Archive for June 17th, 2008

Update on Site Rebuilding

Tuesday, June 17th, 2008

The new site structure is now in place.  Over the next few weeks (although with a break while I’m in Brussels lecturing at a Christian student forum) I hope to be able to add more new material a lttle at a time.  So please keep coming back.

- David Murray -

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Business and the Bible

Tuesday, June 17th, 2008

A lightly edited version of a short item by David Murray, originally written in mid-1996 for the magazine of CARE, London - “Light & Salt” - and taken from previous editions of our web site.

It is a sunny Saturday during the Parisian early Spring. A group of twentyfive men and women, mostly professional business people aged from twentyfive to forty, are sitting in small groups debating some difficult questions. “How can conflict in an organisation be captured and transformed into a creative tension rather than cause destructive fragmentation?” “What is the nature and purpose of human work, and to what extent is individual ambition a valid motivation?” This is not a university running a weekend philosophy course. It is a church seeking to cater to the needs of its many members who work in the world of business and who want to think about how to live out Christian faith and values in their Monday to Friday lives.

A dozen people are gathered in an apartment in Budapest. They plan tonight, for three hours, to think together about the way salary and other reward structures are developing in their post-communist economy … and what, if any, lessons can be drawn from St. Paul`s letters to the early church in Corinth.

In a beautiful conference centre overlooking a Swiss lake senior business people from some of Europe`s largest companies join with bishops and other Christian leaders from many countries to consider how business can apply Christian compassion to the plight of the long-term unemployed. They`ve just been listening to an address by former President of the European Commission, Jacques Delors.

The scouts` meeting room is being used for a different purpose today. It holds almost thirty men and women who, in an area of Romania deeply scarred by environmental, economic and social dereliction, are determined to run their struggling small enterprises as Christian “Islands of Integrity,” even though they are surrrounded by an ocean of bribery and other corrupt business behaviour. Today they`re using their extremely valuable time to share in a workshop on how to deliver quality service to customers in the light of Biblical values.

Eight people huddle around a table in a seminar room at a Cambridge theological college, absorbed in discussion. They are not ordinands speculating on the nature of deity or the relationship between divine sovereignty and human free-will. No, these are business managers considering how to apply Christian principles of morality and care when planning and implementing major change in an organisation.

The above are just five examples of situations in which I have been privileged to share during the past year or so. Across Europe, and across the Atlantic also, more and more people are becoming dissatisfied with a Christianity which ignores the activity on which they spend more time than anything else - their professional and business lives. From small local study groups to substantial international organisations meetings and conferences are addressing the question, “How can we live as Christians in the hurlyburly world of business?”

People doubtful about the moral validity of buying, making, selling and providing service for profit are discovering that Paul, the great apostle, partly financed some of his missions by engaging in the small-scale manufacture of tents and are asking themselves, “How, I wonder, did he display the fruit of the Spirit whilst engaged in commercial enterprise?” They turn to the Old Testament and find a man called Job. He’s running a sizeable agricultural business with many of the same kinds of pressure that people face today, including a period of disaster which looked as if it might have wiped him out, and yet in it all, “He maintained his integrity.”

There are today many organisations bringing together Christian business people to encourage one another and to share insights and experiences, and whether or not you are yourself actively engaged in business you can pray for those who are seeking to follow the Biblical injunctions: “Whatever you do, …. do everything for the glory of God,” and, “Serve wholeheartedly, as if you were serving the Lord, not men.”

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“Fourteen Hundred Years”

Tuesday, June 17th, 2008

The following short piece was written in 1996, and has been on previous versions of our web site since then. Its relevance has not decreased.

I started to write this piece yesterday in my favourite coffee shop just around the corner from Blackburn Cathedral. This year is the fourteen hundredth anniversary of the arrival of Christian preachers in this part of Northern England. I had just come from the cathedral, which had been packed with people from every walk of life - elderly people leaning on their canes, young parents carrying their children in their arms.

As my wife and I arrived, in good time before the start, we found crowds queueing down the street to get in. Most of the seats had been removed, and for almost two hours the building was crowded with people standing, singing and praising God:

I will proclaim
The glory of the risen Lord.
Who once was slain
To reconcile man to God

The preacher was the Archbishop of Canterbury. [2008 note: the Archbishop at that time was Dr. George Carey, now Lord Carey]. As I stood in the crowd three thoughts came over me. I asked myself, “How much publicity will this event get in the media tonight?” Actually it did get a mention on the regional television news and no doubt will in the local papers, and if my doubts about media attention are proved even more wrong in the next few days I’ll be delighted.

I find myself still thinking, though, “If half this number of people had been demonstrating for some currently fashionable cause, or waving protest banners, we would scarcely have been able to move for TV cameras, press photographers and young reporters waving their pocket tape recorders.” But this was a crowd of Christians rejoicing in a centuries-old faith, which although still very much alive and directly relevant to the modern day, is no longer considered “real” news.

Isn’t it time, I thought, that we stopped being so apologetic for our faith, and that more of us, myself included, spoke out to make it clear that the Christian Gospel is not merely a Sunday morning hobby for a few elderly folk. After all, during a weekend far more people in the UK attend church than go to football matches (although bishops don’t command such great transfer fees, so maybe they’re less newsworthy)!

The prayer jerked me to attention:

Father forgive us
For living as if we were ashamed to belong to your Son;
Father forgive us.

My mind flew back to the last time I heard Dr. Carey speak in person. It was about two years ago in the large lecture theatre of the Manchester Business School. Flanked by Chief Executives and Chairmen of major British industrial and financial companies he spoke unflinchingly about the need to bring Christian standards of behaviour to bear on our business lives. The topic was different that day. The audience was very different. But there was one similarity at least. The place was packed. Senior businessmen from around the NorthWest of England were sitting on the steps of the lecture hall to hear how the Gospel was relevant to their working lives.

In thought I travelled again, this time to Budapest and back in time a thousand years, to when King Istfan (Stephen) first formed the fragmented Magyar tribes into a nation. Stephen could be a ruthless monarch at times, but he wanted to learn of Christianity and for his people to do the same. He invited preachers to work among them, but he did something else - which, through modern eyes, looks strange.

In order to spread the faith he brought in foreign Christian craftsmen and businessmen! He knew that in a corrupt society their distinctive honesty and style of doing business would be as effective a means of spreading the Christian Good News as would preaching. He also knew that they would not hesitate to explain what it was which had so transformed their lives. I wonder, have we come around full circle again today, and by the way we behave in our business lives can we rise to the challenge of yesterday morning’s closing hymn?

We have a Gospel to proclaim,
Good news for men in all the earth;
The Gospel of a Saviour’s name:
We sing his glory, tell his worth.

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    • June 2008

A book for today

Ken Costa
God At Work

Ken Costa, God At Work, ISBN-13: ?; ISBN-10: 0826496350

Further details / Buy from

Amazon.com

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Read this one carefully

Paul Stevens
Doing God's Business

Paul Stevens, Doing God's Business, ISBN-13: 978-0802833983; ISBN-10: 0802833985

Further details / Buy from

Amazon.com

Amazon.co.uk


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