Today, many Christians live schizophrenic lives,
balancing commitments to church, home and work,
often relegating God to the former. But, as Dallas
Willard has written, “There is truly is no division
between sacred and secular except what we have
created. And that is why the division of the
legitimate roles and functions of human life into
the sacred and secular does incalculable damage to
our individual lives and the cause of Christ.”
Indeed, there should be no distinction between our
devotional life and our daily life.
This is reasonably elemental theology, and almost
every church would embrace it, but when it comes to
preparing people for Monday morning ministry
– for executing the tenet to live out our faith
daily – there is a gaping hole in most churches.
That hole, more positively-conceptualized as a
discipleship opportunity, involves preparing people
to live their faith at work, or what we call
“work-life ministry.”
Few churches offer anything resembling an on-going
ministry in this area. Often, the closest they come
is an effort focused on the white-collar business
community – a “marketplace ministry,” a
businessmen’s small group, or a 7 a.m. executive
prayer breakfast. In doing so, they minister to the
five percent who are leaders in their work
environments and ignore the ninety-five percent who
are not.
That’s tragic, we think, not only because this
ninety-five percent is left with little guidance
about what it means to be a Christian at work, but
also because this majority is surrounded every day
by untold legions of non-Christians and nominal
Christians to whom they could reveal God. Seemingly,
the church is missing one of its greatest
opportunities for both discipleship and evangelism.
At best a church attracts a few hundred, perhaps a
few thousand people each week. Its members, on the
other hand, have contact with twenty times that many
people in their typical work day.
Work-life ministry fills this gap, assisting
believers to see God’s agenda for their work lives
and teaching them to steward their time, talents,
and relationships in God-honoring ways. What does
that look like in operation? And what tools exist to
help a church create such a ministry? From our
experience with launching these ministries in local
churches around the country, here are several
essential steps.
A Road Map for Launching a Work-Life Ministry in
Your Church
Lay a Foundation of Prayer.
Any effort is in vain without the blessing of God’s
Spirit. Start the ministry with a campaign of prayer
and undergird its ongoing efforts with continued
intercession.
Appoint an Active, Passionate Leader.
A work-life ministry needs a “champion,” a
delegated, activist leader, whether a lay member or
a person on staff. This is an absolute prerequisite
for success here. Next to God’s blessing and the
pastor’s support, identifying the right individual
whom God has raised up is fundamental to the whole
effort.
If you are interested in launching such a ministry,
but you’re not in your church’s leadership, begin
persuading the decision-makers that this ministry
should be a priority. Share with them your vision
and passion. Pass on to them the books, tapes, and
articles that have opened your eyes to the paradigm
of work-life ministry. Begin praying for them.
Invite them to go with you to a work-life related
conference. Connect them with other churches who are
successfully implementing work-life ministry
strategies. God may very well use you to help them
catch a whole new vision, and you may be the key to
the reformation of your church.
Add “Work-Life Equipping” to Your Church’s
Objectives.
A work-life focus ought to be a central theme
integrated into the mission of your church. A
one-time programmatic emphasis will probably falter.
Work-life equipping is not an event-driven campaign,
but a long-term initiative that, if done properly,
yields abundant fruit.
Build a Strategic Framework.
Carefully consider what it is that you want to do
and what it will take to do it. What’s entailed in
equipping your members? And how will you deliver
that information? How will you go beyond imparting
information and encouragement to generate real
passion for living out the faith at work? Without a
structural framework in the church sustainable
action is difficult.
Some places to start are the
Ministry Overview or the
FAQs at
www.HisChurchatWork.org. Besides offering
conceptual models, His Church at Work also provides
a set of turnkey practical tools and strategies that
many churches are finding helpful. The organization
helps churches develop the framework for an ongoing
process of work-life ministry coming alongside
church leaders and their delegated work-life
champion to help create and launch the ministry.
That includes, among other things, creating a
vision, a team, the graphics, a unique set of online
tools, a plan for long-term success, comprehensive
training in our WorkLife University TM,
and the on-going support of your ministry.
Promote the Work-Life Ministry.
Without visibility, a work-life ministry will not
engage and mobilize people in the church. It needs a
name, a logo, and a communication infrastructure. It
requires promotion in church communications like
bulletins, announcements, the church web site,
newsletters and emails.
see HCAW services
We suggest a month-long, church-wide emphasis to get
the ministry onto the average member’s radar screen.
