Synergy

Synergy. Cohesion. Harmony. Teamwork. There are many business buzzwords that essentially describe the same thing. Leaders want their teams to get along. Each year’s New York Times best-seller list has at least a few volumes on how to make sure your team works well together. Since these books fly off the shelves (or fingers fly to click “purchase and download” on tablets and phones), it would seem that this is a deeply-felt and seldom-satisfied need. Teams need to get along, but more often than not they don’t.
Don’t you find that to be true outside of the business world as well? Even the closest family, the giggliest book club, the warmest and most inviting church group, or the most dynamic faculty in the district will get out of sync. Tempers can flare up. Harsh and hasty words spill out of unguarded mouths half-accidentally. Judgment and unconstructive criticism take the throne. Emotions and motivation plummet.
Business leaders are interested in the “secret sauce” to cohesion so that their teams can remain productive. We all want our families and friends to get along so that we can have more fun and be more at peace. Our experience only confirms what happened at the Garden of Eden: the first casualty of sin’s entrance into the human story was harmony in our relationships (See Genesis 3:8-24).
Books that teach how to create cohesion in a team, faculty, or family will often have great advice to follow, but rarely will treat the source of the issue: sin.
That’s why we can appreciate Paul’s final greetings to the struggling, scared congregation at Ephesus. He says:
Ephesians 6:23-24 – “Peace to the brothers and sisters, and love with faith from God the Father and the Lord Jesus Christ. Grace to all who love our Lord Jesus Christ with an undying love.”
He wants for the Ephesians what we all want: peace and harmony. However, Paul knows how it is actually possible. Peace must come from outside of ourselves. The God who loved us and made us his own through the work of Christ gives us peace by restoring our broken relationship with him. He triumphed over the judgment we deserved by serving it up on the cross of Christ, killing it there.
This means that among us there is no need to resort to judgmentalism and unconstructive criticism, because we have received the joyous peace from God. We have an antidote for high tempers and low self-esteem: the righteousness of Christ that covers us through faith. We are called to reflect the peace of God in the way we treat each other.
We have been loved with an eternal love, so it’s only natural to love Jesus back! How? By loving others, treating them with kindness and compassion, and showing the peace of God that we now have by being peaceable people. Maybe then the secret to true harmony and true “synergy” will start to catch on.
Pastor Mike Cherney





