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Loving the City - ICON 2018

Psalm 107 portrays the gathering of displaced people into a city as an ideal.  “. . . and they founded a city where they could settle (v. 37).”  Displaced people are described as “finding no way to a city where they could settle (v. 4b).”

Jakarta has become a global city where over ten million people have found their refuge. The Chinese are among those who have settled in Jakarta.  This mega city in South East Asia on the island of Java has the highest number of overseas Chinese in Indonesia. ICON 2018 was a conference to promote the values and practices of “Loving the City” for an audience made up mostly of young ethnic Chinese.  Several other people groups were among the audience, but the majority were definitely the Chinese and, if history told it all, the Chinese would not have a reason to love Jakarta.  The article on “Chinese Indonesians” in Wikipedia, documents a history of discrimination and persecution against this group.  And yet, over 100 young (average age, 27), Chinese Indonesian professionals gathered on a Saturday in July to receive instruction and encouragement to love Jakarta.  Why?

Many of these professionals came to a personal faith in Jesus Christ while studying abroad and now desire to live out that faith in and through their lives.  But they have a problem, or a potential, depending on which angle one approaches the issue.  Their positions in the business world allow them to implement changes of scale larger than mere personal transformation. The potential of influence would be a problem if the conference did not specifically address this unique angle.  But the organizers have been tracking the needs among this audience for the last four years with excellent, on-the-ground data. Resource Global was able to challenge the audience on their level, and at the right point for their next step.  In education a timely challenge, that is truly a next step in ability and willingness is called, the Zone of Proximal Development.  Debriefing with several participants made it evident to me that ICON hit the Zone.

A business owner at my table decided to make himself accountable.  Mr. Steve Preston, the keynote speaker, a business leader and a former US housing secretary, mentioned that businesses could become deliberate in changing a neighborhood. “Why not cooperate with other businesses and deliberately place your next venture where the economic situation is dismal?”  That is exactly what this business owner heard and inquired about after the speech. What would the dynamics be if he placed his next manufacturing/assembly business in an accessible place to a population that was a need?  He promised he would pray about it and investigate the actions necessary to make the love of Jesus tangible in a neighborhood.

After all, these young professionals have committed themselves, at least forty of them, to implement whatever they learn from the Scriptures in their family businesses and work places and in their personal lives.  Icon 2018 gave them specifics on scaling their influence to not “take out of the city, like many others, but to give to the city” (challenge from Alex Evans, the pastor at The Collective.)

The theme for next year will bring the focus back to personal ethics and issues of integrity.  The organizers of ICON know how to dance between the Sermon on the Mount issues (Matthew 5, ethics) and the parable of the good and faithful steward in Matthew 25 (stewardship).  Icon is making disciples in Jakarta who can and want to change how Jesus’ love would be experienced in healthcare, education, politics, architecture, and more in a city where many migrate to (over 50% of the population is not from Jakarta).  It is crowded now, but open spaces are coming!

Dr. Julius Wong Loi Sing - thoughts from ICON 2018

Struggles of Working in a Family Business

Working in a family business is like an irony. People would think that because it's our own family company, we have a lot of rooms to grow and move around and change things as we deem important. But truthfully, it's harder than it looks. Here are some of the struggles I've encountered:

1. Passing the baton

My father is a self-made man. His family came from nothing and being able to build his own entire company until having what we have now, is something he values so much. It’s his baby. Maybe it's even where he puts his identity in. So that being said, I felt there were a lot of difficulties for him on giving up control and authority. Company structure became messy and I wasn’t the only one who was having trouble positioning myself in the company. The employees were also confused on whom they had to report to, because the business was slowly being passed onto his kids.

But seeing from his point of view, he saw us as kids who weren’t ready to be passed on the family business. This create a lot of tension, because trust was now at stake. My father might have felt that as kids we will never be “man” enough to run the business, but we as kids, we wanted our chance to prove to our father that we were capable. But there was nothing that we could do except to wait (impatiently), until he felt that we were ready.

Sadly, when things at the company are bad and you just want to wind down at home and not talk about business anymore... you still have to sit at the dinner table with family and still discuss business, which makes it hard to separate business from personal feelings and family.

2. Bringing education to the workplace

I was blessed to have the opportunity to have my university education in America where I was exposed to Western ways of thinking and mentality. I took business as my major, so when I went back to Jakarta, I wanted to implement a lot of the same things in the company to make it more forward. But with the different culture and years of an immersed tradition within the company, it wasn’t so easy to penetrate it. It would take a lot of time to make our employees and employers understand why we would want to shift some of the ways we traditionally do it.

But all  that said, I have realized a few things: honest communication is very important, establishing boundaries and positioning ourselves in the company is also key, and taking things easily, or in other words, argue your arguments, but when it’s done, make sure it’s a clear and finalized before you leave it.

3. Depending on God

Finally, my foremost important takeaway from working in a family business is that it makes me understand more about having God as our center as the most important thing in my life. We can get caught up with work and businesses or talk about it neverendingly, which can make it our identity. But without God as our core foundation, we will be easily shift and forget what exactly is the entire purpose of work. Working in a family business requires a lot of patience, and when we try with our own strength, it will never sustain. But with His love, it’s not impossible.

All of these times, it never occured to me to put my faith and trust in Him within my workplace, gosh ..it never really crossed my mind to do so. Maybe because it was too far of a reach that even thinking about it was just ...off. But one thing that God revealed to me at my time at Resource Global was when He helped me understand that His heart is never pointed to only one part of our lives, but to all extended parts; and seeing people from different nations and cities having the same heart that wants to glorify God with their work was another proof that nothing is too big or too far reached for Him.

Velencia Bong, Jarakta Cohort Member 2018

Alternate Realities and Alternate Poverties

As a child, whenever I was approached by beggars on the streets of Shanghai, I recall pausing and reaching for my coin purse before my parents would pull me along and gently reprimand me: didn’t I know my money would just encourage their slothfulness, that if these people really tried they could find a real job? Their words did not sit well with me, not then or later as I repeatedly encountered homeless people in every city we visited or lived in. But then again, who was I to disobey my parents’ wishes, when I wasn’t even sure what difference my contribution would make?

Entering university and once again facing the glaring reality of homelessness in the world’s wealthiest economy, I sought to educate myself about an injustice that seemed beyond comprehension. In my community psychology class, I was surprised to learn that the primary driver of homelessness is not mental illness, addiction, or crime but simply the lack of affordable housing. In my daily devotionals, I was challenged by account after account in which Jesus chose to spend time with and care for the homeless, poor, diseased, and despised in first-century Jewish society. Around campus, I began to strike up conversations beyond the cursory “Hello, how are you?” with street paper vendors I saw regularly, curious to hear their stories and hoping to help meet some of their immediate needs.

It was during one of these conversations that I first befriended Stephen and Edie, over a year ago. A startling number of characteristics unite us. We work and live in Nashville, where Stephen and I are both students pursuing social science degrees at local universities. We are passionate about people and theology and social justice, and we love and worship the same God. When we are spending time together, exchanging stories, I can almost forget the barriers that separate us.

Yet, we live completely different realities. Each day, Stephen and Edie bravely bear the scars of having lost their home and their youngest daughter in the Nashville flood of 2010. Each day, as they earn their daily living dollar by dollar, they choose to bless and pray not only for the passersby who are kind to them, but also for the many who hurry on with blank expressions and averted eyes, or even hurl food and mockery in their faces. Each day, Stephen and Edie thank Jesus for His continuous mercies and daily provision. Is it not I who am spiritually poor, and they who God has sent to fill my poverty?

I have a long way to go before I can truly understand or empathize with the experiences of Stephen, Edie, and many worldwide who may suffer even more than they do. But I refuse to sit in inaction, paralyzed by the ambiguity of who and how best to help. With each life and alternate reality I choose to intertwine with mine— Stephen, Edie, and other homeless friends I have met, the street-smart African American first graders I tutor every Wednesday, my ex-students in Phnom Penh who still dearly hold my heart, those I hope to meet and share life with through PiA—I will learn to engage rather than to overlook, to love rather than fear, and to be a catalyst for radical compassion.

Felicia Hanitio

Jakarta Cohort, 2018

Heart Knowledge

Being biblically literate and memorizing verses is important, however when head knowledge becomes heart knowledge, that is when true life transformation happens.

Over the past few weeks I have been going through a book with my lifegroup (Young Adults Community Group) called Emotionally Healthy Spirituality by Peter Scazzero. Emotions are complicated, messy; life would be much easier if we could just get by our days by shutting away our emotions to get things done.

