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Called to Impact the Culture
Os Hillman
From: Faith & Work: Do They Mix? (Aslan
Publishing, 2000)
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There are many men
and women who have made spiritual discoveries that resulted in being
used by God to impact their world. This is the ultimate fulfillment
when a person understands they are actually called to the work they
are doing and God uses them to impact their world. True success is
fulfilling the purpose for which God made you. It has little to do
with money, prestige or notoriety. God’s measurement of success is
very clear – doing the will of God. His greatest commandment is to
love the Lord your God with all your heart, soul and mind. From this
relationship with God everything else should flow. We cannot help
but impact our culture if we love God and obey Him.
They chose Stephen, a man
full of faith and of the Holy Spirit; also Philip, Procorus, Nicanor,
Timon, Parmenas, and Nicolas from Antioch, a convert to Judaism
(Acts 5:6).
God is raising up a new remnant
of men and women in the workplace that perform their work with an
overriding ministry objective to it. Our first model of this kind of
man was Stephen. In the book of Acts, we learn that the disciples
needed to expand their leadership base and make more time for
personal study of the scriptures. They decided to appoint others to
handle a special food distribution program that was suffering
because there were not enough people to service the need. The answer
was to appoint more leaders to take this responsibility. Stephen was
one of those appointed who was also a businessman. He also had some
other characteristics spoken of in chapter 6: Now Stephen, a man
full of God's grace and power, did great wonders and miraculous
signs among the people (Acts 6:8). Not long after the disciple
laid hands on these men revival began to spread beyond Jerusalem. As
with most moves of God, opposition arose when the power of God began
to be manifested through Stephen. Not so surprisingly, it came first
through the religious community. Stephen preached to the people and
became the first martyr as a result. In fact, it was Stephen and the
other marketplace disciples who were the catalysts to take the
message beyond the borders of Jerusalem while the disciples remained
in the city.
Over the last few years God has
allowed me to bump into more and more men and women who understand
what it means to live for a cause greater than themselves. They see
their “staffs” as something God wants to use to perform miracles.
There have been many such men and women who have used their
marketplace experience to impact their cultures. Here are just a few
of them at different periods of history.
Brigid of Ireland
Brigid was born from a sexual
encounter between an Irish king and one of his slaves
in the fourth century. She was reared as a slave girl within
the king's household and was required to perform hard work on the
king's farm. From the beginning, Brigid took notice of the plight of
the less fortunate. She would give the butter from the king's
kitchen to working boys. She once gave the king's sword to a passing
leper---an act about which the king was enraged. The king tried to
marry her off, but to no avail. One day, Brigid fled the king's
house and committed herself to belonging only to Christ.
Brigid sought other women who
also wanted to belong only to Christ. Seven of them organized a
community of nuns that became known as the settlement of Kildare, a
place where many thatch-roofed dwellings were built, and where
artist studios, workshops, guest chambers, a library, and a church
evolved. These and other settlements became little industries all to
themselves, producing some of the greatest craftsmanship in all of
Europe. Many of the poor had their lives bettered because of
Brigid's ministry to them.
Brigid became a traveling
evangelist, helping the poor and preaching the gospel. When she died
in 453, it is estimated 13,000 people had escaped from slavery and
poverty to due to her Christian service and industry. Her name
became synonymous with the plight of the poor. She was a woman who
turned a life of slavery and defeat into a life lived for a cause
greater than herself. She became a nationally known figure among her
people, and the Irish people still recognize her each February 1.
William Wilberforce
In 1787, William Wilberforce was
known as “the greatest moral achiever of the British people,” as
stated by biographer John Pollack. Wilberforce was attributed with
demolishing the slave trade in England and sixty-nine different
initiatives that had world-shaping significance. Wilberforce came to
faith in 1785 at the age of twenty-five. As a result, he began to
think that spiritual matters were much more important than secular
matters. However, a converted slave trader named John Newton, who
also authored the famous hymn, Amazing Grace, convinced
Wilberforce that he could have greater impact as a politician than
as a minister. After much consideration and prayer, he agreed. He
wrote these words in his journal in 1788: “My walk is a public one.
My business is in the world; and I must mix in the assemblies of
men, or quit the post which Providence seems to have assigned me.”
Wilberforce impacted his culture more than any man of his time.
Jeremiah Lanphier was a
businessman in New York City who asked God to do something
significant in his life in 1857. In a small darkened room, in the
back of one of New York City's lesser churches, a man prayed alone.
His request of God was simple, but earth-shattering: "Lord, what
wilt Thou have me to do?" (John
Woodbridge, ed., More Than Conquerors (Chicago, Illinois: Moody
Press, 1992), 337)
He was a man approaching midlife
without a wife or family, but he had financial means. He made a
decision to reject the "success syndrome" that drove the city's
businessmen and bankers. God used this businessman to turn New York
City's commercial empire on its head. He began a businessmen's
prayer meeting on September 23, 1857. The meetings began slowly, but
within a few months, 20 noonday meetings were convening daily
throughout the city. The New York Tribune and the New York
Herald issued articles of revival. It had become the city's
biggest news. Now a full-fledged revival, it moved outside New York.
