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Author: The Green Room

Ever heard of a “green room”? It’s the room in a theater where actors and speakers can relax when they’re not on stage….talk to each other about what they really think, fix their makeup, get some coffee, and otherwise prepare for their next moment “on.” Well, this blog is the green room for the faith and work movement, where its leaders can kick off their shoes, grab a cup of coffee or a mug of tea, and talk heart-to-heart about where the movement’s come from, where it’s going, what’s working, and what’s not working. We hope you’ll join the conversation.

Hope Exchange in Jackson: From Relief to Development

Reprinted from the Chalmers Center. Levi and Kateri Gill met while serving with a jobs training program that created employment opportunities through a wood shop and a local coffee shop. This work not only set the course of their personal lives, it also deepened their commitment to serving their community.   Levi told us, “The wood shop grabbed my heart for…

Mistakes Are Allowed

By Demi Prentiss, reprinted from Living God’s Mission. My extended, blended family is, probably like many other similar families, repeatedly in the throes of learning how to be with one another.  Lately, we have a mantra to fall back on when things get tough: “We are allowed to make mistakes.”  That’s not designed to avoid accountability, or foster a laissez faire attitude…

On Saltiness

By David Gill, reprinted from the Bay Area Center for Faith, Work & Tech. When things around us—in our country, our workplace, our neighborhood, our school—seem to be sinking or spinning in the wrong direction, it is tempting to want to grab the steering wheel and impose our insight and leadership on the situation. We might wish (or even attempt)…

Work and Rest

Reprinted from the Theology of Work Project; lead contributors David Kim & Leah Archibald. Human beings need a rhythm of work and rest in order to live up to their God-given potential. Just as God gives people important work to do, God also asks people to rest periodically from their labor. Work gives each individual the opportunity to partner with…

Be Still: Rest in the Delay

By Dorothy Moorley, reprinted from the London Institute for Contemporary Christianity. Now a man named Lazarus was sick. He was from Bethany, the village of Mary and her sister Martha. (This Mary, whose brother Lazarus now lay sick, was the same one who poured perfume on the Lord and wiped his feet with her hair.) So the sisters sent word to Jesus,…

Economic Wisdom in One Lesson

Reprinted from the Oikonomia Network. The vision of the Economic Wisdom Project is summarized in twelve “elements” that provide starting points for thoughtful, biblically informed understanding of contemporary opportunities and challenges. For a handy guide to the twelve elements, download this one-page summary, taken from our EWP vision paper “A Christian Vision for Flourishing Communities”: Below is an excerpt from the paper “Twelve Elements of Economic…

Tools to Serve Well: Chalmers Ambassadors Share Their Stories

Reprinted from the Chalmers Center. A little over two years ago, Chalmers started an Ambassador program. Through this two-month-long intensive training, ministry practitioners from all over North America have been certified to represent Chalmers in their region or ministry field. This has allowed Chalmers to send out Ambassadors to provide presentations of a biblical framework for poverty alleviation and help churches and…

Being Just for Today, Just for Today

By Demi Prentiss, reprinted from Living God’s Mission. This past week’s Gospel reading – “deny [your]selves and take up [your] cross and follow me” – inspired a convicting reflection on the scripture (Mark 8:27-38) by Brian Malison, a graduate of Luther Seminary, in their daily posting “God Pause”: “Christianity has a PR problem. It is impossible to put a positive spin…

How Should We Talk about Economic Justice and the Gospel?

By Greg Forster, reprinted from the Gospel Coalition. Recently, stern and sometimes angry commenters here at TGC called me a left-wing stooge of socialism for an article I wrote about economic justice and the gospel. Which is funny, since the last time I wrote an article for TGC on economic justice and the gospel, stern and sometimes angry commenters called me a right-wing stooge of…