NIFW Recommends: Advent Resources

As the Advent season approaches, we at NIFW want to provide resources for you, your colleagues, family, and friends to prepare well for our celebration of Christ's coming. With holiday parties, end-of-the-year celebrations, and the overall hustle and bustle of the season, Advent is often over before we even realize that the season has begun.

Our hope is that these resources will help you to pause and reflect on how the coming of Jesus changes everything – how we live, how we relate, and how we work. May these resources guide you to Jesus and encourage you with hope throughout this Advent season.

Working for the Harvest

Let’s remember this time of year and every season: The harvest is plenty, but the workers are few. Celebrations are soon to come, but first, there’s important work to be done. Let’s pray for the Lord of the harvest to send out laborers and let’s work to bring the kingdom of God to bear on the places where we live our lives through the power of the Spirit who lives inside of us.

Meet the panelists: Josh Miller

Join us on Thursday, November 17th for our Work On Purpose Panel Event, “Cultivating Community and Meaning Through Business,” where we will hear from leaders and entrepreneurs in the Marketing, Tech, Supply Chain, and Business communities for a conversation focused on the impact of cultivating community and meaning through business in an age of superficiality.

Meet Event Panelist, Josh Miller, Chief Product Officer at 5by5 Agency. 5by5 Agency is a Nashville digital marketing agency delivering clarity, reach and results to those who work where life change happens. The following post shares language from 5by5 on the cultural values that guide 5by5 in their mission.

Meet the panelists: Dr. Hannah Stolze

Join us on Thursday, November 17th for our Work On Purpose Panel Event, “Cultivating Community and Meaning Through Business,” where we will hear from leaders and entrepreneurs in the Marketing, Tech, Supply Chain, and Business communities for a conversation focused on the impact of cultivating community and meaning through business in an age of superficiality.

Meet Event Panelist, Dr. Hannah Stolze, Associate Professor of Supply Chain Management at Lipscomb University and Executive Director of the Wheaton College Center for Faith & Innovation. Dr. Stolze is an author, teacher, speaker, and academic with a focus on sustainable supply chain management and the intersection of faith and business. The following post was originally shared on the Denver Institute for Faith and Work blog and is reposted with the permission of the Denver Institute for Faith and Work. To learn more, visit DenverInstitute.org, or @DenverInstitute on social media.

Meet the panelists: Peter Court

Join us on Thursday, November 17th for our Work On Purpose Panel Event, “Cultivating Community and Meaning Through Business,” where we will hear from leaders and entrepreneurs in the Marketing, Tech, Supply Chain, and Business communities for a conversation focused on the impact of cultivating community and meaning through business in an age of superficiality.

Meet Event Panelist, Peter Court, Co-Founder and CEO of Tether. Tether is an app leveraging technology to develop spiritually mature and deeply connected Christians. The following post shares language from Tether on the vision that guides the company in its mission to cultivate authentic community for God-honoring purposes!

Vocational Prayer: Through the overflow of your love, may we love those around us

For our workplaces, as we enter into our vocations this week, align our hopes and longings with you, Oh Lord. Whether we serve in healthcare, finance, education, work from home, or work in the home–may those around us see more of you through our words and actions. Grant us tender hearts toward the unexpected stories we may encounter this week. Quicken our hearts to repent of our sin more than to defend our sin. May we seek reconciliation and peace over passivity in conflict. May the pace of our week be at the pace of your grace.

A Fresh Approach to Team Building

I have a theory that my job as a supervisor is to manage relationships on my team, not just manage people. Every relationship needs to be monitored by the leader. The chain is only as good as its weakest link. Everyone must relate to each other, not just to the boss. I am responsible to facilitate, improve, and maintain relationships between employees and not just my relationships with them.

Shared Language & Culture Shaping

When I was working in higher education, conversations around vision and culture were common topics. We would discuss “tone setting” and “vision casting” as often as we discussed the local game or the new special at our favorite restaurant. It was common for our office to focus on casting the vision for our team on why we do what we do.

As I thought through how I wanted to cast the vision to my team, I thought through how to communicate that the work we do is integrated into our lives because it is all-encompassing–

  • It is compassion integrated with accountability

  • It is tenacity integrated with grace

  • It is faith integrated into our work

Can Fulfillment at Work be Found?

