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People at Work: Preparing to be the Whole Church

Author: Willy Kotiuga
Date: 16.04.2010
Category: Workplace Ministry

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Originally Posted in English

Marketplace Ministry is a term that is commonly used to describe activities related to promoting God’s Kingdom at the workplace. While it is a catchy phrase, there are many who do not consider themselves as part of the marketplace. Public servants, hospital workers, factory workers, lab technicians, engineers and a host of other professions go to a workplace to earn their living and not the marketplace.

At our workplaces God has given each of us the high privilege of preparing our co-workers for a faith journey. While there are many resources to equip believers to invite others to discover God, there is often little encouragement from local churches. Without this encouragement, the momentum of inertia significantly diminishes the passion in the workplace that would normally attract others to the Gospel. Believers who have been in their workplace for many years have attained a high level of discomfort to share their faith or even to touch on the topic. New employees are either at a loss or uncomfortable in sharing faith because they feel vulnerable and do not want to jeopardize their career or jobs. Both older and newer employees are often stuck in a ‘freeze’ mode.

The disturbing reality is that Every day, millions of workers go to work without seeing the slightest connection between what they do all day and what they think God wants done in the world.[1] The Biblical reality is that God calls workplace Christians be the whole Church all of the time, including weekdays. 

Paul Stevens writes Since work was given before the Fall, it has intrinsic value (it is good in itself and may even be therapeutic), instrumental value (it meets needs and creates edifying results) and spiritual value (it is a way of loving God and being loved by Him).[2]

The Bible is a book by workers, about workers, for workers.[3] Human beings are designed and commissioned by God to work out the Seven Verbs of our Mandate: Rule, Be Fruitful, Increase, Fill, Subdue, Work, Take Care Of.[4] Indeed, purposeful work is one aspect of what distinguishes us from animals.[5] We actively go out to our work but the animals wait passively for God to provide.

Evangelism is about Calling the Whole Church with the Whole Gospel for the Whole World.[6] Sharing faith at the workplace is more about ‘being’ than ‘doing’. How we live our lives at work adds power to the words we speak. Then their good character will shine through their actions, adding luster to the teaching of our Savior God.[7] Luster is needed to attract people to God.

Ignoring the relevance of those who spend forty hours a week in workplace is not an option. The role of the church is to equip his people for works of service, so that the body of Christ may be built up.[8] The role of believers in the workplace is to proactively invite others to join us on a faith journey.

Keywords: Marketplace Ministry; Workplace

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PhContributeBy
Reply Flag 0 Thumbs Up Thumbs Down Eduardo_Nunez_Marcos (0)
Costa Rica

Estoy plenamente de acuerdo. Miles y millones de creyentes, acostumbrados a desarrollar su cristianismo dentro de la cuatro paredes del templo, solo los dias domingos durante dos a tres horas. 


08.09.2010
PhContributeBy
Reply Flag 0 Thumbs Up Thumbs Down chikhali (1)
India

Market place ministry is very important to build the body of Christ. Infact we need to train and equip the body of Christ to be actively engaged in market place ministry. Many are not aware of it nor do they know how to do it. training the people for this particular ministry is the need of the hour.
Suman Aghamkar


24.04.2010
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Reply Flag 0 Thumbs Up Thumbs Down crosscampus_intl (0)
United States

I agree with you completely. I work with students and young professionals in East Asia and I’m working to instill in them to reality that they are called to be the so called "Marketplace Missionary" or whatever you wish to call it. I just call it being a disciple of Christ. But, as I seek to help them understand this, there is a root problem that I see over and over, both in Asia and back in the states. There is a major lacking of discipleship. I’m not referring to book studies but to real life discipleship, the kind I believe Jesus modeled as he walked with His disciples. He taught them, he cared for them, he took them out on ministry (both to observe and be involved in) and he did it for three years. It was relational and long-term. I wholeheartedly believe that if we can move toward a more relational style of discipleship, the kind I believe Jesus modeled, than we’ll see more people see their jobs as their mission field.


20.04.2010
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Reply Flag 0 Thumbs Up Thumbs Down Jolly_Abraham_P (0)  
India

"Ignoring the relevance of those who spend forty hours a week in workplace is not an option." I couldn’t agree more.
Imagine a world where all Christians only worked for the church or Christian organizations! The salt can’t stay in the salt shaker if it has to be useful.


17.04.2010

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