Welcome back to Season 1, Episode 8 of the Convene Podcast. Where do you start with the whole conversation around faith and the workplace? What are the foundations of the theology of work for busy CEOs? What are the first steps to understanding this? Helen M. Mitchell is a speaker, author and consultant to business leaders and pastors. Helen was the architect that led 2,000 people into workplace small groups at Saddleback Church and is currently the Director of the Center for Faith Work and Economics at Talbot Seminary and Biola University. She leads the church strategy for Convene bridging the church to the marketplace.
Can I Be A Christian Company? | Brad Dacus
Welcome back to Season 1, Episode 7 of the Convene Podcast. This week, Brad Dacus returns to share some key insights about the interplay between Christian faith and the laws of our nation.
Legally Living Your Faith in Your Company | Brad Dacus
Welcome back to Season 1, Episode 5 of the Convene Podcast. This week, Greg Leith sat down with Brad Dacus from the Pacific Justice Institute. PJI's mission is to defend religious freedom...without charge, and they’ve been doing so since 1997. In this episode, they discuss questions like: How do you boldly stand for Christ in the center of the workplace? What is legal and what is off-limits in terms of evangelism? What are the laws regarding how a Christian CEO leads his or her company?
How Minimizing Stress Maximizes Your Leadership
Everyone gets stressed. In fact, a recent survey by Statistic Brain concluded that over 70% of Americans experience both physical AND psychological symptoms caused by stress. The top stress causing category is job pressure. Running behind job pressure (in order) are money, health, relationships, poor nutrition, media overload, and sleep deprivation. An interesting list for sure, but it seems that the engine pulling the causal stress train is the stress from job pressure. For leaders, the job pressure becomes greater as their responsibilities increase. As Shakespeare so aptly penned, “Uneasy lies the head that wears a crown.”
The Unlikely Man Behind the First English Bible
Late at night, in the year 1523—almost 500 years ago—a preacher and a business leader strike up a conversation in the lobby of St. Dunstan church in London, England. After taking an interest in each other’s worlds, they set out into the streets of London, passing the flicker of street lamps.