Coram Deo ~

Looking at contemporary culture from a Christian worldview


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Living Out Our Faith at Work, Part 5

I had the opportunity to speak to a wonderful group at Truth in Love Counseling on living out our faith at work. This is part 5 of a five-part series inspired by that talk.
Here are some additional ways I personally tried to integrate my faith with my work. Hopefully they will be helpful to you as well:

Connect with Your Team Members and Co-Workers. Get to Know Them as People, not just for the Role they Play in the Workplace. 

As a leader, my first meeting with a new team member was always just about them, not about the work (unless they specifically addressed it). I called these “Getting to Know You” meetings. I wanted to know about them, their families, etc., basically what was important to them. How can you lead and serve someone if you don’t know what is significant to them?

One of my favorite leadership authors is John Maxwell. He has said that the people on your team won’t care how much you know until they know how much you care. We should be leaders who are known to care about their team members and co-workers. We should see them as people with families, dreams, goals and concerns, and not resources. Continue reading


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Living Out Our Faith at Work, Part 4

I had the opportunity to speak to a wonderful group at Truth in Love Counseling on living out our faith at work. This is part 4 of a five-part series inspired by that talk.

Here are some additional ways I personally tried to integrate my faith with my work. Hopefully they will be helpful to you as well:

Serve as a mentor. I’m a big proponent of the value of mentoring relationships, and never turned anyone down who wanted to enter into a mentoring relationship with me at work or a discipling relationship at church. A mentor is someone with more or different experiences that they can share with a mentee. Still, I always learned from those who sought me out as a mentor. I see mentoring as a way of giving back and pouring myself into others just as my career mentor poured himself into me. Continue reading


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Living Out Our Faith at Work, Part 3

I had the opportunity to speak to a wonderful group at Truth in Love Counseling on living out our faith at work. This is part 3 of a five-part series inspired by that talk.

Suggestions on How to Integrate Your Faith and Work

What was it like for me to serve the Lord as a leader in a Fortune 50 organization, spending half of my time in the Administrative Services department and half in a large and diverse I.T. department? How did I try to live for Jesus in the workplace? How did I use the platform He had given me? How did I try to shine His Light to others? In other words, how did I try to integrate my faith with my work?

Tim Keller tells us “To be a Christian in business means much more than just being honest or not sleeping with your coworkers. It even means more than personal evangelism or holding a Bible study at the office. Rather, it means thinking out the implications of the gospel worldview and God’s purposes for your whole work life – and for the whole of the organization under your influence.” Continue reading


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Living Out Our Faith at Work, Part 1

Recently, I had the opportunity to speak to a wonderful group at Truth in Love Counseling on living out our faith at work. This five-part series is inspired by that talk.

Biblical Value of Work
Let’s talk about how we can live out our faith at work. That is, how can we integrate our faith and work? It’s a question that perhaps some of you have thought about, and I think one that all believers would like to know how to do better.
Many books have been written on this topic, with new ones being published all the time. There is even a breakout session titled  “Living the Gospel at Work” that will be offered at next April’s  Gospel Coalition National Conference to be held in Indianapolis, a conference I would highly recommend.
I recently read an article which stated:
“At its best, the faith and work movement gives a deep dignity to those who need to know why God cares about what they do all day, why the daily grind matters, how God uses their efforts as part of a tapestry of common good, an outworking of Jeremiah’s vision to seek the good of the city to which God has called us.”
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