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PRAYER is the heart of Great Commission Movement of Nigeria ministries.
Helping students know Jesus, grow in their faith and go to the world to tell others.
We’ve seen firsthand how digital tools can be used for advancing the Great Commission.
FamilyLife provides transferrable, biblically-based help for you at every stage...
Helping to provide media tools, training, strategies and resources for evangelism in every needed language.
We believe God puts leaders in positions of influence in all segments...
It focuses on working in partnership with churches on a non-denominational basis...
It focuses on a holistic approach to the Gospel to meet the physical, emotional, social and spiritual needs of vulnerable people.
The Police and Military Ministry focuses on reaching and raising multiplying disciples for Christ through effective partnership with Churches in the barracks.
A Christ follower on every team, in every sport and in every country.
Position and empower teams* of mission-minded people in the 36 States and Federal Capital Territory w
How we seek to journey together with everyone towards a relationship with Jesus.
Leading from values so others will walk passionately with God to grow and bear fruit.
Learn about our national, area and global leadership teams.
What we believe about the gospel and our call to serve every nation.
Great Commission Movement of Nigeria 10 Secretariat Road Jos, Plateau State Tel: +234 -810-003-9399. Email: info@gcmnigeria.org; website: www.gcmnigeria.org Facebook: @gcmnig, Twitter: @gcmnig, Youtube: GCM Nigeria
In the TV show The Office, Stanley Hudson sums up the attitude of Dunder-Mifflin’s employees in 9 words:
“This here is a run out the clock situation.”
This expresses one extreme of how people view their work: it’s simply a means to an end, and the end is a paycheck.
I’ve felt this way before. You probably have too.
But the opposite extreme — viewing work as an end in itself — isn’t any healthier.
Work plays a significant role in our lives. Our workplace is where we’ll spend most of our waking hours as adults. So defining ourselves by our work becomes incredibly tempting, even natural.
Unfortunately, by defining ourselves primarily through work performance, we allow something other than God to tell us who we are. This will ultimately lead us away from God.
But a healthy middle ground does exist. Finding it requires the right perspective.
Famed industrialist Andrew Carnegie once said, “My heart is in the work.” This simple phrase captures the difference between a job and a vocation.
We’re willing to give ourselves to work we’re passionate about. That’s why we’ll often describe it as a “calling.”
But by doing so, we inadvertently distort the biblical idea of calling.
God calls us into His family, not His corporation.
By embracing our deeper identity as a child of God, we are freed to pursue a vocation wholeheartedly without becoming consumed by it.
Being created in God’s image means we were created to do the meaningful work described above — work that improves lives, builds society, and advances God’s Kingdom.
Optometrists help people see, trash collectors clean our neighborhoods, artists show us the world through different lenses, etc.
So we can do our jobs as acts of worship to God and service to others, by doing them with excellence, diligence, integrity, and humility.
How do you see your co-workers? Are they more like friends you work alongside or people competing against you for respect and position?
Have you ever considered a colleague to be any kind of enemy?
Whether we see co-workers as friends or enemies, Jesus’ instructions are the same: we are to love them (Matthew 5:44, Mark 12:31).
The Bible teaches us how to love others in light of being loved by God.
Here are some ideas for loving your co-workers well:
You have the choice to accept the culture of your workplace, or with God’s help, be part of shaping it.
Where do you go from here?
Are you searching for your life’s purpose? How we each live out our purpose may look different, but our purpose was defined long, long ago.
The importance of taking care of your body along with scriptural principles relating to physical health and suggested ways to improve.
Umpires need to be invisible. Yet God can redeem our work even if others don’t notice or affirm us. There are parallels between working in anonymity like an umpire and serving in God’s kingdom.
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