Prior to opening Alabaster Coffee in downtown Williamsport, PA, founder Karl Fisher was in full-time vocational ministry.For many, that sort of transition happens in reverse, but for Fisher, moving from churchplace tomarketplace amplified the scope of his service in new and unexpected ways.
“I have already viewed my life as, ‘How are we bringing the Gospel to munity?’” Fisher says. “But now, in many ways, not being a vocational pastor and being in the marketplace, there are definitely aspects of that that give me a broader platform.”
Struck by Alabaster Coffee’s culture and product, Evan Koons spoke with Fisher about hisbusiness and the ways our creative service can spread the Gospel and transform culture:
In a world of accelerating industrialization, societyis learning to rememberand betterappreciate the dynamics munity and craftsmanship in business. AsFisher aptly demonstrates, these arenatural priorities for pounded by something a bit more permanent at the root: a love for people rooted in thelove of Jesus.
Christians in creative service have a call to meet economicneeds, but we do so by connectingthe tangible to the transcendent, the temporal to the eternal.
Though small and local businesses like Alabaster have a unique way of clarifying these things, such features are not confined toawe-inspiring coffee shops orartisan bookmakers andbakers. The call to creative service spans across culture, from factory workers to farmers, oil riggers to artists, welders to Wall Street CEOs.
“How we do our work, how it’s plished, the attitudes that we have to it, is very much an act of worship,” Fisher concludes. “My ability to work and the means to work — the way that I view that should absolutely be joyful and worshipful.”
For more on how creative service connects to God’s economy of all things, see Episode 3 of For the Life of the World.