Today's post, Intersecting Our Culture, is by my friend Dr. Larry Peabody, who teaches Theology of Work at Bakke Graduate University. It is posted here with Larry's permission, having originally appeared on July 31, 2014, in his blog, Called Into Work.
To intersect, says Webster, is to "meet
and cross at a point" or to "share a common area.” Where is that
point or common area where we as Christ-followers most often intersect our
culture?
Some time ago, a pastor friend said he and his church were
looking for some way to build relationships with their community. Although he
didn’t use the term, they were seeking a way to intersect the culture around
them. But how can any church do that effectively?
In church buildings? Clearly we need to gather
regularly with other believers. The New Testament, in urging us not to give up
meeting together, leaves no doubt about that (Heb. 10:25). But as important as
our (typically) Sunday meetings are, they are hardly an effective way to
intersect the surrounding culture—for at least two reasons. First, most profess
the same faith in Christ. Unbelievers, if any, are few and attend
intermittently. Second, once-a-week meetings do not amount to any significant
contact even with the few who may be present.
In church outreach programs? Some churches draw in
hundreds of neighborhood kids for VBS summer events. Work days in the community
can provide useful services. But these events come and go. They usually do not
result in repeated or long-term relationships.
In our neighborhoods? One study revealed that a mere
25 percent of us know the names of those in nearby homes. In Bowling Alone,
Robert Putnam wrote that neighborhood relationships are "measurably more
feeble now than a generation ago.”
But what about the workplace? Suppose your church
includes 100 adults. Assume 60 of them work in paid jobs. On average, each of
them will have 16 coworkers. Say each knows another 20 in his or her job
network (customers, patients, students, vendors, and so on). In that case the
workplace "salt-and-light” reach of your 100-adult congregation would
total 2,160. And those on-the-job relationships will continue with some
regularity week in, week out, year in, and year out.
Nearly two out of three adult believers spend 40 percent of
their waking hours on the job. What proportion of our church meetings should
aim at equipping them to season their workplace relationships with salt and
shine light into the surrounding darkness? Has the time come to equip
Christians to intersect our culture in that shared common area where believers
and unbelievers constantly cross paths?