I have learned over the past weeks that God speaks through our emotions. When we shut down or bottle our emotions we miss out on the things that God is trying to say to us. God speaks through disappointments, sadness, happiness, anger, jealousy. The point is not that we should be guided by our emotions (because that would lead to horrible life decisions), but the point is to realize and reflect on why we feel the way we feel, and what are the things God is trying to reveal to us through these emotions. 

In moments we are disappointed or during situations that just make us burst in anger, we must analyze why we feel angry? Is it because we do not like losing control? Is it because we do not like being abandoned? Why do we react the way we do? Is it because of our family culture, the way we are brought up?


Understanding why we feel the emotions we feel and being able to correct ourselves to be emotionally healthy is an important part of spiritual growth.  

Living in a culture where we are taught to "save face" and bottle up emotions, this book was not easy to digest. I live in a culture where emotions of sadness, anger, disappointment, or even over the top happiness are seen as a sign of weakness and not appropriate to display in public. 

From a young age, I was taught to "know my place", and "accept" the way young people are treated based on culture and tradition. I push down emotions of frustration when being scolded and learned to numb emotions of disappointment. I noticed later on in life that these bottled emotions started to leak out in the form of passive aggressiveness and sarcasm. I begin to create emotional barriers in my relationships to prevent myself (my heart) from getting hurt. 

Understanding how family culture and ethnicity has built me to the person I am today and taking a step back in realizing the emotional baggage that has accumulated over the years has helped me uncover bad habits and emotional behaviors I have built up. I began to reflect on situations that would rise up that would cause me to be overly sensitive or give out overblown reactions, and made a decision to lay my insecurities and emotional baggage at the feet of Jesus. 

In response to Emotionally Healthy Spirituality,  I have decided to be more open vulnerable to a trusted group of friends about the emotions I feel. I can say it has not been easy but being able to sort through emotion and respond in a healthy manner has been a challenging yet liberating experience. 

It is a liberating realization to know that I am not bound by my past or my emotional responses built by my culture. God's love gives me the power to break these unhealthy emotional habits and embrace God's family culture.

We tend to belittle emotions and see them as signs of weakness but when we bring those weaknesses before God, He can turn our greatness weakness into our greatest asset to serve others and bring glory to Him

Grace Liu

Global City Director, Jakarta

Loving Your City

When you think about creation and God's original intent for mankind, what do you envision? Does your mind immediately fill with images of wide open spaces filled with beautiful creatures living in perfect harmony and free from the busyness, noise, and clutter that comes with urban living? It is easy to think of the Garden of Eden as the ideal dwelling place, but it is just as easy to forget that God's original mandate to man was to "be fruitful and increase in number; fill the earth and subdue it." In fact, as we look at Scripture, the Bible gives a very positive view of urban areas and even gives us a glimpse of the eternal future of all believers:  the Holy City, the new Jerusalem.

Cities have a dual nature:  the capacity for great good if they are God-exalting, or the capacity for tremendous evil if they are man-exalting. A God-exalting culture brings glory to God's name and is a means of serving God and neighbor, but a man-exalting culture results when something is done with the motivation of self-recognition. As we look back over mankind's history as it unfolds through Scripture's narrative, we see how this dual nature has played out in cities like Babel, Nineveh, Babylon, and the Roman Empire. Interestingly, the city is also a glimpse into God's redemptive story and one which should give us encouragement to love our city and to be excited about its tremendous potential as a mission field.

The city of Babel is an excellent example of what can happen when the potential good of a city is perverted. The inhabitants—who the Bible describes as resourceful, ambitious, driven, and hardworking...all good things—set out to build a city and a tower. But instead of using their talents to bring glory to God, the people sought to make a name for themselves and to avoid being scattered over the face of the earth. Their actions were in direct opposition to God's command to Noah and his sons that they "be fruitful and increase in number and fill the earth." Their hearts were filled with pride, and their actions brought about God's judgment. As we read the Bible's account of the city of Babel, we are reminded that God will not let evil go unpunished; but we can also be encouraged that there is hope for our cities. When we recognize how the potential for good in our city has been perverted, we have the opportunity to step in and bring God's light to very dark places.

Nineveh, like Babel, was a city filled with people with evil intentions. In fact, Nineveh had built up quite a bad reputation among its neighbors. As we read the Bible's account, we are even told that Nineveh's evil had come up before God. But instead of intervening the way He did at Babel, or bringing swift destruction as He did with Sodom and Gomorrah, God gave the Ninevites a forty-day warning. It can be easy to look at the evil that is being done in our cities and wonder why God does not step in and act, but we forget that "our Lord's patience means salvation." The people of Nineveh believed God's message through the prophet Jonah and repented. They turned from their wicked ways, and God showed the city mercy. Throughout Israel's history, prophets had been raised up and sent to preach to God's people to call them to repentance, but Jonah was the first prophet sent to a pagan city. Jonah and Nineveh are a new phase in the unfolding story of God's redemptive mission. No matter how evil a city is, God wants everyone to have the opportunity to repent, which is why he is so patient with us.

As believers, we know that this place is not our home. I 1 Peter 2:11 Peter writes that “we are like aliens in a foreign land, eagerly awaiting our return to our heavenly dwelling.” But just as God told the Israelites through the prophet Jeremiah that they were to settle down and invest in the good of Babylon during their time as exiles, we too are to be contributors, not just consumers, in our places of residence. Hananiah, the false prophet, dishonestly prophesied that God would bring the Jewish nation back to Jerusalem within two years of being exiled in Babylon. Instead, the exile lasted seventy years. If the people had believed Hananiah, they would have remained disengaged in their new city, waiting day after day for God's imminent deliverance. But through Jeremiah, God reminded the people that He was the one who had placed them in Babylon, that this was His plan, and that He wanted them to pray for the city and seek its peace and prosperity, promising that if the city prospered, the Israelites too would prosper (Jeremiah 29:7). In the same way, we as believers may long for heaven, but we should not put our lives on hold simply because we prefer to be somewhere else. Instead, we must recognize that God has placed us in our city for a reason; it is His plan, and we are to make the most of our time here.

Have you ever considered why the early church grew so quickly and the gospel message spread so rapidly throughout the province of Asia? The believers' strategy was to evangelize the cities. Acts 17, 18, and 19 tell us that Paul made it a point to travel to Athens, the intellectual center of the Greco-Roman world, Corinth, the commercial center of the empire, and Ephesus, Rome's religious center. At the end of the book of Acts, Paul makes it to the empire's capital, Rome, the military and political center. Major cities are the unavoidable crossroads of societies and the place from which culture is influenced and ideas flow. As we consider our evangelism strategy, it should give us great encouragement as we think about the potential our cities have to reach entire nations!

From the time of David onward, the prophets spoke of a perfect urban society that was yet to come. We are told that the city of God, the new Jerusalem, will be "the joy of the whole earth." The Bible's narrative recounts the great spiritual conflict throughout history of the struggle between a society that is created for self-salvation, self-service, and self-glorification versus a society that is devoted to God's glory. This future city will be the culmination of that history. The new Jerusalem is the reason for our hope and why we strive to share the Good News with people. Our cities are temporary; God's city is eternal.

The final goal of Christ's redemptive work is not to return believers to a rural, Edenic world. From God's command in Genesis that man "be fruitful and increase in number; fill the earth and subdue it," to the new Jerusalem as described in Revelation, it is clear that God's intention for mankind is that we raise up cities that glorify him and be good stewards of the resources He has entrusted to us. Our work in our cities is vitally important, and we can take great comfort, just as the Israelites in exile did, that God, himself, has placed us here and that He has a plan.

It is a good thing for us to love our cities and it is a good thing for us to seek the wellbeing of our cities. God's heart longs for their repentance and redemption. Shouldn't ours?

Tommy Lee

Meet Julia Tan

Resource Global is an organization I started nine years ago to take the vision God had given me to take the Gospel to the ends of the Earth. Resource Global is committed to resourcing and releasing the next generation of Christian leaders and professionals within an interconnected network for Gospel movements in major global cities.

One of the people I have gotten to meet and who has been part of our cohorts has been Julia Tan.  Julia is an extremely bright and talented individual.  She is one of the future leaders in that city.  Julia is the Head of Corporate Development and HR at Liputan Group in Jakarta and the Head of Project at DoctorShare and will be speaking at our annual Icon Conference in Jakarta this year.  

