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Why Did I Start Crying During That Beer Commercial About a Puppy and a Horse?
By: Stephanie Walton There is quite a bit that can be said about the negatives of the advertising industry. And people are definitely saying it. I must confess that I am continuously surprised at these negative reactions, the anger at feeling manipulated, all the while devoting a significant amount of public discourse to Super Bowl commercials and Mad Men. I start...
February 18, 2014 -
When to Go Public with Faith at Work
By: Bethany Jenkins On his way home from London to New York, Mark Campisano sat next to a senior partner at McKinsey & Company, where he himself was a junior partner. Mark didn’t know the older gentleman very well so when their dinner arrived, Mark tried to bow his head and give thanks to God as inconspicuously as possible. Knowing that many of his colleagues he...
February 13, 2014 -
Is Technology Hope for the Hopeless?
By: Chris McNerney and Daniel Lee Super Bowl XLVIII earned the distinction of being the most watched television program in U.S. history with 111.5 million viewers. That’s over a third of America’s population. Several more millions who had no particular interest in the part where the Seahawks trampled all over the Broncos tuned in for Bruno Mars’ record-b...
February 13, 2014 -
Roll, Jordan, Roll
By: Kate Rhodes I have sung these words many times. “On Jordan’s stormy banks I stand and cast a wishful eye to Canaan’s fair and happy land, where my possessions lie.” The chorus looks to a place of rest where injustice no longer dwells; a place where fear is no more and freedom exists forever in the presence of God. Though I know the chorus well,...
February 10, 2014 -
Book Review: The Locust Effect
By: Bethany Jenkins Do you go to work without wondering whether your boss is going to physically beat you? Do you send your daughter to school without fearing she will be raped? Do you go to sleep without worrying that looters will seize your land in the middle of the night? “If you are reading this book in a state of reasonable security and peace without fear of...
February 10, 2014 -
Beyond the BPC
By: Tracy Thorton Only a few months after my Not-For Profit, A House on Beekman, won the Center for Faith & Work EI Business Plan Competition (BPC), it became clear to me that big changes were ahead. I had heard how difficult the first year of a venture can be, and I wanted to be able to devote my full time to being a Director of Operations. In order to be ...
February 5, 2014 -
Do What You Love
By: Thomas Martin Seemingly positive and beneficial personal beliefs and aphorisms, such as Do What You Love, have consequences for the wider culture, as Miya Tokumitsu shows us in her article published in Slate. In the same way that doing what you love can be damaging if unchecked, Sam Polk describes first-hand how doing it For the Love of Money can have person...
February 3, 2014 -
Work as a Means to Social Shalom
Anthony Bradley speaks on how so much of what we do in our vocation is so our families can flourish. Sustainability in families leads to sustainability in society and social shalom. From the 2013 Faith & Work Conference.
January 30, 2014 -
City Rhythms
Seeking to follow the vocational rhythms of the city, the Center for Faith & Work (CFW) hosts monthly cross-vocational gathering spotlighting specific sectors each month. On January 23rd, the evening focused on Food and was held at the American Bible Society at Columbus Circle. To begin the night, Amilee Watkins gave a broad overview of ...
January 30, 2014 -
Why We Need Fasting and Feasting
By: Kyle Werner What is it that makes food, or the lack of food, so powerful? Why do we become so worn out, cranky, and exhausted when we need food, and then feel so uplifted and restored when we eat a great meal? Certainly we are designed to crave food for the sake of mere survival, but as humans we crave more than this. We long for food to be beautiful...
January 22, 2014