The ultimate goal is to integrate it into the entire
culture of the church. Sermons cast the vision from
up front and lay the groundwork of the basic
biblical precepts. Involvement tools and online
resources help people get on board.
Plan Ongoing Equipping and Mobilization.
Once the framework and tools for the ministry are in
place, don’t get complacent. Think through what you
can do on an ongoing basis to help your members to
continue to learn how to live their faith at work.
Here are some practical ideas:
· Pastors could schedule periodic sermons related
to workplace topics. Consider including member
testimonies of how God is transforming their
work-lives.
· Offer classes on God’s view of work and on
calling and vocation.
· To recognize and bless their calling in a
formal way, empower believers in their vocations
through a church commissioning service.
· Help your members organize Bible studies,
prayer groups, and evangelistic outreaches at their
places of work. In one success story, Dave Treat
with the Workplace Ministry of Willow Creek,
organized small groups that meet at commuter rail
stations’ coffee shops.
Avoid Vocabulary That Can Derail Your Message.
Ultimately, work-life ministry is a
paradigm-shifting effort. For everyone to get the
message that their “work matters to God,” we must
choose our rhetoric carefully. The question is not
what you think you are saying, but what your
audience actually hears. Much of Christians’
confusion about their jobs can be traced to the
stumbling block of our vocabulary.
For example, be careful how you speak of “ministry,”
taking care to not unwittingly exclude the spiritual
significance of “work.” Even well-meaning categories
such as “spiritual gifts,” “evangelism,” “tithing”
and “missions,” when given singular emphasis, can
leave the impression that work-life only matters as
a means to the end of “real ministry.”
Use inclusive language that communicates to the
entire workforce spectrum of your church. Most would
not describe themselves as “business people,”
“executives,” or even “professionals.” Also in
describing the ministry, talk about “work-life”
rather than “workplace” ministry because not every
worker has a workplace, per se. But every worker
does have a work-life.
So audit the cumulative message and language of your
church. Ask yourself, what are we really
communicating to our intended audience?
Keep Work-Life from Becoming Just a “Niche” Ministry.
By nature it is catalytic. All Christians need
equipping for a Christian work life. Youth must be
prepared for it. Singles, couples, men and women all
struggle with it. Senior citizens face significant
adjustments related to it. Accordingly, this
ministry should cut across and resource almost every
other sector of traditional church programming and
ministry: adults, youth, families, evangelism,
prayer, small groups, and preaching. The
transformational potential of a work-life ministry
outlook will probably not be realized if it’s
relegated to a special interest group ghetto.
The Payoff
Launching and sustaining a work-life ministry in the
local church requires a shift in a church’s
strategic thinking. It requires envisioning a whole
new ministry landscape for the local church. Tall
order, for sure, but the payoff is far taller.
Consider this: the true scope of influence for any
church is not its attendance, but the sum total of
the relationship networks of its members, most of
whom work. If each person has regular interaction
with twenty other people during a given week, then a
church of 250 has a potential scope of influence of
5,000, and a church of 5,000 has a potential reach
of 100,000! Work-life ministry grows out of the
vision to steward this wider ministry opportunity.
Its task is to mentally and practically merge the
ministry of the church with the daily ministry of
its people.
Such a ministry has other payoffs as well. It will
not only accelerate the growth of your church, it
will enhance the spiritual maturity of your church
members. Moreover, members’ appreciation for their
church will likely deepen as the church relevantly
speaks to the daily challenges people face and as it
equips people for their calling. It keeps God in
front of them, empowering them everyday. In one
church where they launched a work-life ministry, a
member wrote to the staff a message that is typical
of the outcome here: “Our workplace ministry and the
tools are a great encouragement for me throughout
the week. This is an awesome ministry and it helps
me to stay focused on what’s really important.
Thanks to all that are involved!”
Surely, the church that makes a priority of
work-life ministry will have no problem filling its
pews. Beyond that, though, it will be filling its
pews with more authentic disciples – people equipped
to take that 9:00 Sunday message and apply it at
9:00 on Monday.
Douglas Spada, a former nuclear submarine engineer
and entrepreneur, is the founder of His Church at
Work, a ministry devoted to fostering work-life
ministry in the local church. For more information
on church-based workplace ministry development,
visit
www.HisChurchatWork.org
or write Doug at doug@hischurchatwork.org.
David Scott, Ph.D., is a writer, speaker, and
consultant. David works with His Church at Work in
equipping and training local churches.