One of the most common expressions of frustration that I hear from people who are exasperated with their work and often considering a change - many of whom as deeply committed followers of Jesus - is this: “I just don’t find my work very fulfilling.”

This is hardly an uncommon sentiment, and one that’s being felt at increasing levels. Recent research has found that younger generations are less satisfied and more frustrated than older generations about work (61% of Gen Z vs. 48% of Millennials, 47% of Gen X and 42% of Boomers. Barna Group, 2021).

Announcing the NIFW Gotham Fellowship 22-23 Cohort!

Announcing the NIFW Gotham Fellowship 22-23 Cohort!

The Nashville Institute for Faith and Work is excited to announce the 2022-2023 class for The Gotham Fellowship! We are excited to have a representation of 8 churches and 7 industries in this year’s Cohort. Please join us in praying for each of our Fellow’s as we kick off the year together with an Opening Retreat on August 26 & 27th!

Welcome Lauren Brett, NIFW Program Coordinator

The Nashville Institute for Faith and Work is excited to welcome Lauren Brett as the NIFW Program Coordinator!

Lauren comes to NIFW with a rich background of education and experience in Ministry and Higher Education Administration, as well as a deep passion for Faith and Work integration.

A graduate of Lee University (B.S. Children's Ministry) and Geneva College (M.A. Higher Education), Lauren comes to Nashville from Anderson, SC where she has served at Anderson University as a Residence Director, Course Instructor, and most recently, Director of Student Involvement and New Student Programs.

Prior to her time in Anderson, Lauren lived in Chattanooga, TN where she served as Children's Ministry Director at Sojourn Community Church as well as in an Administrative role at McCallie School.

Director of NIFW, Josiah Leuenberger, shares about Lauren:

"We are grateful for how God has drawn together Lauren and NIFW for this next season of ministry and we are excited for all she will add to the NIFW ministry team! Lauren's organizational skill set, heart for people, and proven ability to invest in others to serve God in their areas of opportunity will be a significant gift to the NIFW community."

And a brief word from Lauren Brett:

"I look forward to serving as the Program Coordinator for the Nashville Institute for Faith and Work! The heart and mission of NIFW – ”to equip, connect, and mobilize Christians to integrate their faith and their work for the flourishing of Nashville and beyond” - is a mission that I deeply believe in. It is my desire to support NIFW participants to this end. I look forward to serving NIFW participants as they learn about being engaged, global citizens who impact the world for the good of their neighbors and the glory of God."

Please extend Lauren a warm welcome and pray for her as she relocates to Nashville and joins the NIFW Staff in late August!

"Encouragement for New Graduates on God's Presence in Your Vocational Journey."

As I was thinking of what to write in my niece’s high school graduation card, I was led to focus on God’s hand in this milestone event. I wrote something like, “God has prepared you for this moment because of His love for you. God has a purpose for you in this world because of His love for us.”

I believe that this small glimpse of inspiration could also be expressed to any other new graduate.

How the Church Has Failed Business Leaders

By and large, I think the Church has failed business leaders...”

Not long ago I was meeting with a highly-accomplished Senior business leader who I also respect as a follower of Jesus. He asked me how he could be a help to the NIFW ministry. I appreciated this generous offer and told him that what I’d appreciate most was his perspective on this question:

“What would you have me know about how the Nashville Institute for Faith and Work can best serve people in your position?”

His answer to that question:

“By and large, I think the Church has failed business leaders in equipping them to strive for excellence in their work…”

Our Work and a Greater Story

Not long ago, a friend and I were talking and she was sharing with me about all that she has to be grateful for in her job: a secure role, a manager who is understanding and fair, a flexible schedule, ample vacation time, and good pay. But as my friend shared these positive words, they came as a prelude to expressing underlying feelings that are familiar to so many of us: “There’s nothing wrong with my work, it just doesn’t feel overly meaningful either… I wonder if my job is the right fit... Maybe I need a new setting? This isn’t really how I envisioned spending my career…”

Good Works and God's Work

Editor’s Note: The following article is written by Josiah Leuenberger, NIFW’s Director. Read more about Josiah here.

