Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Promoting Community Flourishing at Common Good RVA
Promoting Community Flourishing at Common Good RVA
Mar 12, 2026 1:04 PM

On January 18-19, over 200 Christians gathered at the Common Good RVA event in Richmond, VA, to “explore what it means to see our everyday work as a meaningful part of our Christian calling.” Barrett Clark, director of strategy and analytics for Ivy Ventures, attended the event and provided a helpful summary to On Call in Culture.

By Barrett Clark

Throughout history, the term mon good” has been used in a variety of ways, taking on various meanings, often in the service of personal or political ends.

At the recent Common Good RVA event in Richmond, VA, hosted by Christianity Today and two Richmond churches, local believers were challenged to give meaning to the phrase in their faith and daily lives. As the event sought to affirm, the Common Good is ultimately God–acting through his people, by his delegation.

The conference was an extension of Christianity Today’s This is Our City series, which covers Christian-led cultural renewal efforts in several American cities, whether it beselling mattresses or providing low-cost lighting to the developing world. With a band, beards, and a program broken up by videos and tweets, the event had all the signs of a conference geared toward 20- and 30-something creatives and young professionals.

Andy Crouch, senior editor of Christianity Today, led the event, covering some of the main points from his book, Culture Making. Pointing to the current state of American Protestant church, Crouch drew parallels with 19th-century Pope Leo XIII, who chose to lead from a position of spiritual power when the Catholic Church lost a degree of temporal power in physical territory and earthlygovernance. In a similar way, Crouch argued, today’s American church is losing some of its own temporal power when es to directly influencing government, policy, and power. Once again, we are pressed to rely more heavily on spiritual power, engaging society and culture for the Common Good at lower, closer levels of human interaction and engagement.

Crouch noted that this perspective of the Common Good builds on three primary areas:

Flourishing – being magnificently ourselves by doing what we were created to doVulnerability – taking care of the vulnerable whilealso realizing that we, too, are the vulnerableCommunity – recognizing that the Common Good is notonly pursued individually, but is carried out through small groups munities

Amy Sherman from nearby Charlottesville and author of Kingdom Calling took the topic further, sharing detailed stories about people participating in the Common Good through their various vocations. Drawing out points from her book and life, she explained that the Common Good is a foretaste of the Kingdom, the New Jerusalem.

The event was appropriately spaced with videos by Nathan Clarke, who showed several Richmond locals using their vocations and making the mundane important and useful. Time was also allotted for dialogue about what the Common Good looks like in areas of vocation.

Common Good RVA had the right overarching theme, encouraging the local munity to engage its city for transcendent purposes. The simplicity of the message may have caught some young professionals off guard, as many career-oriented individuals often look for very specific and tangible ways to engage their work munity in Christ. Instead, the message from Crouch and Sherman called for us to pull out of our sometimes individualistic career paths and be “radically God centered” and “other centered.”

Barrett Clark is the director of strategy and analytics for Ivy Ventures, a hospital consulting firm focusing on business growth strategies. He is the president of his neighborhood association and sits on the advisory board of the Elijah House Academy, a K-12 school serving primarily the inner city of Richmond, VA. When he has time, he enjoys skiing, backpacking, and cycling.

For more on restoring a proper view of work and meaning, see Work: The Meaning of Your Life and Flourishing Churches and Communities.