I want to share two videos with you:

Called to Work

Called to Work

"Marketplace leaders." We hear this term often, but you may be wondering, what does it mean and why are nonprofits suddenly jumping to help these people?

I recently had a conversation with someone at church. He told me, "I feel really guilty when I'm at work. I feel like if I'm obedient to God, I should quit my job and either go into full-time ministry or go into missions." It was an interesting thought, and one that left me wondering why he could not be obedient to God in his work. What this individual did not recognize, and what many people fail to realize, is that he put his faith in a box by believing that serving God is limited to church work.

"What is it that God has gifted you in?" I asked him, adding, "God has gifted you with different passions, just like he has gifted the designer with certain skills and passions, or a banker or an accountant." It was important for me to help him understand and see that his career was, in fact, bringing glory to God and enhancing the Gospel. I encouraged him to identify the characteristics that have led him to excel in his current work and consider how they might be used by God in other capacities. "What do you like about your job?" I asked him. "What are the things you are doing at work that you just love, where time flies by and you enjoy every moment of it?" This, I told him, could be God slowly showing him what He has created him to be. I then took it a step further: "How do you begin to use those skills and those passions and what he has given you to not only serve your work and make your work and your city better, but use those skills to also serve the church, your family, and all of this?"

Looking into the Old and New Testaments, we are reminded that the life stories God writes for us are tied to the unique abilities we have been given. Zacchaeus was a tax collector. He interacted with Jesus, and stayed a tax collector. What changed was how he used his gifting. A self-serving attitude shifted to a desire to serve the poor.

Nehemiah was a cupbearer to the king; he was a government official. When he received news that the walls of Jerusalem were down, he took leave to use his skills to organize his people to rebuild the wall. When the task was done, he returned to his responsibilities in the palace. The interesting thing to note is that Nehemiah would not have been able to do what he did if he was not a government official.

Peter was a fisherman.

Daniel and Joseph both worked in the government. The list goes on.

Marketplace leaders are Christian business professionals.

"How can we mobilize these individuals towards ministry in the marketplace?" is a question that is inspiring nonprofit organizations around the world to not just support the spiritual growth of young global leaders, but to encourage them to pursue marketplace careers that create opportunities for evangelism and discipleship in secular fields.

A marketplace leader is born out of an individual actively seeking to discover and pursue their God-given purpose.

In a recent radio interview I did with Dr. Michael Easley, my former boss and the former President of Moody Bible Institute, he said to me, "I'm one of these outliers that doesn't believe in a specific call from God." This view can, and does, upset some people. "I didn't have some experience, or some, you know, intervention, or some, 'Boy, I think God wants me to be a pastor.'"  Instead, Dr. Easley points to our innate, God-given wiring as an indicator for what we are created to do. "I do think we have gifts, calling, abilities, talents, interests, passions, wiring, and when you put all that together and you have a sense of 'I was made to do X,'...I think we need to pay attention to those basic things." Dr. Easley has reminded me time and again, "Tommy, just do the next thing and the next thing."

Careful personal consideration and insight from other people are valuable tools. Sometimes we want something so much that we confuse God's calling with our own desires. I think we have all been there. We have to continually ask ourselves, is it His will, or did I just convince myself that this is God's will for me because I want it so much for myself?

This even happens to people who know they are called into full-time ministry. Take Pastor Mark Jobe's story as an example. Pastor Mark is the Senior Pastor of New Life Community Church in Chicago. When Mark was 21 years old, attending Moody Bible Institute in Chicago in 1986, he received an invitation from God that he knew he could not turn down. "A pastor had planted a seed in my heart," Mark explained to me during an UpNext radio interview. "He said, 'Mark, you know, the nations have come to the city. If we can reach the cities, we can reach the nations.'" Mark was not crazy about Chicago and longed to return to his family in Northern Spain, but God challenged him during a personal prayer time, saying, "I love people. I love the city. Would you love the city?" God softened his heart, and soon Mark began to see the people of Chicago as individuals that God loved. He accepted a call to pastor a small church of 18 people. Now, thirty years later, he is the lead and founding pastor of New Life Community Church, and his congregation has planted 24 other churches with over 40 services in multiple languages. Today Mark says, "I see a city that Jesus loves, that has tremendous potential to be a turnaround city that shows the whole world that there is a powerful God at work in Chicago."

Marketplace leaders have the potential to change the world, too.

If God has called you to serve in the marketplace, he has bestowed upon you a great honor. Almost all non-Christian Americans are in the marketplace. This is not to say that they are unreached with the Gospel, but instead have access to churches and Christians, yet are still living in darkness. As Theology of Business (www.theologyofbusiness.com) describes it, "The local church is like the showroom for Christianity. The marketplace is the test drive." Consider your daily life and how you react under pressure, how you treat your neighbors, coworkers, family, and friends, because the people around you are watching.

If you are in the marketplace, or considering entering the marketplace, because you have considered your "gifts, calling, abilities, talents, interests, passions, and wiring" and found that that is where God wants you, then I want to assure you that you have no reason to feel guilty like the individual I talked to at my church for not being in full-time ministry. As Theology of Business so aptly puts it, "The marketplace is where our unbelieving co-workers get to see if they really want what we have."

Tommy Lee

How God Shows Up in our Work

by Steven Preston

Over 35 years in the workforce, I have had a number of professional roles as a banker, a corporate executive, and a government leader.  As a result, I have been confronted many times with the question of where I see God in my work. I think most Christians would agree that we must see our work as being within the realm of God’s purpose for and hand in our lives.  We have to see him in the every day and the entirety of our lives, and our work often takes up the majority of that. For me, I have seen God work in three primary ways.

First, I have had the joy of working in roles where the actual doing of the work has brought me joy.  Early in my career as a banker and later as a CFO, I found that working in the financial markets, leading the financial operations of major companies and understanding how financial value is created in a firm fed my intellectual interests and allowed me to contribute meaningfully to the organizations I was serving.  Later, as I moved into roles where I led organizations, I was able to engage a much broader set of skills, which involved bringing together a leadership team to develop a vision for those we served, designing and implementing initiatives to achieve that vision, and motivating a broader workforce as we sought to enlist them in the process.  In that knowledge, I am reminded of the quote from the Olympic runner Eric Liddell, from Chariots of Fire, “God made me fast.  And when I run, I feel his pleasure.”

Second, in those roles, I have continually seen the importance of our stewardship in God’s created world.  God can use us to infuse the workplace with inspiring and principled leadership, an atmosphere of dignity and respect, and an expectation for ethical decision making.  I have had a front row seat to a number of major crises that were enabled by deep moral failures. I was a junior banker during the insider trading scandals of the mid 1980’s, a CFO during the Enron and Worldcom accounting blowups, and the HUD secretary during the housing crisis.  All were, in large part, the product of deep ethical breaches across the system. Alternatively, I have seen how principled leadership can turn crises into victories, a dejected workforce into one that is inspired and thriving, and a confused organization into a mission-focused juggernaut.  And in that process, operating openly as a Christian shows others the source for the ethos we bring to the workplace. Each of us, in our own role, has the ability to bless others in unique ways by being the voice and hand of God.

Finally, in my case, the workplace has been God’s venue for doing his deepest work on me.  As many of us have experienced, our greatest gifts can often line up with our greatest challenges. Competitive achievers face frustration when projects don’t progress quickly enough. Charismatic communicators struggle in the absence of adulation.  Perfectionists become dejected when they miss the mark. And those preoccupied with success and image can play it safe and lack courage. Over many years, it has been in the workplace that God has brought me to a place of greater boldness in leading, openness in learning, patience in achieving and caring in shepherding.  

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Why God Always Starts Small

WHY GOD ALWAYS STARTS SMALL

Andy Crouch

Maybe Chicago natives get used to it, but I’m always a bit awestruck whenever I’m in Chicago—a city of gloriously monumental scale, set on the edge of a vast lake, its lights stretching out for miles in a grid that reaches almost to the horizon.

Human beings—at least modern, American human beings—like things big. Resource Global’s annual partner meeting in 2015 took place at the impressive U.S. Cellular Field, home of the Chicago White Sox—a ballpark so huge, Cubs fans will be quick to note, it wasn’t even full during that team’s World Series–winning season. There was an undeniable sense of awe as we walked in through the gates and looked up at the towering walls that surround the baseball diamond.

But there’s a funny thing about our human love of big things. God, at least according to the Bible, doesn’t seem to share it. At least not at first.

The story of the Bible begins with two—just two—human beings made in God’s image. When their descendants finally achieve what the business world calls “scale” and seek to build a tower with its top in the heavens—sounds a lot like a skyscraper!—God confounds their speech and scatters them (Gen. 11), and his very next move is to start a worldwide redemptive project with a single couple who are too old for children (Gen. 12).

God promises that couple that their descendants will be as numerous as the stars in the sky (Gen. 15), but when he leads the people of Israel out of the empire of Egypt, they are a tiny, beleaguered band of ex-slaves whom even God describes as “the smallest of the nations” (Deut. 7). When, after decades of wandering and conflict, they are settled in the Promised Land, they are a speck on the map of the Ancient Near East, subject to predatory empires in every direction—Assyria, Babylon, Greece, and eventually Rome.

And then when God mounts the ultimate rescue operation for his own chosen people and his whole sin-infested cosmos, the Anointed One begins life as a baby and then grows up to wander around by foot with a dozen apostles, plus two sisters and a brother (Mary, Martha, and Lazarus) who seem to be his dearest friends. Even after the astonishing turnaround of his resurrection, ascension, and the gift of his Spirit, with several thousand coming to faith in one day, the church is so marginal that it doesn’t even figure in the reports of Roman bureaucrats until the end of the first century.

God just doesn’t seem to have a problem with starting small.

And the more I’ve thought about this, the more I think that the reason God doesn’t mind starting small is that small is the only way to start—if what you are seeking is truly transformational creativity.

In a world that dreams of making it big, there’s something enduringly important about very small groups of people.

Consider the baseball teams that play at U.S. Cellular Field. At any given time, there are only nine men on the field playing defense, one to four players for the offense (plus two coaches), with another couple dozen in each dugout. There may be 30,000 fans watching the game—but only a handful of people are playing it.

And this is how it must be, with baseball and every other sport. Imagine a 20-person baseball team. It’s just barely possible to conceive (though if outfielders tend to run into one another now, imagine if there were twice as many!). But a 100-person baseball team is inconceivable. A one-thousand-person baseball team? Laughable. The only way to play baseball is with an absolutely smallgroup of people.

Only absolutely small groups can sustain coordinated diverse action—where each individual plays a different part, but the parts combine harmoniously in a single whole. And coordinated diverse action is the most fruitful kind of human action—the kind that commands the most respect and has the deepest power to bring change.

Human beings are in fact astonishingly diverse. From our genetic makeup, to our personal histories, to our cultural heritages, we are inescapably individuals—even identical twins, who share the same exact DNA, express that DNA in subtly or significantly different ways. At the same time, we are made for coordinated action—individuals can accomplish very little on their own. Only absolutely small groups allow both of these qualities to be expressed to their fullest—on the one hand, the flawless coordination of a major league double play, and on the other hand, the unique assignment of roles, from shortstop to right fielder, that perfectly match each individual’s gifts.

Of course, you can coordinate action on a far larger scale than a baseball team. Roughly 156,000 Allied troops landed on the shores on Normandy on D-Day, 6 June 1944, with millions more supporting them. But such massive coordinated operations inevitably require uniformity from their participants—and, in the case of military operations, literal uniforms. And that uniformity requires, to a greater or lesser extent, ignoring, suppressing, or sacrificing the individual uniqueness of those participants. Men and women in such coordinated uniform action must sacrifice their full identity, and sometimes their lives, to such operations—and their greatest and most distinctive gifts therefore are neglected or underutilized.

Every empire dreams of massive, large-scale, coordinated uniform action. And throughout history various empires have achieved extraordinary scale—not just military empires like Rome, the World War II Axis and Allied powers, and the United States and China today, but also commercial empires like McDonald’s and Walmart. But such action is never, strictly speaking, creative action. To engage in significant creativity requires tapping into the deepest capacities of human beings. Only coordinated diverse action can do that.

You could put it this way: empires dream of social machines, with countless human beings playing rigidly assigned and repetitive parts—but God has a different dream. The divine Trinity, after all, is an absolutely small group in which each person plays a distinct part, none reducible to another; and yet God acts in perfect harmony. God’s dream is not a machine but a family, reflected in the revelation of the Trinity as Father, Son, and Spirit. Somehow families can accomplish things that even armies and corporations cannot.

If you really care about cultural transformation, you’ll start small, with a group of people who can know and trust one another deeply. To be sure, such transformation can’t stay small if it’s going to have wide effects. But at the beginning, when the most extraordinary creative work is done, the number of people in the room is always small so that each one can contribute their absolutely greatest capacities in an environment of maximum trust.

This makes the case, it seems to me, for a particularly risky and particularly fruitful kind of investment, the kind that Resource Global specializes in: coming alongside teams of innovators who are still small enough to be able to be deeply creative, and helping them build the systems, skills, and organizational culture that will allow their vision to grow.

It’s easy to invest in efforts that have already reached a reliable level of scale—but it’s also less rewarding. As exciting as a crowd of 45,000 baseball fans can be, their cultural capacity is oddly limited. About the most complex thing you can get them to do together is “the wave.”

But nine people on a field, on a good night, intensively disciplined, intimately familiar with each other’s every movement and thought, committed to one another and the game? That’s something worth celebrating—and worth investing in. And God’s relentless commitment to the small, local, and family-like, at every turn of redemptive history, suggests that efforts that start small can end up transforming the world.

Exploratory Trip- Nairobi

Bridge Building in Nairobi

by Tommy Lee

It has been one year since I last arrived to Nairobi with some co-workers. Now, since battling cancer and getting my feet back under me, this second trip allowed Resource Global to continue learning about the local environment and also focus on the establishment of a cohort in Kenya.  

Over the course of five days, we had over 13 meetings with our future partners, friends, and key leaders, pastors and business leaders in Nairobi. I wanted to take some time and highlight some of our conversations.

We met an old friend, Joshua Wathanga, who is the chairman and founder of the Hesabika Network, which is a catalyst for a value-driven socio-economic transformation of Kenya. More info here: http://www.hesabika.com/. Joshua will serve as our first Chairman of the Board in Nairobi and Resource Global will also be under the Hesabika Network because of their credibility and network in Kenya. We are excited to have Joshua be a part of our team as his experience and reputation provides our work with credibility and opened doors for us that otherwise would not have been opened.  He has experience in the ministry, the marketplace, and the political world. 

Along with Joshua Wathanga, during the week we met with Pastor Calisto Odede of Nairobi Baptist Church, Pastor Oscar Muriu of Nairobi Chapel, and Pastor Erastus Weru, Missions Pastor and Church Planter for Nairobi Baptist. Many people we met with were impressed that we had Joshua, Calisto, and Oscar involved in what we were doing. Both Pastor Oscar and Calisto have committed to helping promote, recommend, and support the work of the cohorts in Nairobi.  It is imperative to have them involved because pastors play a huge role in the success of the ministry in Nairobi.  We are thankful for favor with these two men who now have become dear friends.   

Along with ministry leaders, we met with other business leaders like Reuben Coulter, Director of the Business Transformational Network in Africa and Sunru Yong and his wife Anne. Sunru is a friend from college and is the current COO of Mobius Motors, a new start up car manufacturing company that produces cars strictly for the tough terrain of Africa.  

During the week, we also had the opportunity to visit some of the slums of Nairobi called Kibera. This is definitely a tough site to see, but we hope that as we start a cohort in Nairobi that our cohorts will be able to visit these slums because many Kenyans do not choose to go into them.

Overall it was a great trip and we are looking to partner with Hesabika and start our first cohort in Nairobi in 2019.  

 

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Mission Trips of a Different Kind: Diving Into the World’s Financial Districts

By Tommy Lee

Thinking about mission trips to impoverished countries as about only reaching the poor is a thing of the past, says Resource Global visionary and leader Tommy Lee.

The reality is that many of these same countries where Christians went out in multitudes to share the gospel in distant villages and outposts, now have economically thriving financial districts inside cosmopolitan cities.

“The whole idea behind Resource Global is that the world is different. We used to think that missions was just about sending missionaries to all these islands, the bush, and third-world countries where they don’t know anything about Christ,” Tommy said. “Now, the cities are booming, the economies are booming, and their young people are well-educated, college grads, wealthier than you and I, and have dreams to really make a difference in the city.”

The question now becomes: “How do you equip young Christian marketplace leaders to not only grow their existing enterprises for their city but to understand the greater world of global missions and supporting initiatives around the world?”

Because of this shifting paradigm, an important focus for Resource Global is to identify young marketplace leaders, who are post-college to early 30’s living and working in different global cities. “We come alongside them to help them really understand their journey and what their presence in their city means,” Tommy said.

Resource Global was started in 2010 after the Lausanne Global Congress in South Africa. After the Congress was over, the question was asked – How do we invest in these leaders who are making a difference for the Kingdom in their respective countries, cities, and also communities?

In the first five years of the organization, the staff and volunteers of Resource Global worked primarily with ministry and non profit leaders to engage their cities. Resource Global worked on projects in a number of global cities and also in various parts of the US. Countries included Ghana, South Africa, Egypt, Peru, China, and more.

Tommy said that the idea of establishing cohorts, such as in Jakarta, came when he felt the need to shift away from focusing on ministries and invest in these young marketplace leaders in key urban cities around the world. Many of these young leaders had studied in the West, Oxford, or other cities outside of their own and now were returning home to work. “Globalization was creating a different type of person, one that is unlike anyone we have seen before.” They are seeing things different, with a different set of lenses. “What does it mean if these people continue to renew their city as we continue to invest in them?”

Cohorts are started when a decision is made to “journey together for eight months to really be able to learn some practical, theological ideas, and also reflect and understand God’s journey and story for their lives.” The long term vision is to build a global network where like minded leaders from different cities are learning from one another. Technology has allowed us to do this easily now.

Tommy adds, “So, we will spend some time looking at Scripture, but a lot of it is looking at what their story is and how God is moving and shaping them. We also look at the topics of faith and work as well as their strengths and passions while tackling what it looks like to address the problems in their city.

“The key then becomes for us to connect them with the other cohorts. So, we have a cohort in Chicago, we will have one in Nairobi, and Singapore. Now, with the world being smaller, how can a person in Jakarta connect with a person in Nairobi and learn from each other?”

Resource Global focuses on developing local leaders and teachers.

“These cohorts are a pipeline for developing local leaders and teachers,” Tommy said. “Now, this first cohort (Jakarta) is helping us to oversee a conference, they are now going to be some of our future breakout teachers and We’re teaching them how to break down scripture and speak according to scripture and develop talks around scripture.”

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Our Life As A Living Sacrifice

by Tommy Lee

I love what Paul writes in Romans 12:1-2. “I appeal to you therefore, brothers, by the mercies of God, to present your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God, which is your spiritual worship. Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewal of your mind, that by testing you may discern what is the will of God, what is good and acceptable and perfect.” (ESV)  Romans 12 verses 1 and 2 is a turning point in the Epistles of Romans.  Paul has now spent eleven chapters in Romans laying out the fundamentals of the Christian faith and theology.  And now from Chapter 12 onward it's application time.  Paul begins the verses with the word "Therefore."   “Therefore” is a preposition and is the connector between what he is teaching in Chapter 1 - 11 and from Chapter 12 to the end of the book of Romans. 

Because of what Paul has laid out in the first twelve chapters in Romans he is encouraging and challenging us to present our bodies as a living sacrifice.  It's as if Paul is coming along us as a brother or as a friend, putting his arm around us, and encouraging us to present our whole bodies or lives as a result of everything God has done for us.  It's our part now.  We have a role in it.  Notice the word “present” in the ESV translation. “Present” is an action verb.  It’s something we do.  It’s a choice that we have to make.  The term “living sacrifice” is understood in that culture because of the sacrifices that the Israelites had to make each year as an offering to God.  Therefore the believer needs to present his body or entire life as a sacrifice. The conditions are that our sacrifice is holy and acceptable to God much like a sacrifice made at that time had to be without blemish and imperfections.  This concept of presenting our whole life is worship in itself.  

"Holy and acceptable" is key to understand here because as believers our life is not ours anymore.  It belongs to God and as we come before the Cross the decisions that we make in life have to be in line with what God finds as acceptable.  This is laid out in the pages of Scripture.  As believers we cannot make decisions that benefit us but rather what the Lord calls us to do.  That is one of the marks of a believer.  It is not that we are perfect but we are striving ourselves to grow in our understanding of what is acceptable to God and improve in those areas.  I love what Ephesians 2:8-9 tells us to do.  Ephesians 2:8 tells us that it is by grace we have been saved and it is not by ourselves.  What is the result of that grace?  We are therefore His workmanship created in Him to do good works.  How can we become more like Christ as we continue to work and journey with Him? Is our life and our bodies "holy and acceptable to God?" 

Gifts in God's Hands

by Steve Preston

Most people who have risen through the leadership ranks have been through skills assessments, 360 reviews, and personality profiles enroute to developing as more capable leaders. I recall going through one such assessment which was designed to generate a profile of my strengths. The idea of this particular approach was that we should play to our strengths, because understanding them would help us leverage them more powerfully. 

I was encouraged when I received my report. My strengths were firmly rooted in the type-A power zone and included achievement, strategy, commitment to beliefs, self-confidence and accountability. People who have led large, multifaceted organizations, driven complex transformations, and put big results in front of their boards have similar profiles. But the results of my review came with a troubling caveat — ‘strengths’ that were out of balance had a downside to them. Being an outsized ‘achiever’ can lead to a lack of balance, over commitment and burn out. Being overly self-confident can lead to arrogance and an inability to listen to others. We often hear people lament the separation of their faith world and their work world. This is the prime example of that separation. When the dark side of our ‘strengths’ show up, it is an indication that these gifts from God have not been brought into the realm of our faith. We are managing them, rather than submitting them to God.

One of the most powerful examples of God’s ability to use our gifts is in I Samuel. The two books of Samuel are packed with intrigue, power struggles, historical relevance, and God’s remarkable intervention, with the prophet Samuel as the lynchpin in dispatching God’s purposes. In the course of his lifetime, Samuel would speak God’s words to Israel, establishing and then rebuking its first king, Saul, and then anointing David, whose kingdom and lineage would prefigure the Messiah. It’s easy to forget that all of this excitement started with the simple story of a barren woman giving a gift back to God.

For years, Hannah had longed deeply for a child, and had suffered ridicule and shame because of her infertility. Children were a mark of God’s blessing, a guarantor of social acceptance, and a safety net for the future, and without a son, Hannah had none of these. Over time and through her pain, both Hannah’s view of God and her view of a child changed. She realized that God was the provider of the gift, i.e. the child. She no longer saw the child as something to build her life around. Rather, she needed to build her life around God’s purposes, and the child she so desperately longed for needed to be part of those purposes. She promised God that if he gave her a child, she would “give him back to the Lord for all the days of his life.” (I Samuel 1: 11b)

Outside of God’s hands, the child’s future was limited. However, having surrendered her desires to God, Hannah knew that her child ultimately belonged to God and he could do immeasurably more with the child than she could. That child was Samuel.

Hannah’s committing God’s gift back to him is a metaphor for our need to give the leadership gifts he gives us back to him. In God’s hands, our creativity, our strategic skills, our ability to inspire, and our leadership tenacity will bless people within and outside of our businesses in ways that are honoring to him and further his kingdom.  In God’s hands, they serve his eternal purpose, which is greater than anything we can understand or imagine. A stuttering Moses leads a nation, an imprisoned Joseph saves his people, a fearful Peter establishes God’s church.

Eden Chen: Resource Global On Mission To Lead Business Leaders In ‘Massive Cities’

Interview with Eden Chen

Resource Global is in perfect position to lead a movement of business leaders who successfully live out their faith in Jesus at the workplace in major metropolises, said board member Eden Chen recently.

“There are some great programs out there that are training young Christians to see the importance of work and how that applies to their faith,” Chen said. “But I think Resource Global is unique in that it has this international mission of reaching people in these massive cities outside of the U.S., like Nairobi, Jakarta, and Shanghai.”

Chen, who was named to the Forbes 30 Under 30 list earlier this year, is the co-founder of Fishermen Labs based in Los Angeles. His company specializes in app and website development, virtual reality and augmented reality for brands and startups. The company’s clients include Sony, United Nations, HTC, Qualcomm, Quintiles, NFL and NBC. Chen also founded Knife and Fox, a design studio for brands and startups.

When asked about the reason he joined Resource Global, Chen said, “I originally first joined Resource Global because of my friendship with Tommy Lee (founder) which is probably consistent with a lot of people. I really love Tommy’s heart and the way that he values friendship and people so much, and loves the Lord.

“Secondly, I felt that, at least in my industry and different industries that I’ve been in that there’s always been a lack of Christians that have been interacting in the secular working world,” he explained. “I just don’t interact with that many Christians in this space.”

Chen said he believes that Christians, in general, have “exited the conversation” when it comes to engaging about their faith.

