I believe that
the Lord wants us to be people of influence
and impact for the kingdom of God. We are
called to be salt and leaven - and this
extends to our work life as well. Steve Clark,
in his essay in the booklet on
The Mission
of the Sword of the Spirit, uses the
example of a brother from one of our
communities who gave a sharing and articulated
what an “ordinary” life of mission looks like.
This brother was a successful businessman, a
good community man, who also lived a Christian
community home life.
Steve described this “ordinary” brother’s
experience at work, how he expressed being a
missionary at work. His low key approach to
evangelism took advantage of opportunities as
the Spirit led him. He described his growing
influence by the way he carried himself, his
attitudes, the ways he approached his
responsibilities and his high standards of
ethics in conducting business. Steve also said
that this brother “spent more time thinking
about how to do a good job than how to
evangelize people, and doing a good job put
him in a position to have an evangelistic
influence, because it gave him respect.” This
is the most common and ordinary way for a
brother or sister to become a person of
influence in their work and gives us the
initial call or mission for our work.
We can summarize this brother’s influence at
work by saying that he demonstrated what it
means to be a “Christian Professional” in his
work life. Both parts of this phrase are
critical. To become a person of influence we
must both be a virtuous “Christian,” a person
of integrity, as well as a “Professional”,
highly competent in our chosen profession.
Being a solid Christian, but incompetent at
one’s profession is a bad witness, as is being
highly competent but an unscrupulous pain in
the neck to work with or to work for. Our
formation as a disciple of Christ through our
relationship with the Lord, the gift of the
Holy Spirit, our community life and training,
and the support of our brothers and sisters
provides the base from which we are sent out
to engage the culture through our work or
service and become a person of influence.
Getting the “Professional” part of that phrase
right becomes a critical decision and goal if
we are to fulfill our call as a disciple on
mission.
Discerning our career direction is a
prudential judgment. It begins with the
understanding that we are free to choose what
kind of work and career path we want to pursue
- given our gifts and abilities, our
commitments to family, Christian community,
and the call to be disciples of Christ on
mission. In choosing our
work life
direction, it is a question of stewardship,
free will and God’s grace. In Jesus' parable
of the talents, the master did not specify how
the servants were to use the resources he had
given them. However, he did have the
expectation that his servants would use those
resources responsibly and put them to work in
a wise and judicious way that would bear fruit
for his estate. In choosing our work career
path, we have the responsibility to make a
wise choice based on counsel (what are our
gifts, available job opportunities, training,
etc.) and the important step to pray and seek
God’s light and wisdom.
I think it is important to look at the world
of work from three different perspectives:
first, from the point of view of how God looks
at work, second, what employers are looking
for in an employee, and third, how we make a
good decision for our work life direction.
God’s Perspective on Work
From God’s point of view, he has a four-fold
purpose for work. First, we are called by
grace to be a co-creator with him in his
on-going work of creation by bringing the
world to a greater development toward the end
he had in mind when he first created it.
Second, by surrendering our Work Life to the
Lordship of Christ, we enter into a
participation in his on-going work of
Redemption and bringing forth the Kingdom of
God by becoming a disciple of Christ and
missionary to the Work place. By performing
our work with excellence and integrity, we
grow in responsibility and influence others
for Christ as a Christian Professional. This
influence extends to witnessing to the “joy
that is in you,” and supporting other
Christians in your work place and profession.
Third, by discovering, developing and applying
our "Godly Design" to the particular work He
leads us to become good Stewards of his gifts
to us. Our work becomes a vocation and
provides a vehicle for applying our gifts and
talents to an area of need in the world.
Fourth, our work allows us to earn a
livelihood that supports the way of life the
Lord calls us to and allows us to financially
support the building of the Lord’s Kingdom.
Together, these four purposes add meaning to
our Work Life and give us an opportunity to
make an impact on our culture and the world
around us.
What Employers Are looking
for in a Candidate
To understand what employers are looking for,
we need to understand the fundamentals about
how the World of Work is organized and how it
functions. At its most basic level, every
occupation in the World of Work is made up of
a series of job functions called Technical
Competencies. These consist of a body of
knowledge, a set of skills, an array of
aptitudes and a set of behaviors. Of these
four components, knowledge, skills and
behaviors can be improved and developed by
coaching and learning opportunities.
At the heart of every technical competency
lies the fourth component, natural abilities,
or aptitudes. These are inherited abilities
that are fixed throughout life and determine
the ease or difficulty with which a person
will learn and perform the work functions
associated with that aptitude and the
Technical Competencies for that occupation.
Aptitudes and personality characteristics
combine to form your aptitude profile, and the
world of work is organized by aptitude
profiles. Assessing your aptitudes and knowing
your aptitude profile, enable you to
understand your capabilities and choose an
occupation that will play to your strengths
and what you will need to do to overcome your
weaknesses in your chosen profession.
Competencies in work
The world of work is made up of three types of
competencies. Success in your career depends
on obtaining and advancing in all three of
these types of competencies, advancing from
awareness, to basic, to intermediate, to
advanced, to the expert level.
1. Technical - these are the competencies that
make up your specific occupation; engineer,
banker, accountant, teacher, sales person,
etc. You advance in your career by
systematically developing the knowledge,
skills and behaviors of the Technical
competency level above you.
2. Non-technical - These are concerned with
the characteristics and behaviors needed to be
a high performer at work. They are concerned
primarily with the way a team member goes
about performing their technical competencies.
One example of this set of competencies comes
from the State of Virginia.
The
Virginia Competencies are: understanding
the organization’s purpose and mission,
attaining goals and objectives, customer
service, communication, teamwork, leadership
and personal effectiveness. Each competency
has a set of indicators that can be observed
and measured.
