Vocation as Common Grace for the Common Good

Speaker(s): Steven Garber
Date: Summer 2016
Length: 11h 46m
Product ID: RGDL4612S

Purchase Options:

MP3 Download - $34.99
CD - $54.99

Description

 

Our vocations are central to God's work in the world and his plan for humanity. Too often, though, we equate our vocations with our occupations. Join Steve Garber as he distinguishes these concepts, developing a deeper understanding of what it means to be made in the image of God. Uncover a vocation that encompasses your whole being: one that animates your occupation, guides your management of relationships and responsibilities, and shapes your engagement with a desperate world.

See All Audio by Steven Garber

Steven Garber has a classroom among many people in many places. As the Founder and Principal of the Washington Institute, the heart of his own calling is that people understand the integral character of faith, vocation, and culture. Author of The Fabric of Faithfulness: Weaving Together Belief and Behavior and Visions of Vocation: Common Grace for the Common Good, he writes frequently for Comment and Critique. For many years he taught on Capitol Hill in the American Studies Program, and then became the Scholar-in-Residence for the Council for Christian Colleges and Universities.nHe serves as a board member for Ransom Fellowship, the Blood:Water Mission, A Rocha, and the Telos Project, and as a consultant for the Wedgwood Circle, the Murdock Trust, the Demdaco Corporation and the Mars Corporation.

Related Audio

Details / Buy

Forming Vocation--The Whole of Life for the Rest of Life

Speaker: Steve Garber

Details / Buy

The Tears of Christ & The Silence of God Conference

Speaker: Makoto Fujimura, Steven Garber

Details / Buy

On Seeing Seamlessly

Speaker: Steven Garber

Details / Buy

Roundtable Discussion: Christian Spirituality & Vocation

Speaker: Christopher Hall, Steven Garber, Carolyn Arends

Details / Buy

Roundtable Talk: FOLLOWING AND LEADING ON THE PATH OF WISDOM

Speaker: Paul Stevens, Peter Shaw, Clive Lim