By spring of 1858, 2,000 met daily in Chicago's Metropolitan
Theatre, and in Philadelphia, the meetings mushroomed into a
four-month long tent meeting. Meetings were held in Baltimore,
Washington, Cincinnati, Chicago, New Orleans, and Mobile. Thousands
met to pray because one man stepped out. Annus Mirabilis, the year
of national revival, had begun. This was an extraordinary move of
God through one man. It was unique because the movement was lead by
businessmen, a group long considered the least prone to any form of
evangelical fervor, and it had started on Wall Street, the most
unlikely of all places to begin.
R.G. LeTourneau
Samuel Morse was born in 1791
and grew up desiring to be an artist, and he eventually became very
talented and internationally known. However, it was difficult to
make a living as an artist in America during that time. A series of
crises further complicated his vocational desire when his wife died;
then his mother and father also died soon after. He went to Europe
to paint and reflect on his life. On his return trip aboard a ship,
he was captivated by discussions at dinner about new experiments in
electromagnetism. During that important occasion, Morse made the
following comment, "If the presence of electricity can be made
visible in any part of the circuit, I see no reason why intelligence
may not be transmitted by electricity." In the face of many
difficulties and disappointments, he determinedly perfected a new
invention, and, in 1837, applied for a patent that became what we
know today as the telegraph. He also created Morse code. It was only
later, after many more setbacks and disappointments, that his
projects received funding.
Samuel Morse later commented,
"The only gleam of hope, and I cannot underrate it, is from
confidence in God. When I look upward it calms any apprehension for
the future, and I seem to hear a voice saying: 'If I clothe the
lilies of the field, shall I not also clothe you?' Here is my strong
confidence, and I will wait patiently for the direction of
Providence." Morse went on to create several other inventions and
can be recognized today as the father of faxes, modems, e-mail, the
internet and other electronic communication. (Glimpses,
Issue #99 (Worcester, Pennsylvania: Christian History Institute,
1998).)
Today, God is using men and women in the workplace to impact
nations. Space does not permit me to recount the number of
modern-day examples of men and women who are impacting their world
through Christ. However, I would like to make mention of one man
who has become a good friend to Angie and I.
Dale Neill is a commercial builder in Southern California whose
business has expanded to the international level. Several years ago
Dale went through some major business problems and lost millions of
dollars in the process. God saw him through the adversity, and Dale
became fully committed to the Lord's purposes in his life because of
the things God did during this time. God began to show Dale how He
wanted to use business to impact the lives of others.
Dale is now President of the International Christian Chamber of
Commerce (ICCC) -- USA, and the International Vice President of ICCC.
A few years ago a door was opened that allowed a video training
course to be developed for the nation of China entitled "You Can
Start A Business". China selected ICCC over Microsoft and IBM for
this project because they wanted ethics to be presented in the
series. This happened because of some groundwork of prayer that had
been laid in the nation of China through the leadership of ICCC.
Dale and Laurence Holt, another businessman with ICCC from England,
were selected by ICCC to head up the video project. Most people
said the project would never get off the ground and would end up
getting diluted through the political system. Most said it would
never air on China TV. Even though ICCC had no background in video
training and production, China asked ICCC to do the project. ICCC
reminded the government that they were a Christian organization and
anything they would teach would be based upon Biblical principles.
The Chinese response was that it would be okay, they just could not
mention the name of Jesus or say it came from the Bible. ICCC
responded by asking, "May we say it is written?" China agreed to
allow that statement. That was the door they needed to proceed with
the project. The entire series quotes scripture throughout as the
basis for the business principles being taught. The series has aired
several times on the second largest television network in China with
a potential viewing audience of more than 240 million people. The
Chinese government has asked ICCC to expand the series significantly
and has even given permission to begin the ICCC in the nation.
God
is using businessmen and women to take the gospel to un-reached
people groups through business. It has been through much sacrificial
prayer, giving of resources and time by men and women in the
marketplace that this project has moved from birth, to its present
state of effectiveness. The series is currently being translated
into a number of other languages and will be utilized in many
countries worldwide, including the inner city, the U.S.
Copyright 2000 by Os Hillman.
Used by permission of the author.
Os Hillman is president of Marketplace Leaders (www.oshillman.com),
an organization that helps men and women discover their God-ordained
calling to their vocations, and he is the director of the
International Coalition of Workplace ministries (icwm.net) which
brings leaders in the faith and work movement together once a year
at an annual summit. Os has authored several books including TGIF:
Today God Is First; Making Godly Decisions; TGIF Small Group
Bible Study; and Faith and Work: Do
They Mix?
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