3. Leadership competencies come in five types:
leading self, leading projects, leading
others, leading programs and leading
organizations. Each of the non-technical
competencies has a leadership component with
indicators. This is a natural starting point
in developing your leadership capabilities.
The Virginia web site has an assessment tool
for evaluating how often a team member or team
leader demonstrates the indicators for each
non-technical competency. This assessment can
be used for self-improvement, training, or
performance management. Employers are looking
for the candidate that meets the technical,
non-technical, and leadership requirements for
the open position they are seeking to fill.
There is one additional type of competency,
called “pastoral,” that is appropriate for
Christians. This competency includes topics
like evangelism, intercession, spiritual
warfare, pastoral care, apologetics,
scripture, and Christian living courses. The
Sword of the Spirit has a number of courses
for pastoral workers and leaders who serve in
Kairos, University Christian Outreach, and our communities. There is
one more step which I think we need - some
formal levels of proficiency for this
competency. Growth and development is based on
the wisdom needed for the issues encountered
at the different levels of pastoral
responsibility. These Pastoral Competencies
are vital to grow in as we strive to become
Christian Professionals and encounter the many
challenges of working in an increasingly
secularized society.
Discerning Work Life
Direction
Your Work life discernment is a self-discovery
process of your "Godly Design", leading to a
deeper understanding of yourself and your
capabilities, and then making a free choice to
apply those capabilities in an area of need.
Our Godly Design is made up of our fixed and
acquired abilities and the desires God places
in our hearts. Our Fixed Abilities are those
talents, personality traits and natural
abilities inherited through our parents and
grandparents. Our Acquired abilities are
changeable and develop through our life
experiences. These are our accumulated
knowledge, skills, values, interests and
formed character traits. God also works in us
through our desires. He leads us to areas in
our journey we find interesting, then
fascinating, then compelling. We may develop a
passion to solve some issue, problem or
question, or provide a specialty service or
product for the common good. This process is
made easier by working with a Career Coach.
To uncover your Godly Design, your Career
Coach will use a combination of reflective
writing on your life experiences, an
assessment based inventory of your personality
and aptitudes, a series of three reading
assignments that include written reports this
Coach would develop on your background and
natural abilities results. Understanding your
aptitudes, how they have worked in your life
in the past and how these can work for you in
the future in conjunction with your
personality characteristics is empowering.
Once you understand your capabilities, you
have the needed information to design your
future work by using your best natural
abilities and personality characteristics in
an area of your choice where you believe you
can make an impact. You can move forward in
your career choice with confidence that you
can quickly learn, perform and advance in the
technical competencies for your chosen
profession as a Christian Professional.
Finding Purpose in
Mission
Entering the World of Work as a Christian
Professional does not answer the question “For
what purpose?” To begin with, answering that
question includes embracing the purposes of
God for our work. But that question is further
answered in a unique way by each brother and
sister as we grow in our Christian life, our
vision for our work, and the opportunities
that come from our personal growth and
development in our profession. A helpful
resource comes from the book,
Restoring
All Things by Warren Cole Smith and John
Stonestreet. They write in regard to viewing
and participating in the world:
“But Christ followers are to see
the world differently and have a different
posture toward it. Rather than safety from
or capitulation to the world, the grand
narrative of Scripture describes instead a
world we are to live for. This world,
Scripture proclaims, belongs to God, who
then entrusted it to His image bearers. He
created it good and loves it still, despite
its brokenness and frustration. He has plans
for it yet and invites the redeemed to live
redemptively, for its good and our
flourishing, even as we live for Him.”
They go on to ask four questions “that connect
our actions with what we know to be true about
the world from the biblical story.” These
questions can give us food for thought as we
seek to grow in our vision for our work and
serving the common good.
- “What is good in our culture that we can
promote, protect, and celebrate?
Christians believe that how God created
the world was, in His own words, ‘good’.
Even after the fall, much of this
goodness, such as beauty and truth and
human dignity, remains.”
- “What is missing in our culture that we
can creatively contribute? Christians
believe that humans were created to be
creative. When something good is missing
in a particular time and place, we should
find ways to offer it to the world. God is
glorified and the world is helped by
properly ordered human creativity.”
- “What is evil in our culture that we can
stop? God hates evil, and so ought we.
Throughout history, courageous Christians
have worked to stop that which destroys
and deceives. We must do no less. It’s a
basic requirement of loving our
neighbors.”
- “What is broken in our culture that we
can restore? Ultimately, we reflect the
gospel most clearly when what has been
damaged by sin is restored to God’s
intended purposes.”
We fulfill these questions by living out our
call to Christian Community, but also by
applying them to our work or service. They are
directly related to our mission: to “Be” a
Bulwark that defends people in this time of
spiritual warfare, a Prophetic People that
lives the Christian call radically as
disciples, and a Servant People called to
serve church and society by working to stem
the tide of evil and promote holiness in the
daily circumstances of our lives. Our mission
also calls us to “Do”: to Proclaim the kingdom
of God by life and word: to Gather others into
communities and movements so they can live
effectively; to Leaven: live as disciples and
work for truth and justice in the daily
circumstances of life, and to Defend Christian
truth and morality in church and in society.
Living out our call to be disciples on
mission: to live, work, and strive, by the
power of the Holy Spirit, so that others might
have true life in Christ, now and forever, is
fulfilled by living out our community life.
This life empowers us to go out from our
communities, becoming a Christian Professional
in our chosen work, virtuous and highly
competent, impacting culture as a missionary
while serving the common good.
.
Joe Firn
is a member of the Word of Life community in
Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA.