SERVICE
21st Century Samaritans
3.1.09
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Article:
Are you sitting down? Good.
I don't have shocking news, but I do want to know something about the chair you're sitting on: Who brought your chair into this world?
I'm guessing there was a designer. And an advertiser to promote it. And how about a seamstress to sew the upholstery, and a chemist to mix the colors and another to make the synthetic polymer (plastic). Then a metal stamper and die caster, welder, plastics injector, miner, accountant, ergonomist, assembler, farmer (leather), office supply store clerk, lumberjack, the engineer who designed the lumberjack's chainsaw to cut down the tree, and the captain of the ship who transported the oil to run the chainsaw, and the boiler mechanic who kept the ship running . . .
Okay, it's an endless list. But here's the point: Work is not separate from community.
Thousands of employees helped bring your chair into the world. Most of them probably never thought about being connected to each other in this grand chair-making community, but they are connected. This means they affect each other. This means their jobs are not self-contained personal enterprises. In fact, none of us have jobs that belong to us exclusively.
In the story of the Good Samaritan, robbers attacked a man and left him for dead. After two passers-by ignored his plight, a third traveler—the Samaritan—stopped to bandage the man and then carried him to town for further medical help and safety. If that weren't enough, the Samaritan also picked up the hospital tab. Most of us lack medical expertise or sufficient funds to pay for someone's lodging and recovery expenses. So this story seems to be about more than helping people in ditches. Jesus is answering a broader question about how to care for others. He is teaching us to employ our skills—our very jobs—to serve the community in a fitting way.
The need to respond to emergencies is apparent. But what if your job description has nothing to do with serving victims of crime? The challenge, then, is figuring out how to jump into this story vocationally.
Ten years ago, I joined the Coalition for Christian Outreach, an organization committed to helping college students face this challenge. In fact, for thirty years the CCO has partnered with colleges, churches, and other organizations to develop men and women who live out their Christian faith in every area of life. For me, that area of life is advertising. I wonder from time to time how students and practitioners can be faithful to God in this notorious field, but I believe a new breed of advertisers is possible. So I blog about marketing ethics, encourage graphic designers, email art directors, and stand before Consumer Behavior classrooms. I continually pray for all of them to see creativity and sociology and communication as instruments of praise and customers as children of God.
Regardless of the major, students are fairly good at seeing others' needs. Many of them enter service-oriented majors like medicine or counseling. Most of them still fail to see the connection between doing good work and loving their neighbor. Too many of us view work as an obligation or selfish pursuit. We think Good Samaritan behavior is an avocation for Saturday morning volunteerism, mission trips, and the occasional opportunity for heroism.
One of my favorite activities addresses this disconnection. I ask students to imagine how their future jobs connect to the wounded man. First I have them read the story in Luke 10. Then I tell them to draw the basic landscape, without the characters, as they imagine it from the Scriptures. Finally, I ask them to draw the characters in a way that their particular majors can address. Here are a few results:
Foreign Language majors talked about educating the passers-by on cross-cultural differences. They understand how to dismantle social barriers such as fear and stereotyping between people groups. Their work also improves communications and increases the probability for compassion to triumph over neglect in the future.
Urban/Regional Planning majors talked about designing a safety corridor along this dangerous stretch of road. Such a project might involve installing street lights and emergency call boxes. They would collaborate with other engineers to reroute road segments that contain narrow passages and popular criminal hideouts.
PR/Marketer majors said they would develop a campaign to improve public sentiment about the road. Such a campaign would employ flyers, billboards, TV commercials, roadside kiosks and community publicity events to warn evildoers, encourage traveling in pairs, and promote monthly Safe Corridor walks.
It's amazing what you can discover when you connect how your degree trained you with how Jesus calls you. The key is recognizing that your job is not yours exclusively. It belongs to the community. This week, as you sit on your chair, think about the connections your work has with the larger community. Then turn your attention toward the Kingdom. Turn your skills toward the needs of others. And ask how Jesus might retell his parable with you—in your job—as the Good Samaritan.


READER'S COMMENTS
This is great. I work at a Christian university and am going to share this with some folks. Great connections. Thanks!
Sam,
This is so good, and so YOU. Thank you for reminding us of what the High Calling blogs are about---relating faith and ordinary life, nurturing Christian faithfulness in the worlds of work, and learning to follow Christ in the proverbial nuts and bolts. How many workers does it take to make a nut or a bolt, by the way? Man, that opening piece was fabulous (reminding me of Martin Luther King's assertion about being connected to the whole world by the time we finish our breakfast.) And then the Bible study part was very creative, helping folk relate Bible to life, thinking "vocationally" Seeing how you do that as one interested in advertising and marketing is really instructive and may generate more ideas from others, in their own unique contexts.
Michele, I hope it's helpful to your folks. Press on in your good work.
Byron, "How many workers does it take to make a nut or a bolt?" sounds like the start of a joke, but you're asking a very serious question. Just the thought of the answer takes me from my little nut-making station at factory X in little town Y on the third shift and transports me backward and upward, zoomed out for a bigger picture of what's really going on. I'm glad you saw that in the chair metaphor.
Perhaps advertisers need to see this more than most. Their work so often takes advantage of consumers that a better, broader focus on the community around them could provide a needed shot of compassion.
I love the beginning of this piece. I mean, I could go on about the rest of it, but I'd rather just sit with that opening and enjoy it and tell you how much I like it (no pun intended, btw. : )
Thanks, L.L. Took me a minute to get the pun. But that bit about where you tell me how much you like it? I got that right away.
Sam -- great thoughts. Our faith can't be segmented off for Sundays only, or it wouldn't be faith. Thanks for this.
"CCO has partnered with colleges, churches, and other organizations to develop men and women who live out their Christian faith in every area of life"
i like the part about "every" area of life. because, like the chair, our life is made up of many things that tend to overlap and merge together.
Glynn and nAncY, thanks for reading and commenting.