Two weeks into my role as NIFW Director, I’m grateful to so many of you for your warm welcome. I’ve come to see quickly and clearly that, at its core, the NIFW community is a vibrant group of people who desire to live in response to the gospel in real, personal ways. You love people and are invested in cooperating with God to bring his redeeming grace to bear on the places you serve in this one-of-a-kind city.

As I begin, I’m also grateful for the leaders who have come before me in stewarding the NIFW ministry. Each of you has played a part in laying a foundation of transformative, practical ministry and building upon it in such a way that gives me excitement as I pray and dream about the possibilities ahead. 

As I think about the future of NIFW, what I look forward to the most is hearing the stories that will continue to be told of God’s grace made manifest among the communities with whom we work as a result of God’s work among us. 

A passage of scripture that spurs my imagination in thinking about this comes from the Apostle Paul’s letter to the church in Ephesus - a diverse, booming city in its own day. To a people faced with a variety of challenges and opportunities, Paul opens by sharing how the story of Jesus provides ultimate hope for any person who trusts him for forgiveness and restoration to God. 

As Paul’s words of Good News build to a crescendo in the early part Chapter 2, he pivots from expounding upon the monumental nature of God’s grace to naming the purpose for which this gift is given:

For we are his workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand, that we should walk in them” (Ephesians 2:10).

The word translated workmanship in this verse in the original Greek is poiema, a word used to describe a product (often a fabric) that was crafted for a specific intent and purpose.

What Paul is tapping into here is two-fold: 1) The uniqueness of every Christ-follower in the way that God has created us to serve (with different gifts, abilities, personalities, experiences, and cultural backgrounds), and 2) The common purpose shared by every follower of Jesus: That the work of our own lives would point to the ultimately good work of Christ.  

An activity that I very much enjoy is writing training programs for endurance sports athletes. Though the art of coaching inevitably involves continual, strategic adjustments to any training program, no matter how well-written, I love the sense of excitement and potential that comes with completing the process of writing a training program for an athlete and dreaming about the improvements in fitness and performance that lie ahead.

As I read Paul’s words in this passage, I can’t help but imagine God feeling a similar sense of excitement and anticipation in considering the redemptive potential within every person who Jesus has so graciously drawn to himself. New possibilities for transformation are on the table - for our lives, our communities, and this world - as a result of God’s presence and activity among us. 

Think about the difference this truth can make in the way that you and I approach our day to day:

How might God’s grace be made manifest in our work as a result of his work among us? 

This is a question that followers of Jesus have the responsibility and privilege to engage. It’s one we can answer in a myriad of ways, and, thank God (seriously!), this is a question we have the joy of being able to answer together, as we support, encourage, and challenge one another to live out our common mission in unique, creative, and meaningful ways. I look forward to making the most of the opportunity as we learn, serve, and experience life together in the years to come.


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A Prayer for Peace When Feeling Overwhelmed at Work

God who is with me,

You know what I need before I even quiet myself to ask (Matthew 6:8). At this moment, I am feeling burdened under the weight of my work, feeling overwhelmed at the tasks laid before me.

I feel the pressure to succeed and the fear of failure in my bones. I worry I may not be up to the task. I fear the approaching of deadlines, the meeting of expectations. My body feels heavy with dread.

God who is with me, I bring these anxieties to You and ask that You would meet me in them. Help me remember that these worries are not trivial to You, but that you deeply care about these details of my life.

Bring to my mind previous times of fear and worry, and how I have overcome similar challenges before by Your Spirit.

Lead me beside still waters. Slow my racing thoughts. Bring me back to this present moment. Don’t abandon me in my anxiety.

Lord, I care about this work and ask that You would help me complete it faithfully. While I do not yet know the outcome, I know You have a good plan for my life and for my work.

Help me to trust in Your provision, and may that trust begin to take up more space in my heart and mind. Equip me with the patience, energy, persistence, and courage I need to do this work, and remind me of Your love for me, no matter the outcome.

Amen.


Want more resources from NIFW? Follow us on Instagram, Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn. You can also find more resources from NIFW on our blog and resources page.

Want to stay connected with NIFW? Join our email list to be the first to know about our upcoming events, programs, and latest resources.