Thanks to frequent commenter and track facilitator David Underwood for this tip.
I think many people in Missional Business will be very interested in ways of doing business that take care of the earth and the people who live there. While some evangelicals have resisted anything “green” with comments like “it’s all going to burn anyway”, [...]
Posts Tagged ‘Missional Business’
Hope for the Marketplace
Posted in Uncategorized, tagged encouragement, MarketplaceMin, Missional Business on July 9, 2008 | 3 Comments »
Here are a couple of quotes about what’s currently happening in the marketplace. I hope they encourage you.
Today, a spiritual revival is sweeping across Corporate America as people of all stripes are mixing mysticism into their management, importing into office corridors the lessons usually dolled out in churches, temples, and mosques. Gone is the [...]
Into the Wildness
Posted in Uncategorized, tagged encouragement, Missional Business on July 7, 2008 | Leave a Comment »
True faith is not expressed or experienced by those who remain in the safety of the temple courts, but by those that charge into the wildness of humanity armed only with the Cross of Peace.
While I was journaling with Dad today, he gave me the tidbit above. While there are many practical reasons why [...]
What’s the “Bottom Line”?
Posted in Uncategorized, tagged Missional Business on June 18, 2008 | 2 Comments »
I’ve been thinking about the “non-negotiables” of following God at work. In order for me to seek the Kingdom in enterprise, what I do must resound with the calling of Christ and impulse of the Gospel. It must prophetically announcing the coming of Kingdom-reality as much as all other Jesus-following. [...]
Four Streams of God + Business
Posted in Uncategorized, tagged Business as Mission, Kingdom Business, MarketplaceMin, Missional Business on June 18, 2008 | 2 Comments »
My friend, co-planter, and business partner Jared Looney has been doing some research into Jesus-following in different business modes. He’s identified four “streams” of combining faith and work, each with it’s own emphasis, origin, and culture. I’d be curious which of these terms you identify with the most or have heard most often: