Business as Mission – The Pollinator: Creation Care Network News http://news.lwccn.com Headlines, opportunities and prayer needs from around the world. Thu, 01 Jun 2023 13:46:52 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 https://i0.wp.com/news.lwccn.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/cropped-pollinator-icon.png?fit=32%2C32 Business as Mission – The Pollinator: Creation Care Network News http://news.lwccn.com 32 32 164541824 One Big Thing: Creation Care and Business as Mission http://news.lwccn.com/2022/10/one-big-thing-creation-care-and-business-as-mission/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=one-big-thing-creation-care-and-business-as-mission Fri, 07 Oct 2022 02:00:00 +0000 http://news.lwccn.com/?p=1295 One of the more effective strategies for missions outreach over the last several years (decades?) has been the Business as Mission (BAM) movement. Now an Issue Group within the main BAM movement has issued a substantial report that has been several years in the making: One Big Thing: The One Thing a God-honouring Business Must Do to Be a Good Creation Care Steward.

Produced with input from leaders around the world, the report offers a number of ‘big things’ BAM companies can do. Here’s a taste of the report from the Executive Summary:

Business as Mission (BAM) companies serve people who face great environmental, even existential challenges. BAM practitioners are on the ground already in many areas of the greatest need and are positioned to respond.

To help BAM practitioners meet the business as mission goal— or bottom line—of environmental stewardship, we asked some of the leading Christian scientists and thinkers on the topic of business and creation care:

What is the one thing you would tell a God-honouring business they must do to be a good creation care steward?

What other advice would you give to those businesses?

We received strong guidance from this wider group, drawn from their experience and a knowledge of the biblical view of creation care. This report summarises their advice, complemented by our own analysis, into the following emerging themes:

• Be part of the solution

• Talk about it

• Connect with nature and appreciate it

• Become acquainted with local and international environmental laws

• Study the Bible on creation care and ask God for help

• Set measurable outputs and internal incentives for reducing waste and pollution

• Create a sustainable supply chain and go local where possible

• Conduct an energy audit

• Speak up for creation with government officials and politicians

• Dedicate a team for creation care within the staff and be intentional

Read more or download the entire report here.

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Business and the Stewardship of Creation http://news.lwccn.com/2020/11/business-and-the-stewardship-of-creation/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=business-and-the-stewardship-of-creation Sat, 07 Nov 2020 12:18:31 +0000 http://news.lwccn.com/?p=778 Business As Mission (BAM) has been an effective tool for spreading the gospel of Jesus and building the church around the world, particularly in places where traditional mission outreach is diffcult or impossible. We salute our brothers and sisters working in this space, though at times we have wished creation care was a more prominent part of their strategies.

Mark Polet, long-time member of the BAM community, has recently published “A Cup of Cold Water: Business and the Stewardship of Creation” in the BAM Review (their blog). Here’s an excerpt – click through to read the whole thing, and by all means let Mark know if this is encouraging to you:

The purpose of this blog is to reflect and comment on the eleventh affirmation of the Wealth Creation Manifesto:

11. Creation care is not optional. Stewardship of creation and business solutions to environmental challenges should be an integral part of wealth creation through business.

The Wealth Creation Manifesto is an integrated whole, and so I would like to continue from Dr. Rod St. Hill’s blog on affirmations 7 and 8. Rod argues that the BAM movement is committed to the quadruple bottom line – economic, social, environmental and spiritual. He then quotes Amartya Sen, saying threats to environmental sustainability is an ‘unfreedom’ that must be overcome to foster development.

Creation is a gift from God. Eons ago, God created everything we need right now for our businesses. What are we going to do with the gift?’ Specifically, how do we “set the captives free” [1] answering the challenge given by Rod St. Hill?’

Read the full post here.

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