One
of my responsibilities at work is to manage our company’s social media
accounts, including Twitter. If you’re familiar with it, you know that most
people use their real names in the Twitter “handle” or in their profile. Many
don’t. Twitter allows you to participate without revealing your identity.
We
get our share of profanity, invective, outright lies and distortions, and even the
occasional threat via Twitter. One day, a tweet popped up with an accusation
that was so blatantly untrue and provocative that we decided it had to be
answered. We were polite, and cited a third party link disproving what was being
claimed. The person tweeting responded with a loud wail. “Well, it should be
true because you’re so evil.”
Welcome
to the subject of worldviews.
In
Every
Good Endeavor: Connecting Your Work to God’s Work, Tim Keller discusses
the importance of stories and worldviews. A story is a narrative, and
narratives, he says, “are actually so foundational to how we think that they
determine how we understand and live life itself.” Our narratives form and
structure our worldview, from the German word Weltanschauung, meaning “the comprehensive perspective from which
we interpret all reality.”
A
worldview, Keller says, is a master narrative, a fundamental story about what
life should be like, what has knocked it off balance, and what can be done to
make it right.
If
you think worldviews don’t matter, look at Washington, D.C., and the war of
worldviews over spending, the budget, and the size of government. Our
worldviews are growing more extreme, but that’s another story.
As
Christians, we, too, have a worldview, the Christian worldview. We know there
is wrong in all of us – and it’s called sin. (If you are uncomfortable with the
word “sin,” and many Christians are – another worldview at play here – you can
substitute “brokenness.”) We know there is wrong among all of us – and it’s
called sin. And we know what can be done to make it right, or move it in a
right direction – and that’s called faith in Christ.
Perhaps
less obviously and spectacularly than politics, this plays itself out at work,
too. A worldview exists at all organizations. It may be capitalist, for
example. A strong component of the worldview at my company is technology. Other
workplaces have worldviews that are outward-focused, inward- focused, utilitarian,
benevolent, patriarchal and more.
As
a Christina in a largely secular workplace, am I expected to conform and share the
prevailing worldview?
In
a word, no.
I
see the sin and brokenness play itself out each and every day. And I have to
decide how to act and respond, each and every day.
It’s
not easy.
I’ve
talked with enough Christians who work in Christian workplaces to know it’s not
easy there, either. The secular workplace doesn’t have a monopoly on sin and brokenness.
A
few weeks ago, I made a decision to start each day tell myself three things.
God’s
creation is good.
The
world is fallen.
That
nasty person who knifes me in the back is just as much loved by God as I am;
that person, too, is made in God’s image.
It’s
not so much changing my worldview and fully embracing it.
Over
at The High Calling, we’ve been
discussing Every Good Endeavor. We
complete the discussion today, and this section had a lot of material to cover,
which I might write on another time. Please visit The High Calling to see more of what’s
being thought about and said.
Glynn, I think I'm going to adopt your "three things strategy" each morning too. :) I found the discussion on how sin impacts work very helpful in my current situation at work. Sometimes it's just hard, isn't it? I keep hanging on for those glimpses of Eden that Keller and Alsdorf talk about.
ReplyDeleteThanks for your company through this book. I always love reading your thoughts.
Broken. We all are.
ReplyDeleteWhat a great word you have here as always.
You and I, Glynn, work at companies that are targets for a lot hatred. Unfortunately, some of it seems to be justifiable if not always coherent.
ReplyDelete