Tag: Collaboration

  • Entrepreneuerial Christianity

    My wife, Gay, has become a quilter.  Shortly after arriving in Kentucky, she became involved with a group of women in a ministry of the Church called “Cross Quilts.”  They gather weekly in the home of a member and make quilts to give to veterans, homeless persons, and children who are Baptized at the Church of the Good Shepherd. Working together adds something to their mission.

    She told me about an experience she had recently while shopping for fabric for one of her quilts.  As she was walking through the fabric store, a young woman stopped her and asked for help in selecting some ribbon for a project she was working on. Gay was intrigued that this complete stranger would ask for her opinion and curious to see where this encounter might lead.  The young woman explained the project to Gay and they discussed the ways in which the ribbon would be used with different fabrics.  At some point, she made her decision, thanked Gay, and took the ribbon to the cashier.

    What fascinated me about this story is the openness to collaboration between these two women, who had never met before and will probably never meet again.  I’ve seen a lot of that since coming to Kentucky, such as the man I wrote about last week who helped me with my shopping cart.  I’ve seen a spirit of collaboration in the churches, in the communities, in circles of friends, and among complete strangers. 

    I don’t know if it is primarily a cultural phenomenon or if it’s in the water or the air we breathe here in the Bluegrass, but people here seem to value each other’s opinions and appreciate opportunities to work together toward some purpose. Perhaps that is why economists point out “entrepreneurial support” as an attractive economic feature of the Lexington area.  Entrepreneurs know the wonder of collaboration in bringing together assets in new ways to develop new things.

    There are parallels with the Christian mission.  From the beginning of Jesus’ ministry, he worked collaboratively with his disciples and others to open hearts and minds to the new thing God was bringing about.  He was critical of those who were locked into one way of doing things and who resistant to the fresh wind of the Holy Spirit. But to those who were willing to enter into a trusting relationship with him and each other the way to abundant life.

    In her sermon today, during a celebration of The Holy Eucharist at Christ Church Cathedral here in Lexington, Dean Carol Wade told us that she has established commissions to explore various aspects of the Cathedral’s life and witness.  I was fascinated to hear her say that one of those commissions is “The Entrepreneurs Commission.”  She described their role as “discovering resources for the increase of ministries.” What a great concept!  What an expression of a theology of abundance!

    God has provided all the resources we need to do what God is calling us to do.  Our job is to open our eyes to see God’s hand at work around us to discover those resources and employ them in new ways in the service of the Gospel. 

    At the top of the list of resources is people who share a love of Jesus Christ.  Christianity has been a collaborative and entrepreneurial enterprise from the beginning.  Despite tendencies of the culture to cast Christianity in terms of a private relationship between the believer and Jesus, authentic Christianity is always corporate and collaborative at the core.

    A good example is Matthew 18:19-20 where Jesus says, “Again, truly I tell you, if two of you agree on earth about anything you ask, it will be done for you by my Father in heaven. For where two or three are gathered in my name, I am there among them.” The Greek word for agree in this passage of scripture is συμφωνία, meaning "agreement or concord of sound", "concert of vocal or instrumental music", from σύμφωνος, "harmonious" (Oxford English Dictionary).  It is also the origin of the word symphony.

    Is it any wonder that Christians sing when we gather?  When we live and work collaboratively in Christ’s mission, we make beautiful music that expresses our life in Christ.

    Ron Short Sig Blue

  • Collaboration and Community

    When I started the car and the radio came on, an interview was already underway with the author of a recent book about the significance of civil discourse at every level of our lives. I was unable to get the name of the author or of his book.  However, in the course of the interview, he made this statement about the statutes, ordinances, policies, guidelines, and customs which govern us:  "These are the structures we have set in place to make it possible for us to collaborate."

    I'd like to add that followers of reveal religions like Judaism and Christianity believe some of those structures are God-given.  The Ten Commandments come to mind.  They are given to us as a revelation of God's desire for the children of God to live together in ways that advance God's vision for creation.

    Because human beings are by nature more or less suspicious of authority, if not defian of it, we tend to resist rules that are imposed upon us.  And, yet, the author's words remind us that we need such things to make it possible for us to work together toward common objectives and shared visions.  If our human structures for collaboration are ineffective, then we have structures to guide us through an orderly process of improving them.  We have been given higher order thinking ability to move us past our fears and mistrust into collaborative behaviors.

    Theologian and University President George Rupp wrote a book about community and commitment in which he points out that there is no life without community and no community without commitment.  God created us for community.  We have been placed in families, tribes, nations, societies, nations, and organizations.  Jesus' first act in his public ministry was to form a community when he called his disciples.  The call to follow Christ is always a call to life in community with others of his followers.  Continuation of community requies something of us.  We need each other!

    In our life together in the Church, the nation, or the global village, we accomplish more together than apart.  We live in an increasingly interdependent world.  At the same time, we are more aware of the differences that threaten us.  In light of that interdependence and diversity, perhaps effective collaboration is more critical now than at any point in human history.  Our world and our progress as God's children requires that we devote ourselves to working together in effective ways.

    The Baptismal Covenent in The Book of Common Prayer of The Episcopal Church contains two questions that invite us to commitment to civility, collaboration, and community:

    Will you seek and serve Christ in all persons, loving your neighbor as yourself?

    Will you strive for justice and peace among all people, and respect the dignity of every human being?

    Our answer to these questions is, "I will, with God's help."  Those of us who have given such an answer to these or similar questions are in the best possible position to become specialists in civil discourse and collaborative behavior in pursuit of our Creator's vision of healing and advancement of human life on "this fragile earth, our island home."  God help us do it!

      Ron Short Signature