To join the On Call in munity, like us on Facebook or follow us on Twitter.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
In Memoriam: Walter Berns
Resident Scholar at AEI and Georgetown University Professor Emeritus of Government, Walter Berns, passed away on January 10, 2015. Director of Istituto Acton, Kishore Jayabalan, recently reflected on his time in Bern’s classroom and how that greatly influenced him: Simply put, I would not be where I am today if I hadn’t audited the last course he taught at Georgetown. Slogging away as an economist at the Bureau of Labor Statistics in Washington, I dreamt of graduate school while taking...
Catholic Bishops In Venezuela Take The Government To Task
In a country rife with economic and social ills, Venezuela’s Catholic bishops issued a strongly-worded critique of the government during their annual conference this week. According to The Wall Street Journal: The church has long preached reconciliation in the bitterly polarized nation. But as the oil price plummets and economic disaster threatens, the bishops clearly are losing patience. Monday’s statement recalled the 43 deaths during antigovernment protests in early 2014, the “excessive use of force” by the state against protestors,...
‘Watchers of the Sky’: Awakening the World’s Moral Conscience
The mass killings of minority groups, which have occurred time and time again throughout history, are often prehension. How can humans be capable of such evil? But even more inexplicable and troubling is the fact that many of these atrocities have gone largely unnoticed. They have not received due recognition and response either from heads of states or the public at large. Fortunately, these tragic historical events have not eluded all. The new documentary, Watchers of the Sky, scheduled for...
Chinese Government Tries To Stay Ahead Of Child Traffickers
Underground delivery rooms. Babies smuggled in designer handbags. Criminal gangs kidnapping pregnant women. It’s all part of a growing concern in China: child trafficking. According to CNN, Chinese authorities rescued 37 newborns and one toddler this week, arresting over 100 people in the process. The operation included the raid of an “underground delivery room” in an abandoned warehouse, where one baby was found near death under a large pile of blankets. It is believed that the children were going to...
Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette: Making Progress Against Human Trafficking
In 2013, the State of Michigan published its Report on Human Trafficking. In anticipation of the publication of the Acton Institute’s monograph, A Vulnerable World: The High Price of Human Trafficking,I interviewed Attorney General Bill Schuette last month. Schuette (who served as co-chair for the Commission) explained that he realized upon his election that Michigan had a great deal of work to do in this area. As he prepared to attend the National Conference of Attorneys General, he became aware...
Yep, the Social Sciences Really Are Biased Against Conservatives
“Psychologists have demonstrated the value of diversity—particularly diversityof viewpoints—for enhancing creativity, discovery, and problem solving,” say a team of social scientists in a new paper. “But one key type of viewpoint diversity is lacking in academic psychology in general and social psychology in particular: political diversity.” Social psychology is an interdisciplinary domain that bridges the gap between psychology and sociology by studying how people’s thoughts, feelings, and behaviors are influenced by the actual, imagined, or implied presence of others. The...
Vox Connects the Dots Between Inequality and Envy
Imagine that the wealth of both the poorest and richest Americans were to double overnight (and the middle class wealth stayed the same). Would the poor be better off? Most of us would agree they would be. But those obsessed with e and wealth inequality would fret thatthe poor were in even worse shape than before sinceinequality just got much, much worse. The difference in opinion is based on ourchoice of perspective. If you care about the only inequality that...
The KKK, Selma, and southern Christianity
Two January 2015 film releases provide great opportunities for Christians to examine the not so admirable aspects of American church history in order to learn from the mistakes and successes of the past. First, the newly released movie Selma tells of the story of the passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 and the public protests leading up to LBJ signing the bill into law. My parents were born and raised during Jim Crow and the movie does a...
God Is With You in the Workplace (Whether You Know It or Not)
This post is part of a symposium on vocation between the PatheosFaith and Work Channeland the PatheosEvangelical Channel, and originally appeared at the Oikonomia blog, a resource fromthe Acton Institute on faith, work, and economics. We’ve seen a renewed focus among Christians on the deeper value, meaning, and significance of our daily work, leading to lots of reflection on how we might “find God in the workplace.” As a result, Christians are ing ever more attentive to things like vocation...
10 Quotes for Religious Freedom Day
Thomas Jefferson wanted what he considered to be his three greatest achievements to be listed on his tombstone. The inscription, as he stipulated, reads “Here was buried Thomas Jefferson, author of the Declaration of American Independence, of the Statute of Virginia for Religious Freedom, and father of the University of Virginia.” Today we celebrate the 229th anniversary of one of those great creations: the passage, in 1786, of the Virginia Statute of Religious Freedom. Each year, the President declares January...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved