| Today's hot new
career handbook? The Bible.
November 28, 2005 | By Patrik
Jonsson | Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor
DURHAM, N.C. – Landing in
jail threatened to end Joseph's promising career. But he
befriended the warden, won release from Pharaoh, and emerged,
as the Bible tells it, to save Egypt from starvation.
It's the kind of journey line that, more or less, Willie
Jones is hoping to walk, too. Just released from 16 years
in state prison for drug trafficking, Mr. Jones faces employment
prospects that he calls insurmountable. But the story of
the famous Israelite gives him hope. "I can certainly
relate to Joseph - and more," says the heavyset man
with a cane and a pale beard.
At Durham's Covenant Presbyterian Church, Jones is one of
eight prospective hires - ex-cons and ex-homemakers dressed
in their best - learning how to gain confidence and break
through personal roadblocks with a biblical bent: a bit
of Jeremiah for the jitters, some Noah for uplift, and Joseph
for perspective.
They are here because of Jobs for Life, a group based in
nearby Raleigh that helps churches and faith-based organizations
provide practical job training from a spiritual perspective.

HOPEFUL: Willy Jones, center,
relates to the story of Joseph.
|
Today, as part of its first national
"Bible-to-work" program, Jobs for Life founder
Skip Long wants to put 52,000 such tough hires into the
workplace next year.
Experts say the decision by Mr. Long to not seek federal
money to help chronically unemployed Americans also shows
the limits of the White House's efforts to use church groups
to help the 15-million-strong US "underclass."
"Religion is very useful in these sorts of life-change
programs, because it's saying you're not alone, you get
a second chance, and Jesus is with you in that second chance,"
says University of Michigan economist Rebecca Blank, author
of "Do Justice: Linking Christian Faith and Modern
Economic Life."
"That's pretty powerful when people are feeling very
lonely and down and not sure they can make it," she
adds.
A Mennonite minister with a gap-toothed smile and a passion
for social justice, Long wants to invoke in job-seekers
a deeper faith in God's power, and ultimately themselves,
in order to overcome employment obstacles - whether a behavioral
flaw, a long-time absence from the job market, or a criminal
past.
"The cornerstone of a healthy life is gainful employment,"
says Long. "It's not only letting them know they're
valued by God as individuals, but by putting that value
in their life and helping them believe that about themselves,
it's going to take them a lot further [in the workplace]."
To be sure, while talking the religious talk, some students
in the Durham class are desperate simply to meet someone
who can open doors for them, says Jones.
Still, research shows that faith-based antipoverty programs
tend to outperform secular ones. The Washington-based Jobs
Partnership, the model for Jobs for Life, placed 80 percent
of its 220 graduates in jobs in 2004. Similar, but secular,
job-coach programs tend to have success rates in the 60
percent range.
But even after Long met privately with President Bush earlier
this year, he says the prospect of receiving federal money
is souring as groups such as the Freedom From Religion Foundation
step up the legal fight against public funding of Bible-based
"life-change" programs.
Jobs for Life "might be something [separationists]
would take a close look at," says Bryan Jackson, a
spokesman at the Roundtable on Religion and Social Welfare
Policy in New York. "Some organizations feel that perhaps
they might come under legal scrutiny and [therefore] tend
to shy away from accepting public money."
But cutting out Bible passages from its program to meet
federal standards would certainly emasculate the Jobs for
Life curriculum. Instead, Jobs for Life is marketing its
$499 curriculum kits to more than 2,000 ministries across
the nation.
From dos and don'ts to the prayerful, students learn the
47 most-asked interview questions - "What are the three
things you like best about yourself?" - and peruse
Jeremiah 29:11: "'For I know the plans I have for you,'
declares the Lord, 'plans to prosper you and not harm you,
plans to give you hope and a future.' " [New International
Version]
Long-time homemaker Elaine Grenon says she's trying to turn
a volunteer position at a local church into a full-time
job. But first she has to figure out how to write a proper
résumé, make friendly eye contact, and give
thoughtful answers to tough interview questions.
"A lot of what Joseph and Noah went through, we go
through in everyday life," she says. "Instead
of going off the handle, there are better ways to handle
things, and if you obey God's word and believe in him, you
can make it."
Such faith is not naive, hiring experts say, especially
in a tightening labor market where employers are often giving
marginal candidates a second look.
"People make mistakes that may show up on background
checks, but most employers would give them serious thought
if they have the right personality and behavioral makeup,"
says Robert Cameron, a hiring consultant based in Weston,
Fla.
"And I'd think for what these people are trying to
accomplish, [a Bible-to-work program] could work for them."
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