“In my parent’s generation there were lots and lots of Christian business leaders and I think either business caused them to be more lukewarm or maybe the next generation lost their faith,” he said. “There’s something to be said about money and the poisonous effect of it. There is also something to be said about Christians sort of trying to get away from popular society and trying to move to the suburbs and get away from where lots of commerce exists. I think that’s led to a sort of loss of interaction with the business world.

“I love organizations like Resource Global because they are trying to get people back into that ecosystem.”

Chen, 30, wanted to be a youth pastor when he was in college, but through an internship became interested in business and finance. “I did some business financing and found that there were (seemingly) no Christians. There were two Christians out of 150 people in my internship class, “ he said. “That’s when I realized that this is like a complete unreached people group that no one will ever get into and these people are going to make a huge impact and nobody is going to tell them about Jesus.

He said that as sort of a backlash to a generation of Christians that may have talked more overtly about their faith, but perhaps less in the way of biblical action, his generation is “one that is afraid to speak up about their faith, so a lot of times, people don’t even know they are Christian because they are too afraid to even bring it up.”

“What I try to do is to set-up like sort of ‘landmines’,” said Chen, referring to placing mental triggers that spark conversation in people that he meets through his work.

“Fishermen Labs, for example. A lot of people ask, ‘Why do you guys call yourselves Fishermen Labs?’ That’s an automatic opportunity to talk about our faith,” he explained. “I can answer that my business partner and I met at church. We feel like fishermen … the early church was the most influential group ever to exist and they were just a bunch of fishermen who didn’t have a lot of skills. If you just look historically, these 12 people were the most impactful people.”

Such a conversation is very powerful and influential, he said.

He added, “If you don’t have the landmines, I think no one is ever going to bring up the fact that you’re a Christian. It’s not like in the normal course of business, when I’m working on an app, [that] someone is going to ask, ‘Are you a Christian?’ I mean these little blocks that give me the opportunity to talk about faith.

“Ultimately, most Christians and most people on this earth spend most of their waking hours working, whether it’s a job that you like or don’t like, whether you are working 40 hours a week or 80 hours a week, it’s still a large majority of our waking hours. So, we have to have a theology of work because that’s where we are interacting with people.

“So, having a strong basis of justifying why we do what we do and what we are doing is hugely important. If we teach the right things and have the right mentorship that could cause massive change to happen.”

Resource Global has the chance to connect global cities, bring good training and good mentorship to these global cities and spark movements that get business leaders and aspiring business leaders to help and mentor other, he said.

“We’re increasingly living in a globalized, non-Western, post-Christian time,” Chen said. “So you do have these massive revivals that are going on in Africa and China, and yet, it’s very clear that there are theological deficiencies. Christians are trying to get more theological training into Africa and China. What’s not thought about as much are these accountability deficiencies outside the U.S. and the lack of theological training around work, and how work relates to someone’s faith.

“The movement in the U.S., talking about work and faith has only been in the last five years. At least, growing up, I didn’t feel like that was really talked about or that much. We’re just talking about it now.”

Interview by Alex Murashko

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Interview with Andrew Jun - Part 2

Tommy: I still remember when I was in Jakarta last and you actually did a whole sermon series for multiple weeks on depression, mental illness, homosexuality. What are some of those taboo topics that you spoke about that are taboo to life in Jakarta?

Andrew: Yeah we called the sermon, “You Can’t Talk About That.  In the US it’s the same as those are a little bit of taboo issues to talk about, but especially in Indonesian culture those things are not going to be addressed over the pulpit nor are they really talked about even among family members and things like that. So you have a bunch of people, a generation, that’s really kind of at a loss on how to deal with those things. And so most of their influence in learning about topics like same sex attraction and depression and politics are really just from each other or from media or something like that. So I think we have the privilege, as an international church, I’m not necessarily bound to some of those cultural constraints and to talk about those kinds of issues that may be a little bit more taboo or people might be a little bit uncomfortable hearing from a pastor. They’ll be a lot more open to hearing it from me, and so we found that sermon series and that teaching really fruitful and helpful for people and even following up with it in their life groups. So we do bible studies according to what we teach on Sundays, and so we dealt with it on a life-on-life level in small groups and hopefully it was really helpful for people to talk about it because those issues exist, things like mental health issues and same-sex attraction—those are things that are pretty relevant in Indonesian culture and society and yet are not really talked about or addressed.

Tommy: Andrew, Indonesia has the fourth biggest population in all of the world and is one of the wealthiest countries in all of the world with fifteen thousand islands.  There is a difference between ethnic Indonesians and Chinese Indonesians. For the average American, what is the difference?

Andrew: The difference is, I think Chinese Indonesians will look at themselves even though they may be third, fourth generation, they still look at themselves as ethnically Chinese and distinctly Chinese, and so I think it would be actually the same thing as second or third generation Korean American or Chinese American who still has a distinct Asian culture and background, and yet also has an American background. So in Indonesia, there will be Chinese Indonesians who are distinct Chinese ethnic background and it may not be 100 percent, but that’s their dominant background, and yet they grew up in Indonesisa.  That’s where their parents were born or they were born, so it’s kind of similar to that.

Tommy: Got it. I have found that the people who are Chinese Indonesians have a huge respect for Americans. Would you find that to be true? Why is there such a huge respect towards those in the West, especially Americans?

Andrew: I think there’s various reasons. I think probably one is probably a little bit of a colonial influence. Indonesia has been colonized and fought over for many, many centuries. And so I think it’s naturally ingrained in them to perhaps look at, for example, Americans or Europeans in a much higher regard. I think also because at least another factor is the young people that are educated and ambitious. I think they really look up to things like the work ethic or social ethics of Americans or Westerners and those are things that they grew up partially with, whether they studied overseas or something like that, for university or high school that they want to emulate. So I mean those are probably two of the factors that I can think of as the reasons why.

Tommy: As a pastor, you’re also learning the importance that some of these individuals may not have a good biblical foundation in terms of digging in the Scripture, and sometimes you’ve actually been trying to do that more as a church, as a pastor?

Andrew: Yeah, that’s right, so we’re really trying. I think it’s two things. It’s giving them a biblical foundation.  They need that understanding of what is the theology of money, or what is the theology of work, what is the theology of marriage and family, so that’s a really big foundation for them. And then the second part to that it is discipling people through that, through what does that look like in their lives on a daily basis? What does that look like for them personally, and how do they need to live in obedience to the scripture in their own context? And I think a lot of time that’s actually the harder part. A lot of guys in our church, they have access to all the books and all the stuff on the internet by Tim Keller and all these great pastors and theologians but walking through those types of issues are challenging. And I think that’s really the role of the local church in Indonesia—to be discipling young people to do.

Tommy: Andrew I have two last questions for you. The topic is nonprofits.  We’re very familiar with that here in the US but in Jakarta people may not have a very high confidence or opinion of nonprofits in Indonesia. Can you talk through a little bit of that and explain this.  

Andrew.  I think a factor that you can’t ignore about working with nonprofits in Indonesia is the factor of corruption. I mean it’s so pervasive in the society in Indonesia, so a lot of nonprofits are going to work in that kind of environment and in that kind of system. So a lot of them are going to be affected by it or kind of get swept under by it.

I think another big issue with nonprofits is leadership. There is a big leadership void, so really having people who are let alone “godly,” but just someone who has integrity and someone who is able to follow through and able to execute on a plan they have, I think that’s a lot harder than often times it’s realized in a situation like Indonesia. So even though people may have great ideas, the execution of those ideas and goals as a nonprofit are just really hard to realize. And so, yeah, it’s really, really hard to find those kinds of people who are really good leaders in the nonprofit sector.

Tommy: Andrew, even as you’ve been with Resource Global and been helping us out on the Indonesian board what is your hope that these cohort members would do to help their city or their country in the future?

I’m really hoping that people that are involved in this cohort first really love Jesus Christ and that love and devotion to Christ comes out in the way that they do everything in their lives, in the way that they’re involved in their local church and discipling people, the way that they’re involved in their families and we see restoration, Christ-like restoration in their own marriages and with their parents and just with their own parenting. I want to see them as people who really are salt in the marketplace, and they’re really light in the marketplace and use that platform to bring Christ into the systems that are in place as well as relationships with people that they work with and the influence that they have. So that’s what I’m really praying for, for the influence in this generation in the next 20, 30 years, that God would really raise some of them up in different spheres in society, whether its business or whether it’s education or government or even in churches. You know, that they would be these people who really love Christ and are really making Him known and exemplifying that in their lives and the generations to come. That is my hope and vision for Jakarta.  

Tommy: Hey Andrew, thank you, I appreciate it!

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Interview with Andrew Jun - Part 1

Two Part Interview with Andrew Jun, Lead Pastor of Harvest Mission Community Church (HMCC) Indonesia

Andrew Jun is a graduate of the University of Illinois and also University of Michigan in Ann Arbor.  He now lives in Jakarta with his wife and three kids and is the pastor of two church plants in Jakarta and Karawaci.  Andrew is on the Indonesian board of Resource Global in Jakarta.

Part I

Tommy: Andrew, it’s been more than five years now since you moved to Jakarta.  Can you talk to me about what life in Jakarta or Indonesia is compared to life in US? Similarities, differences, things that.

Andrew: A long time missionary was describing life in Jakarta to me when we first moved there and he said the difference between Jakarta and the US is the same difference as Jakarta and everywhere else in Indonesia. So it’s quite unique compared to other places in Indonesia because you have so many of your modern conveniences. Actually some things are even more modern than in the US…the malls and things like that are all very highly developed and really really nice.

But really Jakarta is full of contrasts.  You have some places that are just amazing and modern. And then you have some places that are very developing and can be very frustrating because you just can’t expect to have things run as efficiently as in the US. So we have to deal with regular things like traffic and different things concerning the weather and other things. As well as because it’s kind of island culture, everything just runs a lot slower. There’s something called *jim-kar-et* which is translated as rubber time, which is everything is flexible, nothing is really, like, on a tight schedule, so we have to be really flexible about what we can accomplish in a day, or who we’re going to be meeting at what time.  We just always have to be flexible.

Tommy:  Andrew, one of the things I’ve also experienced in Jakarta is the fact that being flexible means sometimes people will cancel out on you or reschedule on you.  Is that just a way of life and how culture is?

Andrew: In Jakarta everyone is on the go and there is probably many different variables going on, factors going on in a person’s daily life, that they can have multiple meetings or have a previous meeting and it will go way over and they just have to cancel the meeting after or something like that. So it’s like operating in New York City, with the infrastructure, you know?

Tommy: Yeah, and you mentioned traffic. When people think, wow, California is bad traffic; Atlanta, Chicago is bad traffic, that traffic in the US is nothing compared to Jakarta, right?

Andrew: Yeah that’s right. I mean usually it will take me about 45 minutes to get into the city center. Without any traffic that’s what it should take. But it will take anywhere between an hour and half, two hours, maybe even three hours if traffic is bad. I kind of look at it like this. In the US you can run multiple errands on a single trip, like you’ll stop by at one place and then you’ll go to Target and you’ll go somewhere else and the library. But really here in Jakarta you don’t run errands like that. If you can make it to one place and run one errand in a day, you’ve had a pretty good day, you accomplished something, but never more than one errand in a day unless you’re planning on spending all day running errands. You’re lucky and productive if you have two meetings squeezed in.

Tommy: One of the things I also realized and you’ve taught me is family obligations and work life is actually very important and interrupts ministry and some of the things you can do.

Andrew: Yeah, that’s correct. I mean because people in Jakarta, their working life is so packed Monday through Friday and oftentimes bleeds into the weekends. The weekend time, Saturdays and Sundays, are really important to family time and it’s very guarded time to spend with family, even though sometimes it isn’t like meaningful interaction or meaningful conversation.  It’s just kind of the Asian mindset of just being present, and being together is an accomplishment. So people are really held to those obligations and younger people really want to honor their family or have a lot of pressure to honor their family obligations.

Tommy: As a pastor, how have you found what’s been effective for you to disciple these people and to really care for them? Has it just been spending time or building relationships with them? What’s important in doing ministry in Jakarta?

I think it’s being really patient, kind of picking and choosing your battles and discipling people through issues rather than discipling people to make one decision or two decisions or something like that. It’s really helping them follow Christ and knowing that sometimes people will fail or disappoint you and other times you know they’ll be learning and they’ll be making good decisions and healthy decision. So I think it’s just a lot of patience and trying to instill principles into people in which case it will not always be a linear and a smooth process for people. It’s going to be a very up and down thing.

Metrics in Missions

written by Bobby Doll, Director of Impact

The impact value chain provides a framework to measure impact and follows the basic logic model; inputs and activities lead to outputs, outcomes, and impact.  Essentially a map of how an organization’s assets and daily functions lead to impact, the impact value chain provides key measurables of the successes and failures of a program.  Somewhat crudely, inputs and activities boil down to money and time, time both in the general sense and time spent performing a specific action.  Outputs, outcomes, and impact are all results measured in different ways, at different times, and of different scope. Outputs are short-term and generally of relatively small scope such as number of participants in a program; outcomes are longer term and of relatively larger scope such as effects of a program on the participants; impact can take up to a decade to measure but has the largest scope such as effects on the society and/or environment.  Formal impact evaluation is extremely costly and time-consuming due to its tremendous capacity, but looking at outputs and outcomes, a much simpler and less rigorous task, provides useful measurements and analytics. This type of performance measurement is what we are focusing on in the short term, which will hopefully lead to impact evaluation later on.

The impact value chain is not a perfect method, however, especially in the arena of spiritual fitness.  The logic model’s central premise is based on causality; that is, each link leads to the next one.  Measuring spiritual health does not necessarily have a direct link to the use and management of resources for several reasons.  First, the impact value chain tends to deal with the efficient use of assets that lead to measurable change not with changes in an individual’s beliefs; second, culture, society, community, personal circumstances, etc. all play a role in one’s faith, which makes it difficult to apply a theory of change to each situation; third, the Spirit plays a tremendous role in one’s heart change and sanctification, a near impossible identifiable and measurable link in the impact value chain.

On the quantitative side, Resource Global primarily uses self-reporting of a few different key metrics to measure the effectiveness of the Cohorts. The first is called Net Promoter Score, which measures the willingness of Cohort members to recommend the Cohort experience to others. NPS is used throughout the world of customer satisfaction and is well regarded as a proxy of customer loyalty. Each month, Resource Global calculates the NPS of the overall Cohort experience as well as the NPS of that month’s specific Cohort session and compares them to previous months’ numbers in order to determine the positives and/or negatives of that month. Of course, satisfaction is not the only point the matters or contributes to Cohort effectiveness. We also measure two points of Cohort members’ engagement and involvement with the material presented and discussed.

Reference:

Bronkema, D. (2015). Towards and Understanding and Practice of Spiritual Metrics. Page 15.

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A Look at Our Global Cohort Gathering... (2016)

Dear Friends and Supporters of Resource Global, I am officially writing on behalf of my brother, Tommy Lee.  As you know he is undergoing cancer treatment right now.  The Board of Directors placed him on a leave of absence during this time period to help him recover.  I have stepped in during the interim to run the day-to-day operations of the organization.

I wanted to send you an update on how Tommy is doing and of our Global Cohort Gathering here in San Francisco.

Update from the Global Cohort Gathering:

Over 50 people were with us for our Global Cohort Gathering in San Francisco. We had participants from our Chicago cohort and our Indonesian cohort.

The purpose of our time together was threefold:

We provided a space for each member to personally grow in their understanding of how faith affects their work.

  • We provided a space for individuals from two different countries (one Asian and one North American) to come together to learn from each other and grow in community.

  • We provided a space for individuals to discover their passion and gifts and understand their calling on how God may be using them to make a difference in the community or country they live in.

This is the first time we have done this event and it was quite successful. Attached you will find a few pictures from our time together. The week was pivotal for many of our cohort members as they sought the Lord in how he would have them integrate their faith and work. 

Here are a few quotes from some of our guests:

Katherine Leary Alsdorf, Author, Every Good Endeavor:  Appreciated the uniqueness of the work we are doing at Resource Global and how we are able to merge international leaders together with local leaders.

Randy Kennedy, Maclellan Foundation:  The work you are doing at Resource Global is unique and can potentially be a model for many other organizations.

Nancy Ortberg, TBC (Transforming the Bay for Christ):  I really love the work you guys are doing with future leaders here at Resource Global and would love to find a way for us to do a cohort here in San Francisco.

 

Testimonials from cohort members:

It was a restorative weekend. I attended a conference on work and faith, which provided an opportunity to reconsider how to integrate my faith into my everyday work-life. It doesn't only mean inviting people to church, but it really challenged me to think how I show my values to my coworkers and clients through how I talk and treat others.

Just wanted to share that it was a huge blessing to have us think through it because I had a meeting with my boss to talk about my annual performance today. When I shared this, I found out he was a Christian and we ended up discussing how my past behaviors / projects portrayed my faith. He even joked that I should come over and share it with his kids because it was refreshing perspective.

-Jennifer Chae, cohort member

 

Being a part of Resource hasn't just been a great experience for me, but it also gave me a chance to be a part of this one big family that fights to live out their Godly calling in the marketplace. Resource has given me a community of support. 

Hearing everyone's stories has influenced me so much that I've decided to move closer to home in order to pursue what God is urging me to do (at least for now) and that is to introduce my family and peers to Christ. As you may remember, I grew up in a Muslim family and chose Jesus on my own after coming to the United States - I don't think God pulled me out of Indonesia and be made in His image just to hang around, I think I need to share my story back home too. 

-Alika Savira, cohort member

 

The total cost of the Global Cohort Gathering in San Francisco was $30,000.  If you are interested in helping us defray the expenses of this worthwhile event with a personal donation, please let me know.   You can reach me at jimmydlee@gmail.com. Thank you to each of you for your prayers, words of encouragement, and financial support.  We are tremendously grateful.

I will continue to lead the day to day operations of Resource Global until Tommy comes back.  

As of this email he is entering the third week from his last chemotherapy and radiation session.  He still struggles with physical exhaustion and pain in his throat and neck.  The recovery period has been a harder time physically than when he going through treatment but that is to be expected.  Tommy continues to still work on Resource Global but for now I will take leadership temporarily of what needs to be done.  

 

Sincerely,

Jimmy Lee

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Abraham Viktor Reflection - GCG 2016

Three weeks ago, I attended Resource Global's GCG 2017. It is possibly the most life-changing retreat that I've ever attended in my life. It truly transformed how I think about work and how it ought to be integrated with my belief. Work is a big part of my life, so to know the truth about it is truly liberating. I truly cherished every moment there; from the sessions brought by world-class speakers, the fellowship with my huddle group members, the conversation with the people, until my personal reflection time. I want to relive each and every moment of it. Since I came back to Indonesia, I haven't stopped talking about what I learned there. Here, I would like to thank few individuals that have made the memory a lasting one.

First of all, I would like to thank:

Tommy Lee and Sarah Chow for giving me the opportunity to be a part of this Resource Global cohort. Everything, since that first event in puncak until the GCG have been an incredible blessing to my life, I am forever grateful for the opportunity

Kara Sauder for picking me up in SFO airport at a late night until you feel asleep in the car, that was very-very nice of you

Noah Chung for withstanding the total of 3 hours trip to that pho restaurant at the edge of San Jose

Matt Harvey for teaching me about baseball!

Michael Liu for the meaningful conversation in the car ride to Tenderloin

Johannes Ardiant Harlie for the conversation in the room about love and compassion for the city

The best huddle group ever: Jimmy Mei, Jenny Chae, and Ketlien Manuel; for the most epic scavenger hunt! We know we were the true winner!

Jen Kamins and Donna Eicker Crum for the amazing trip (and amazing conversation) to Yosemite. I can't believe someone would drive a total of 9 hours for some friends they'd just met, you guys sacrificed so much for us; Julia, Johannes, and I don't deserve friends like you guys.

Being a part of this is a proof of God's generous grace upon my life.

Abraham Viktor

Jakarta Cohort Member

The Justice Calling in Our Workplace

Referencing The Justice Calling, by Bethany Hoang and Kristen Johnson A woman that endures horrific abuse at the hands of traffickers. A sixteen year old girl who is forced to flee her home to escape rape and abuse from her own family member.  A young man that is enslaved in unsafe work conditions with no contact to the outside world.  These are the stories often told to highlight injustice and God’s heart for redemption.  It is less likely that my everyday life will involve such heart-wrenching stories…or is it?

In an eight week course with Bethany Hoang, co-author with Kristen Johnson of The Justice Calling and speaker and advisor on behalf of International Justice Mission, we had the privilege of unpacking the world’s need for justice in light of a God who loves relentlessly.  Hoang’s comprehensive approach to justice revealed that it is intricately woven into God’s character and the entire arc of Scripture. From beginning to end, the Bible speaks of a God that cares deeply about justice, righteousness, and the flourishing of all that he has created.  It is safer to consider justice as a concept - a mere abstract idea that floats in conversation rather than exists in action.  This course was a reminder that the call to justice is about real people.  People suffering from injustice are our neighbors, both nearby and around the world, at this exact moment. Justice is deeply rooted into our lives and the world around us, including our work.  If our work is to be a part of our call to live out the Gospel, it is essential that we pursue justice in our 8 to 5.  These four themes from the book provide tangible ways to partake in God’s call to justice.

Sabbath Rest

Although not an expected part of seeking justice, Hoang explains that if we can stop before we even start, we begin by remembering who is in control.

“If we stop our ‘doing’ to enter into Sabbath rest, we acknowledge that we are joining God in the work he is already doing in this world and are not ultimately responsible for its success.  It is work centered in Jesus Christ, who saves us by grace and yet has created us as his own workmanship to accomplish good things (Ephesians 2:8-10).”

The Sabbath helps us to recognize that our Creator is Lord, and we are not.  It is also where we receive the deep restoration, healing, and strength that comes only from the Spirit, so that we can continue to partake in the work God has for us.  As we are called to rest, we are also called to extend and provide rest to those around us - especially those who cannot choose it for themselves.  By keeping and extending Sabbath, you are offering others a glimpse of God’s character and his deep, deep love for them.

Move Toward Darkness

Not our natural instinct, is it?  We would much rather walk in the light than move into dark spaces.  Our instinct can be to shrink back - to run away.  It may be counterintuitive, but the more we understand we “are the light of the world” (Matt. 5:14), because of Christ living within us, the more we will know the strength we possess, even when facing impenetrable darkness. Hoang writes “To find life for ourselves and for the world God is calling us to love, we must run toward the darkness with the light of Christ.” We will not conquer darkness on our own, but pursuing darkness will foster an immediate need for God amidst it. Prayer is critical as we see Jesus as our constant companion that reminds us of our purpose in these dark places. Communing with God will also give us eyes to see the dark spaces that we so often overlook.  Part of running toward darkness is about navigating darkness in our own lives, or about having the courage to enter into the darkness with people around us.  It is sometimes easier to run toward the blaring injustice we see in the world at large than to walk towards what is close to home.

You Are Not The Hero

Prayerfully moving towards darkness in this world does not mean that we will be able to “fix” anything.  The great temptation of our faith is to think it depends on us to change the world and change ourselves.  Hoang reminds us that this does not correspond with what we learn in Scripture about God’s relentless grace.  To be the hero is a glorious notion.  We enter the story at the time of crisis and change the situation for the better.  But in this scenario, the hero becomes the center of the story.  They can take the credit, and all of the blame if they fail.  Hoang and Johnson argue that the “hero calling” is not sustainable.  While it might arise from one’s fiery passion for justice, it does not allow that passion to be transformed into perseverance when brokenness and opposition are met along the way.  The word hero is accepted in our society.  If you call someone a saint, it is usually prerogative, but this is the idea that Hoang and Johnson propose.  “Saint” is never used as a singular word in scripture, but always plural, as a body of people. Saints, in the true meaning of the word, do not save the day.  They don’t “provide decisive action that changes everything for good because Jesus Christ already has.”  They don’t have to depend on themselves because God is at the center of the story they are living, and He is ultimately responsible for how it ends.

Abide

The final discussion in this comprehensive view to justice may be the most powerful, and yet the most unexpected.  The night before his crucifixion, Jesus described himself as “the true vine” (John 15:1).  Those who follow him are branches of this vine.  If we remain in him we will bear much fruit, but apart from him we can do nothing.  Apart from him we can do nothing… this means that without a deep connection to Jesus Christ, our very best efforts to pursue justice are fruitless.  “Working against all that is broken in this world begins and ends with seeking God, who loves justice and longs for this world to flourish.”  The work of justice is long and full of difficulty.  But with each step we take, we are rooted deeper into this unfathomable, abiding space that brings fullness to us.  Without Christ, we will wither, but with Him, we can continue the fight for justice for the long haul.

Pursuing justice in our workplace is no different.  The suffering, oppression, inequality, and struggle exist in every city around the world, in every office building, every cubicle, and in every heart.  We are all in need of Christ and the redemption He brings.  Just as The Justice Calling was written as a comprehensive biblical theology, the need for justice in our lives is all encompassing.  God desires for the entirety of his creation to flourish.  Our work is no exception.