Rationale Of Ministry/Business
Each person on this planet is unique. Everyone has their own idiosyncrasies and preferred manner of doing things. God has gifted certain people in different ways. My goal is to use my gifts and values in such a way as to maximize my effectiveness in a business or ministry. In this paper I have identified five core values: (1) Family, (2) Integrity, (3) Team, (4) Solo time, and (5) Mentorship. I want to incorporate these into my life within the context of a business and or ministry. These are values I have observed in myself over a period of time, but most of them have become more clearly defined over the course of the past year.
Value: Family
I value family. I value both my current family (parents, siblings, extended family), and my future family (wife, children, grandchildren). I have known for a very long time that I want to be able to work from home, or have some type of job that allows me to interact with my children on job time. This value become my own one day when I was painting my uncle’s house. My uncle is a graphic artist and works from home. He and my aunt have two children, a girl who is 5 and a boy who is 18 months. I was staying at their house for a week to paint the exterior of the home.
While I was painting the area outside my uncle’s office, I witnessed an event that stirred my heart deeply. As I was painting, I heard my cousin’s gleeful 5-year-old voice pouring forth from the house as she rushed downstairs into my uncle’s office. My uncle stopped what he was doing, turned to her and lovingly lifted her up in his arms. “How is my beautiful little girl,” he said as he tossed her up into the air and caught her. She giggled and hugged him as tightly as she could. As I witnessed this scene through the window, many chords were struck inside me. I realized at that moment I wanted to work from home so I too could be available to my kids in the same way as was my uncle.
No matter what career I have or what ministry I participate in, I want my family to be able to be involved and to be with me. This includes my parents, siblings, and kids and all my extended family.
Value: Team
During one of our practicum planning meetings it hit me how much better this practicum was going to turn out because a team of people was working on the project. The combined gifts and talents of everyone in the group could produce something so much greater than what I could have done on my own. One meeting we were discussing how to incorporate spiritual lessons into the wilderness survival training we were going to be teaching. While my strength is not in thinking of creative ways to accomplish tasks, some of the people on the team are very strong in this area. My strength is in the execution of clearly defined jobs with specific tools. I have a hard time thinking “outside the box”. Nonetheless, the group was able to come up with some great ideas.
In addition, I tend to think of the quickest and easiest ways of doing things. If it had been up to me to do all the planning for the practicum, it probably would have been very boring, but very efficient. Sometimes efficiency is not what is needed; quality and creativity are very important. I realized I needed other people with different ways of thinking to help curb my efficiency mindset and to add flavor and spice to the planned initiatives. Through this practicum I saw the need and value in having a team of people involved in planning for a ministry/goal/business.
Value: Solo Time
While I do value having and working with a team, I am also an introvert. I am energized by spending time alone or with a very small group of friends. I lose energy when I am in a large crowd or have to deal with a lot of people for extended periods of time. I value and need time spent alone to recover after going to a party or large gathering. This is something I have seen especially this year in Explore. I love the solo times, and tend to leave early from our impact group meetings. I don’t go to the movie nights and often chose to do things by myself. My actions show the value I have in solo time.
During one practicum meeting, a couple members of our group became involved in conflict with each other. The meeting lasted for several hours while these two people attempted to work things out. Even though I had no part in the conflict and was just an observer, I was exhausted after the meeting. I was so exhausted that I went straight to bed and skipped dinner even though it was pizza night, which is my absolute favorite. I skipped because I needed time to recuperate after this ordeal. Whatever business/ministry I end up involved in, it needs to provide time for me to be alone. I can handle intense interaction with people, but just need time to be by myself also.
Value: Integrity
I have grown up with a very strong influence coming from my father to keep my word. Dad set the example for me of coming through when he said he would do something. This was passed on to me by osmosis. I didn’t really realize it as one of my core values until one day when I got an email. I run a website about my hobby of model bridge building. I offer tips on my website, and also have a contact form for people to send me additional requests. One day I received an email from a man who had said he had given a pledge help a young student build a toothpick bridge, but then realized he didn’t know very much about the subject. This man then spent time researching on the internet and had come across my website. He read everything on my site about toothpick bridges, and then contacted me for further help. This man felt so strongly that once he had said he would help this student, that he would do everything in his power to fulfill his promise.
