| After much prayer, Hamilton began to drive 150 miles
every other week and set up ten-minute appointments with executives.
The meetings quickly convinced him that the needs were real and
confirmed his sense of God's call. Hamilton resigned his pastorate
and, with his wife, Judy, and their two-year-old son, moved to Minneapolis.
With no nucleus of people, no organization to support him officially,
Hamilton worked 15-hour days conveying his vision. "Although
a person may wear a very nice suit, inside he or she may be crippled,
blind, or impoverished," Hamilton remembers stressing to people.
"My objective was to bring the concept of Christ as Redeemer
to everyone from CEOs to receptionists, to fill an appetite—a
spiritual appetite for which Jesus Christ is the answer. That was
my motivation."
Certified financial planner Greg Molle is among the dozens of volunteers
Hamilton has attracted to help reach the executives and office workers.
"Traditionally the poor, the homeless, and the inner city have
been the mission field of the church," he explains, "but
corporate America the crossroads where our country does business
has been largely ignored."
Hamilton began holding monthly (now, twice monthly) noon-hour services
in the auditorium of a national insurance corporation served by
the skyway. The seats are padded, the stage has a wide, leisurely
look, the floor is carpeted, and the podium up front gives no clues
that it will soon double as a pulpit.
Services begin like clockwork at 12:10 (allowing workers time to
walk the skyway to the auditorium). Live music—designed to
settle and quiet people after an intense morning of work—prepares
the hundred or so worshipers for Hamilton's message.
Hamilton keeps his messages to the point, limiting himself to seven
to eight minutes. He applies Scripture to business situations whenever
he can: setting personal goals, persevering through stressful times,
enhancing careers.
"We strive to show from Scripture how Christ is involved in
all the intimate details of life," Hamilton explains. Thinking
of some in his audience who face being laid off because of a corporate
takeover, for example, Hamilton presses a point about God's care.
"Is God in this or not?" he asks. "If he is, then
claim it. Let him be your helper." The service is brought to
a businesslike close after a half-hour; Hamilton knows how important
schedules are to managers and office workers.
"My focus remains at the top of the ladder," says Hamilton.
"I knew that if I could inspire executives first, and get them
to own the vision, then the remaining levels of management would
follow." So far, a core of 10 to 12 executives have stuck out
the early months. "Because of their vocal support, and the
popularity of the skyways with salaried and hourly workers, about
250 lay people have joined as Church Metro regulars," he says.
Regular attendee Steve Stormoen, a bank staff consultant, explains,
"It's a place to do business with God." Stormoen came
to appreciate the sessions so much that he now regularly invites
unbelieving associates to services. "I'd been at the bank 20
years but couldn't share my faith until now."
Diedre Dahlstrom, a manager at Dayton Hudson headquarters, has
had similar experiences. "I might say to a young woman coworker,
'Here's what I'm doing for lunch; want to come along?' A couple
of my friends have really opened up and have been spiritually enriched."
The 30-some worship services held to date, which began with 20
in attendance, now average over a hundred. "Eventually, we
hope to offer three to five brief worship meetings daily-a frequency
that will increase people's freedom to come and go," Hamilton
adds.
The heart and soul of business
Church Metro also provides counseling by phone, appointment, or
in person.
Eleven coordinators at nine different corporations (such as Dayton
Hudson, Pillsbury, and Norwest Bank) help Hamilton keep track of
people's needs. Coordinators also sometimes counsel. They look for
ways to help hurting coworkers, model Christian living, and be professional
and spiritual mentors. "We act as a sounding board for coworkers
and listen objectively. We want to help people deal with family
pressures, marriage, or divorce," Hamilton says.
By mid-1991, Church Metro even expects to have a ministry center
situated on the skyway that offers walk-in counseling, and a video
center showing spiritually oriented programs. To finance the facility,
Hamilton and his board of directors (which includes two women) are
raising money by word of mouth. They are quietly asking local churches
to include them in their mission budgets and are "stirring
up awareness" at meetings among individuals.
While a media center may seem impersonal to some, Hamilton thinks
it provides a way to help while at the same time it respects an
individual's rights. Aware of the retail atmosphere of the skyway,
he wants his approach to be like that of the stores around him.
"We're not into buttonhole evangelism. Any retailer today knows
a customer wants 'space' until he or she needs help; then a friendly
salesperson will step in. We want to respond rather than confront,
to let our guests be guests and take the initiative."
Hamilton reaches for the Bible in his briefcase. "Of course,
we intend to provide the truth," he concludes. "If a person
applies what he or she has learned and sees how it works, we hope
it will dawn on him or her, 'Hey, I'm putting into practice a biblical
principle. This works.' In turn, we believe they will consider Christ
as their Lord and Savior."
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