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A Spiritual Growth Industry

More than ever, Christians are bringing faith to bear in the for-profit world.

Mike Valleskey was struggling to understand how his job at Sears fit into his new life of faith. Valleskey hadn't been asked to perform unethically or kept at work so late he lost touch with his family. But he couldn't see how a disciple of Jesus Christ could work 9 to 5 inside an office with such a large mission field outside.



"I contemplated going back to Bible school," Valleskey tells CT. But before making the jump, he looked at his sphere of influence—his wife and four children, no surprise there, but the next one blew him away. "The workplace," says Valleskey, who now leads a Christian fellowship at Sears with 150 members. "I was around 5,000 people, every day, 40-plus hours [a week]."

Welcome to Faith in the Workplace 101, one of the fastest growing arenas of Christian ministry. If nonprofits are learning lessons from former for-profit execs, it's also true that Christian workers are learning how better to bring their faith into the for-profit world.

Like many before, and even more since, Valleskey discovered in 1994 that the largest mission field in his life was inside his Chicago office building. He didn't need a Master of Divinity degree. He just needed to work with a higher mission than receiving that Friday paycheck.

"People don't just want to park their car [and] their soul in the lot outside. They want their personal values, their faith values, to be aligned with the values of the office," says David W. Miller, executive director of Yale University's Center for Faith and Culture and author of the book God at Work (Oxford, 2006). "They don't want to live a compartmentalized life."

That much has become clear. With an explosion of regular Bible studies meeting in American offices, the number of nonprofits supporting those Bible studies has mushroomed to more than 800, according to the International Coalition of Workplace Ministries (ICWM). In 2000, there were 79 books published about faith and work; ICWM has counted 2,000 titles in the past two years. The next new position to be salaried at larger churches will be seminary-trained pastors of workplace ministry, says Stephen Christensen, founder of Concordia University's Center for Faith and Business.

"This will be one of the major issues that will determine the history of the church," says Kent Humphreys, president of the Fellowship of Companies for Christ International.

The business community has taken notice. Articles about increasing expressions of faith at work have appeared on the cover of BusinessWeek and in Fortune, Newsweek, the Wall Street Journal, and The New York Times, among others.

Ignorance about Rights

Still, the market has substantial room for growth, experts say, largely because Christian employers and employees are ignorant about religious protections under the law—and many work hard to refrain from any overt religious expression.

"Most Christians sort of cower at this toothless lion called separation of church and state, because they don't understand their freedom and their limits," says Os Hillman, president of ICWM.

That's where Brad Dacus steps into the picture. The founder and president of Pacific Justice Institute, a legal-defense organization, Dacus travels throughout California and occasionally out of state to provide free seminars about what Christians can and can't do at work.

Under federal law, Dacus says, employees can share their faith with non-Christian employees off the clock, use available conference rooms for meetings before work and during breaks, keep religious items on their desks, and redirect union dues to a charity.


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Comments

Displaying 1–3 of 10 comments

Seeking His Heart

March 19, 2007  10:41am

As a partner in a women's workplace ministry group, I am continually stunned to see the impact of the open discussion of faith and the availability of Christian fellowship in the workplace. I have witnessed some profound transformation of lives. I would encourage those who are fearful, struggling or even discouraged to step ahead with boldness and watch the Lord provide for those He loves and is waiting to shepherd. It really has very little to do with being trained or untrained, churched or not churched, and everything to do with the heart of Jesus being extended to the lost and faltering. How blessed we are to be a part of this powerful movement! May we be found faithful.

Richard Sides

March 10, 2007  9:44am

I have to agree with Mr. McCook - most churches have avoided the business community, and any limited involvement has been from an "us - them" perspective. As this article expresses, the idea that someone with a "secular job" would need to quit it in order to become involved in full time Christian ministry is absurd - if we view our place of employment as our mission field, we are living the Great Commission.

Bob McCook

March 09, 2007  12:08pm

Very good wake-up article. One glaring flaw to me is the comment by Stephen Christiansen indicating that he sees this movement being led by seminary-trained pastors of workplace ministry. In case he hadn't noticed, the reason this movement is doing so well is the lack of seminary-trained leadership. This work needs to be led by businessmen with a heart bent on displaying the love of Jesus Christ for no other reason than fulfilling the Great Commission. The failure of the church to relate to men and women in the marketplace is notorius. These men are doing just fine.

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