Because I get a lot of requests for help from my website, I have been in the habit of not answering them because I don’t have a lot of free time. But when I read this man’s story, I admired what he was doing so much I made a point of helping him as much as I could. I realized the reason I decided to help him is because I valued integrity, and wanted to honor people who were trying to keep their word also. Throughout my life, in whatever business or ministry I find myself in, I want to exhibit integrity. If I say I am going to do something, I am going to do everything in my power to fulfill my word.
Value: Mentorship
During our practicum leading a troop of boy scouts up a mountain to learn winter camping and survival skills, I saw that I value a mentorship approach to teaching and ministry. One of my jobs was to teach the art of making quinzhees, which is a type of snow shelter. A quinzhee is made by piling a large amount of snow in a dome shape, and then hollowing out the inside. The walls have to remain thick enough, and it is easy to dig too far. To avoid this, I made sure I was on the inside helping the scouts dig the quinzhee out. There was only room two people inside the quinzhee at a time. I found that I really enjoyed this one-on-one time with each of the scouts, and I was able to connect with and teach each student easily in this type of setting. Because of this, I want the ministry I get involved in to include mentorship and keep the student to leader ratio low. The more I can invest in people one-on-one the better.
Incorporating Vision with Mission and Scripture
These values make up the basis for my vision for ministry/business: to develop a team, starting with my family, to mentor others into Godly lifestyles. The scriptural background for these values and my vision comes mostly from the second chapter of Titus. Titus 4:2 says, “that [older women] may train the young women…” Verse 6 states, “Likewise, urge the younger men to be self-controlled.” 11-12 says, “For the grace of God hath appeared, bringing salvation to all men, instructing us, to the intent that, denying ungodliness and worldly lusts, we should live soberly and righteously and godly in this present world.”
The chapter begins by instructing the older women to teach the younger women, and the men to do likewise. This implies several things. One, that Paul is promoting the use of mentorship for growth in a Christian community. In addition, Paul implies the older people of the community are working together as a team to accomplish the goal of leading and teaching Godly lifestyles. These are two aspects of my vision for ministry.
Another important part of my vision is that my team starts with my family. My wife and I will be mentoring our children. In turn, once our children have reached a certain level of maturity, we will begin as a family unit to reach out to others and develop mentoring relationships. This does not mean that every single member of my family is mentoring the same people, but rather each member could be mentoring a different person. I see my family unit as a base of operations from which the various members branch out for ministry. The family will be a place of encouragement and accountability in this.
In I Corinthians 12 Paul spends a considerable amount of time talking about how Christians should relate to each other. The conclusion he comes to is that everyone is different, and we all need to recognize the value of each other. We all need to work together and tear each other down. In this passage is found the concept of team. The Christian Church should be one big team. It is my hope to follow this model on a smaller scale, working with my family and a few other Christians.
Family, Integrity, Team, Solo time, and Mentorship are five core values I consider vital to any ministry or business I participate in. These values stem from my individual talents and experiences. I hold to these values because I believe incorporating them will help me to be more effective in business and ministry. At the root of these values is a deeper value, a value center to the Christian faith: love. The values I have listed are aspects of love and help define love. The ultimate value and goal in my life is to share and show the love of Christ with everyone I come into contact with.






































By Garrett, April 9, 2008 @ 9:29 am
This is, as the title suggests, my rationale for ministry/business. I also had to write up a philosophy of the same, but I will not include that here. The rationale says everything you need to know minus the word picture/story of my vision, which turned out to be a bit sappy.
By Drew, April 10, 2008 @ 3:52 pm
w00t!
By Garrett, April 10, 2008 @ 6:41 pm
That is not a word you use often and I am slightly confused on your contextual meaning.
By Drew, April 12, 2008 @ 5:04 pm
That’s the first time in my life I ever used it, I believe. The first time I ever felt like using it, actually. I was expressing my hearty agreement with you.