The Jesus Geek Creed

The following is the culmination of hearing people laud our skills after servicing their computers. We have it on a whiteboard here for all to see. This may just be a draft.

Despite what you might think, feel, or say:

We’re not geniuses …
We’re not magicians (it’s forbidden; Deut. 18:10-11) …
We’re not gods …
We’re not even “gurus” …

We are simply your brothers and sisters who know that things designed and built by fallen creatures (Romans 3:23), using materials from a planet subjected to frustration (Romans 8:20-21), are bound to break and fail.

And we’re dumb enough to fix them anyway.

Irons in the fire

Today I gave a pilot presentation of our impending email change to my own department. It was good to have a rehearsal for the similar talks we’re planning for the rest of the people who work on our campus. Rather than deliver this major news to one large group, I hope to work with small groups to pass on information that could be somewhat overwhelming to people.

I think my little seminar was well received. No one tried to kill or maul me.

For a lot of the Wycliffe members I serve here in Dallas, this change in email is going to necessitate a major shift in thinking and practice. Much of the work of Bible translation is progressing through email messages that flow constantly around the world. Any disruption to what is now a familiar daily exercise is bound to cause anxiety.

I don’t need the Counseling department breathing down my neck because I’ve given them more clients than they can handle. But after today, I think I can prevent the stampede.

At the same time, I am also working on a major overhaul of our helpdesk system. Have you ever submitted something to a support website? Ugh, even the terminology sends me reeling! “Request”, “ticket”, or “incident”? “Helpdesk”, or “support”? “User”, or “customer”?

When we first put this system together, the handful of us working on it looked at things almost exclusively from a geek’s perspective. It’s easy to see that now. And even while those 1,000 mailboxes occupy some part of my mind, other parts are bent on making our helpdesk “user-centric”. The whiteboard in my office is losing its white-ness to all the ideas I’m putting on it.

These days, Bible translation needs technology in order to work smarter and faster. When it doesn’t work, I want the people involved to have their problems resolved as quickly as possible. A smoothly functioning helpdesk can help make that happen.

In the week ahead, please pray that the Lord, my King, would give me the wisdom, patience, and perseverance I need to bring glory to Him through these projects. Hmm … even now, Psalm 46:10 comes to my mind. Did you pray before I hit the “Publish” button?

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