The 95-foot-tall Carrie Tower welcomes visitors to Brown University in Providence, RI.
The 95-foot-tall Carrie Tower welcomes visitors to Brown University in Providence, RI.
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Sam Lam expected the American Northeast to be cold, and not just in temperature. “It’s probably one of the toughest situations in the United States, or even around the world, in terms of the penetration of faith,” he says.
Sam resides in Singapore, where he serves as president and managing partner of Linkage Asia, a global leadership development firm. His work with executives in some of the world’s largest and most recognizable companies offers him opportunities to engage with many different cultures.
“It’s a very strange phenomenon, looking from the outside,” Sam says. “The [human] need for a God-solution is quite obvious. But [that solution] has been portrayed as old, parochial, narrow-minded, exclusive — when actually Jesus and the Christian faith are the most inclusive of all. No high or low, no male or female, no slave or master. Christ is all — and in all. But we are accused of being the most bigoted if we fully believe in the Scriptures.”
Sam isn’t alone in his sentiments. On the podcast This Cultural Moment, Australian pastor and author Mark Sayers, who is highly regarded for his insights into faith and contemporary culture, describes the current “post-Christian” age of the West as “the kingdom without the king.” In other words, the values that Jesus proclaimed as part of the kingdom of God — peace, justice, equality, truth, etc. — are championed, while God and His authority are discarded. These values have become distorted versions of themselves, and their biblical forms are viewed as obsolete or even antithetical to a progressively humanistic world.
As a result, there is a crucial question facing Christians in the Western world today: How can Christians effectively engage a post-Christian culture with the gospel?
Sam traveled to the Northeast U.S. to serve as one of three featured presenters at Brown University’s third annual Executive and Entrepreneurial Forum, or EII Forum for short. Athletes in Action® — Cru®’s sports ministry, which is active at Brown — hosted the event. Held on campuses nationwide, the EII Forum is designed to introduce top student leaders to Jesus while offering them a valuable service: leadership and life expertise from highly successful businesspeople.
“The Executive Forum allows us to get to students that wouldn’t darken the door of a Cru meeting. But they will come to an event that’s about bettering their resume and talking about leadership and mentoring.”
The EII Forum follows a template that allows presenters to address several audiences over a 24-hour period, intentionally highlighting how the presenters’ faith in Christ has affected their leadership and work. The EII Forum at Brown also offered valuable insights on engaging our post-Christian culture.
Located in Providence, Rhode Island, Brown University had a religious beginning, just like its seven Ivy League brethren. Princeton was affiliated with Presbyterianism; Harvard with the Congregational Church; and Columbia with the Church of England. Brown, founded in 1764, became the Colonies’ Baptist institution.
Over time, Brown followed the course of the other Ivies, distancing itself from its denominational roots and becoming an incubator of post-Enlightenment philosophies, such as postmodernism and existentialism, that filtered out into the wider world. The predominant philosophy in the West today is humanism, which Merriam-Webster defines as “a philosophy that usually rejects supernaturalism and stresses an individual’s dignity and worth and capacity for self-realization through reason.”
Brown prides itself on a diverse student body; an “open curriculum” (a student-centered system with no general course requirements); a transcript that doesn’t list GPA; and opportunities for students to design their own major or even pioneer a new course. Students commonly say, You can do whatever you want at Brown. As a result, a freethinking, inclusive energy permeates the campus, which is comprised of a series of dignified old buildings bordered by neighborhood streets.
“The challenge at Brown is this: God is a lot like Santa Claus,” says Jarrod Lynn, leader of the Cru staff team in Rhode Island. “You don’t see a class on Santa Claus. Is he real or is he not? He’s not even considered. It’s the same thing with God. He’s not even considered on the campus.”
The belief that God is a childish idea intelligent people should move beyond is one Jarrod uses the EII Forum to combat. He joined the staff of Cru in 2007 and enjoys the challenge of ministry in a secular, intellectual environment.
“I just want to put the Christian worldview on the table. If I have to clear out some of the baggage — [the belief that] Christians are stupid or anti-intellectual, anti-science — I want to help do that, so [people] can see Jesus for who He is.”
On the first evening of the EII forum, bundled in a long overcoat and scarf over his jacket and tie, Sam hurried past high mounds of plowed snow to enter the Brown University Faculty Club, site of the forum’s centerpiece event — an invitation-only banquet for the campus’s top student leaders. Sixty-five others braved the frigid late winter air: a mix of student-athletes, leaders of a dozen and a half campus organizations, and adult volunteers helping with the event.
Sam spoke second in the banquet’s program, as students began to delight in a meal of chicken, rice and asparagus in a rich cream sauce — unusual for college fare. In his talk, he discussed how successful leadership requires focus and humility. When he finished and returned to his seat, he joined the student leaders both in eating and in receiving an affecting message.
The deliverer of that message was the third speaker, Dan Berglund, managing director of equity derivatives for Goldman Sachs. Dan described how the pursuit of career-related achievements, especially in his first year after college, led him to frustration and dissatisfaction. He learned that he couldn’t live for what could be shown on a resume. Instead he found that true satisfaction, and the development of the character and virtues that determine a person’s lasting impact in life, is found in a relationship with Jesus.
The way Dan talked about his faith in Christ challenged Sam. “Myself included, and a number of people I know — in positions that are reasonably influential — for years have talked about building bridges to lead to the gospel,” Sam says. “The biggest problem is, we’ve got all these bridges built, but there ain’t enough people crossing them! That is an extremely troubling thing to me.”
Sam touches on a concept Mark Sayers describes in his book “Disappearing Church.” The theory is that, by imitating contemporary cultural norms, a Christian can make faith more attractive to those who don’t know Christ. Some bridge-building efforts stem from this motivation. However, while relevance has a role to play in sharing Christ, in order to truly be “relevant” or accepted in today’s cultural climate, we’d have to sacrifice certain biblical positions. As a result, by pursuing relevance, some lose their faith altogether.
After the banquet, the three speakers rushed through the cold to another event, Brown’s Athletes in Action weekly meeting. In a rustic loft above a snow-covered lawn, student-athletes settled into mismatched chairs for a 45-minute panel discussion about faithfully following Christ and influencing people toward Him in the workplace.
Rather than encouraging assimilation into the culture around us, Dan pointed out that the most influential way to represent Christ in the workplace is to do what is markedly countercultural: apologize when wrong, ask for forgiveness, show forgiveness to others and resolve conflict instead of ignoring it. This vulnerability flavors relationships like spices do food; an entirely new and more inviting meal, one which becomes rich with gospel opportunity, results.
Dan also said that the courage to live in countercultural ways must be paired with a watchful, prayerful readiness. As society moves further into post-Christianity, more people will find our faith to be foreign, problematic or worse. Beseeching God to transform co-workers’ hearts — and being prepared to offer a reasonable, compassionate explanation of our beliefs — becomes vital.
Pete Henschel, national field director for development in Cru’s campus ministry, has organized EII Forums at universities across the country since 2008. He’s quick to point out the “wins” the event can bring to a campus movement. First, future leaders hear the gospel; on average, 15% of banquet attendees indicate a decision to receive Christ. Second, the gospel footprint of the Cru ministry increases; although they aren’t employed at Brown, about 40% of EII Forum presenters are invited to address classes related to their field. And finally, students involved with Cru are inspired by leaders boldly sharing the gospel on their campuses.
Pete is just as quick to highlight how the forums affect the lives of presenters. A few years ago he received a voicemail from a speaker at an EII Forum in Duluth, Minnesota. He marveled to hear the speaker enthusiastically say, “Pete, I think this was the most important thing I’ve ever done in my whole life.”
Sam left Providence motivated to share Christ more intentionally back in Singapore and wherever his work may take him. “The opportunity is there [to lead others to Christ],” he says. “I’ve not leveraged the social, reputational, emotional capital I’ve built over the years. I need to take that one step further.”
For centuries the now-archaic word “Christendom” was somewhat synonymous with the Western world. Societal values were largely shaped by Christianity, which became the dominant faith, even if many within society were only nominally Christian.
Now, as humanism increasingly becomes the predominant civic worldview, Christians in the West are finding themselves in a situation that resembles that of the New Testament era: living as a minority group with a radically different set of beliefs than the mainstream. Instead of lamenting this, we can embrace it and find opportunity.
In “Disappearing Church,” Mark Sayers calls Christians to be a “creative minority,” much like Jews in the Babylonian Exile. In Jeremiah 29, God called these exiles to take root in Babylon and seek its peace and prosperity, while remaining set apart for Him. Sayers writes, “This dependency on a source of power and truth outside of the dominant culture leads creative minorities to refresh and reinvigorate ailing cultures.” It takes courage and willingness to be viewed as outside the “norm,” but it may allow us to regain some of the influence we’ve lost through pursuing relevance.
Here are a few resources and ideas to help:
1. Be Connected. As our culture becomes more hostile to Christianity, abiding in Christ as a way of life and living in rich community with other believers are vital practices both in helping us hold fast to our faith and in allowing us to build a countercultural, communal witness for Christ.
2. Be Ready. Brown’s EII Forum speakers advocated for readiness as a key cog in effective ministry in the workplace, echoing 1 Peter 3:15 ⎯ “In your hearts honor Christ the Lord as holy, always being prepared to make a defense to anyone who asks you for a reason for the hope that is in you; yet do it with gentleness and respect.”
3. Be Watchful. Prayer is easy to neglect but more crucial than ever. Prayer brings us into partnership with God in His work, part of which is to turn wayward hearts to Christ. As we pray for God to do this, Colossians 4:2 reminds us to be watchful. While reflecting on how the EII Forum challenged him, Sam mentioned adopting a prayerful posture that, in each interaction, asks, “Lord, what is this encounter meant for? What do I do here?”
4. Be Courageous. While people are sometimes drawn to Christ through our bridge-building — seeking to make Him more attractive through our character, actions, conversations, and even events — we need to become more like a ferry boat operator. Instead of waiting for someone to start across the bridge, we cross the gap to them to usher them toward Christ. It takes intentionality to talk about Jesus both directly and in relationally appropriate and compassionate ways, to be the one bringing Him and His message up in conversation.
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