about one of our wonderful, wonderful people here. And I just texted him with this verse for him and his wife by something horrible have been said about them. And this is the promise. Nothing will harm you. The bad things that are being said about you are not going to harm you. And then in the Old Testament, it’s about the appointment of leaders, very relevant to everyone listening to this. And it’s where Moses is told The Lord will increase you a thousand times and bless you. But how can I bear the problems and your burdens and your disputes all by myself? Choose some wise understanding and respected men from each of the tribe. So in other words, he’s told, You can’t do this on your own, you’ve got to delegate. And in order to delegate, you’ve got to find the right people. And here are the tests. Choose people who are wise, understanding and respected. So when you guys who are listening, if you’re looking to employ people in your companies, this is the test. Find people who are wise, understanding and respected. Those are the marks of a leader wisdom, understanding and respect. And then you’ve got a delegate. You’ve got to delegate to those people. But if you find the right people, you can trust them. And if you trust them, then you can release them and they can flourish. But it’s all about choosing the right people.

How Can You Be Intentional This Season?

— by Cory Carlson

How Can You Be Intentional This Season

The following is an excerpt from Cory Carlson’s new book, Rise and Go.  The book is available here on Amazon.  

Leadership Trait: Intentionality

Acts 18:11, “And he stayed a year and six months, teaching the word of God among them.”

In chapter 18 of Acts, the Apostle Paul has arrived in Corinth, which was one of the political and commercial centers of Greece at that time. Like most cities today, Corinth had a mixture of good and high moral individuals as well as immoral and corrupt individuals. So as Paul was teaching the Good News of Jesus to the people of Corinth, there were people who were very receptive to what he was sharing and others who rejected his teaching, even to the point of insulting him.

Like you and me, Paul had his good days and his bad days as he interacted with others. Verse 9 tells us, “And the Lord said to Paul one night in a vision, ‘Do not be afraid, but go on speaking and do not be silent.’” Paul was obedient to this command and stayed in Corinth for a year and six months, teaching the word of God, as verse 11 mentions.

However, it was not an easy eighteen months. There were days of frustration as some people rejected Paul’s teaching. Even though Paul was being obedient and doing his job, he must have felt some- times like he was swimming upstream. Plus, there was the frustration of waiting for God to reveal his next assignment.

I know one of the hardest things in my life is waiting for what will happen next. When will I get the job? When will they call me back? Why is it taking so long?

While I am waiting and wondering for the next development, I can start to get frustrated. Frustrated that I am not hearing anything about new steps to take. This then leads to feeling anxious about whether I am even in the right place or doing the right thing. What if I didn’t hear God’s signal and should have already moved on? All of these worries can sometimes move me into a place of slothfulness as I feel discouraged and wonder if my goal is even worth pursuing anymore. It’s almost as if I’m thinking, Fine, if it isn’t going to happen, then I will just sit here.

In chapter 1 of this book, I shared a story from about five years ago, when I was President of Sales for a company that went through a company sale process that was ultimately unsuccessful, as we did not find a buyer.

In preparation for the sale that didn’t take place, we spent about six months gathering data and building presentations, as well as conducting the actual presentation and holding meetings with these potential buyers. But after all that hard work, we were back at the starting line.

I felt defeated. Lost. Discouraged.

Before that job, I had left a large company I’d worked at for ten years, where I’d eventually become a divisional Vice President, with many opportunities for future growth. However, I’d felt that I was called to this new job as part of my career advancement.

I started to have thoughts like, Didn’t you bring me here for this company sale? I thought the plan was to help build the company toward this transaction, then off to bigger and better things. What is going on, God? Yet I didn’t receive any answers to these random thoughts.

Months later, I was in Miami, Florida, making sales calls with our local sales team. From there, I was to drive to Tampa for a meeting with the leadership of the company and with the private equity group. As I was driving, I started to think again about this process of the failed company sale, as well as what it could mean for my future. What was I supposed to do now: stay or go?

I was to the point where I was crying out to God for answers. Literally praying out loud. Even yelling to God. “I thought this was going to be my time. My exit. My cash out. Why did you even bring me to this Florida company? Why did I leave a great company after ten years?”

You name it, I was probably saying it. Once again, not my finest moment. But once again, an honest one.

I started rattling off all kinds of thoughts: “Do I update my resume and get out of the company? Do I stick around for another company sale? Should I call other companies and look for a new job?”

Thoughts were running rampant through my head, both good and bad. Then out of nowhere, I heard an audible voice, or at least one that felt audible to me. Its message was very clear: “Stay.”

“God is that you?” I asked. “‘Stay’? Why? For how long? Are you sure? God, do you have any other words for me?”

I heard nothing else. Just the one word: “Stay.”

Now I had more questions than answers. However, a sense of peace came over me. The stress and frustration even began to settle. Even though I didn’t know entirely what the message meant in the long term, I felt that the obedient thing to do now would be to stay.

Over the coming months, our company’s owners directed us to downsize, in order to keep our company profitable as they contemplated what to do next. During this time, I remember employees, and even my wife, asking if I was going to update my resume and look for a new job. I told them “no” and said that I felt called to stay.

Ironically, after receiving that direction, I no longer sat around discouraged. I now felt that God had a plan. I would be lying if I said I never wondered when I would receive another word. But I made a choice to keep moving forward until I heard differently.

During the time I spent operating under the word “stay,” I had my good days and my bad days. I am sure this is how Paul felt in Acts 18:11 when he ended up staying in Corinth for a year and six months! Leading up to that moment, Paul had typically stayed in one place for a few days, or a few weeks at the most, to teach the Good News of Jesus before heading off to the next town. Paul had to be anxious at times during those eighteen months. I imagine he prayed something like, “God, if we are to spread this news, then I need to get to the next town. Haven’t these people heard enough?”

However, he stayed and was obedient as he waited for God’s next signal. During his time in Corinth, he continued to teach the gospel and impact many people who lived there. While Paul was waiting for the next signal, he was obedient and intentional.

HOW ARE YOU PREPARING THIS SEASON?

When we are in the waiting room of a doctor’s office, we can choose to waste our time or be intentional with it. We can sit there and scroll mindlessly on our phone as we wait for our name to be called. Or we can work on some emails, pray about our day, listen to part of a podcast, or even set up our online grocery order.

The same thing is true when we are in a season of waiting for what is next. We can choose to waste time and just do the bare minimum at our job, or we can be very intentional and make the most of the moment.

During my time in the “waiting room,” I doubled down on investing in my sales team. Not only did I work to help them meet their sales goals, I also taught them some of the life coaching skills I was learning, in order to help round them out as leaders. I also spent time investing in myself by exploring the idea of starting my own coaching and speaking business, by getting a few clients, and putting together content.

This continued for a few months. Then in August 2016 I was terminated from that job. However, I was not discouraged by this termination. God had already used that waiting time to prepare my mind and heart for the drastic change of leaving my corporate job, including my high salary and fancy title, and starting at ground zero of becoming a coach.

This transition was possible because God had softened my heart and helped break my reliance on both a corporate executive identity and a sense of financial security. I now realized instead that God was my provider. The truth is, I don’t believe I ever would have started the coaching and speaking business if I hadn’t been terminated and if I hadn’t had the time in the “waiting room” to prepare my heart and mind.

Do you feel you are waiting for the next thing?

If we are not careful, we can miss out on beneficial waiting room time by wasting time instead of being intentional. However, when we believe that God uses all seasons to better us, we can experience the waiting room as a place where He is doing work in us and preparing us for what is on the other side of this season.

ACTION STEPS

Spend five minutes thinking of ways that you can be intentional during this season in the areas of both your personal and professional growth.

Now spend five minutes thinking of ways you can personally invest in those you lead and help them grow, both at work and at home. We need to make sure we are intentional in our leadership so that those we’re leading are better for having had the opportunity to be led by us!

PRAYER

Lord, waiting rooms are frustrating, yet I know you use them for our good. I repent over the times I’ve gotten frustrated, and the times that frustration has turned into sloth- fulness. I will diligently spend my days investing in myself and those around me, so that we may grow closer to you and become better prepared to help you in your work. Amen. 

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