Church Work

Rich Marshall is concluding a talk at a Business Men's Fellowship (BMF) conference in Los Angeles. After inviting several pastors in the crowd to join him, the group kneels in the hotel banquet room. Then the former pastor leads the group in an apology for the way they have misused and misunderstood businessmen.
 
"There is no division between church and business, clergy and laity, ministers in church and ministers in business," he says. "In the name of Jesus, we release a new creativity, power, anointing, authority and dominion over you."
 
Later, the reaction from various members of the group is pronounced.
 
"I broke down and wept like a baby," says Ronny Svenhard, BMF's national president and CEO of a family-owned bakery in Oakland, California. "He articulated what's been in my gut ever since the Lord called me to a business vision, for us to use our business for the kingdom of God."
 
Such emotion doesn't surprise Marshall, who left the pulpit in 1999 to speak to businessmen about God. He has seen similar reactions in places as close as Nashville and as far away as Australia. It isn't just that businessmen need affirmation, he says, but that pastors need to understand the potential of the army within their grasp.
 
"We need to get pastors to walk in faith instead of fear," says the author of God@Work, godisworking.com. "Their fear is that if business people understand ministry outside the church, they'll leave. That's not true. They're going to want to be equipped.
 
"Number two, they're afraid that their money will stop coming in; if they somehow lose control over them, they'll stop getting their tithe. The reality is they'll probably get double or triple the amount of money they used to get."
 
Another mistake pastors make is expecting busy business leaders to set aside their responsibilities for "church work."
 
Marshall recalls meeting a wealthy real estate developer he met in the Philippines. The man ran a cell group for his church and faithfully attended other services--and was on the verge of burnout.
 
When Marshall warned the man's pastor that he was pushing the developer too hard, the developer and his wife burst into tears because the pastor was making so many demands on their time.
 
"They don't have time to spend hours [doing church work]," Marshall says. "They're busy already. Pastors shouldn't make it where they have to come to meetings. Just go get their input. When we make them fit our mold, we're chasing them out of the church."
 
Another key misunderstanding is the value of theological training as a prerequisite to serving God, says Ed Silvoso, founder of Harvest Evangelism.
 
The native of Argentina spent seven years as a hospital administrator and financier before entering ministry. Yet only recently did he discern that God's anointing was on him as a businessman, just as in evangelism. The problem today is that instead of equipping members to do the work of ministry, pastors try to do the work themselves, he says.
 
"A businessman isn't going to do the same things as a pastor," Silvoso says. "We need to equip the saints to do the work so every believer is a shepherd of a congregation of lost sheep."
 
The evangelist sees the story of Zacchaeus in Luke 19 as a key passage in understanding what was lost when Adam and Eve disobeyed God. Not only were human relationships fractured, the divine order in the workplace was disrupted by God cursing the ground, he explains.
 
Silvoso says that the marketplace needs to be restored according to the order of Luke 10, when Jesus sent out his disciples to spread the good news. First they had to bless the lost, fellowship with them and pray for miracles. Only then could they declare that the kingdom of God was near.
 
"But instead of blessing the lost, we curse them," says the author of Anointed for Business. "Instead of fellowshipping with them, we avoid them. Rather than pray for them to do well, we hope they go broke so they'll see they need God. Instead of following the pattern, we begin with preaching and get nowhere."
 
The good news is that this is about to change, according to Kent Humphreys, president of Fellowship of Companies for Christ International, and CEO of a company that manufactures medical testing kits.
 
In recent months, pastors have asked him for help in relating to and equipping business leaders--something they never learned in seminary. Ministers often make up 10 percent of the audience at his speaking engagements.
 
"The way we do church and reach the community is changing," says Humphreys, who has led people to Christ over lunch, in his office and at nursing homes. "It's not a new message. The church is just open to it."
By Ken Walker, a regular contributor to New Man.

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