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God’s Pattern for Changing Culture
A lesson from the natural gas industry, a summit conversation with David Bereit, and the ministry of Jesus converge on the same truth: lasting transformation never begins with policy — it begins upstream, with the renewing of the mind.
Where Lasting Change Begins
If you read my recent article, Leave It Better, you know I returned from Japan with a question I couldn’t shake. How do values become so deeply embedded that doing the right thing simply becomes “the way we do things”?
At the Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF) Summit a few weeks later, I heard David Bereit share an insight that connected my experience in Japan with a lesson I had learned years earlier in corporate America.
At the time, I was leading one of three regions selected to pilot a new initiative called Behavior-Based Safety. Our region included approximately 250 field and office workers. In the natural gas industry, safety isn’t a corporate slogan or an annual training event — it is literally a matter of life and death.
Like every other region, we had policies, OSHA regulations, and detailed safety manuals. But this initiative challenged us to think differently. Instead of management owning safety, employees would. The objective wasn’t better compliance; it was building a culture where every employee believed safety was their personal responsibility.
As employees embraced ownership, I noticed something changing. People no longer asked, “What do I have to do?” They started asking, “What’s the right thing to do?” That wasn’t a policy question. It was a culture question.
That shift began influencing decisions across our region. One example came when our leadership team chose to adopt a higher safety standard than company policy required. Although technicians were permitted to work around certain gas leaks under very specific conditions, we decided our region simply wouldn’t. If there was a leak, we shut the gas off first. Every time. Not because corporate required it. Because that’s who we wanted to become.
Looking back, that culture shift was what made our region one of the safest in the company. It wasn’t because we had different policies or different OSHA regulations. As that mindset spread, safety conversations moved from the conference room to the field. Employees challenged, protected, and held one another accountable because they genuinely cared about one another.
“One of our inspectors respectfully stopped him and asked him to either remain in his vehicle or put on the proper PPE. No one hesitated. His title didn’t matter. Safety mattered.” — Krystal Parker
The culture had become stronger than both the written standard and the organizational chart.
A Pattern Behind Every Cultural Shift
As David Bereit continued sharing his journey at ADF, he explained that after years of studying some of the most significant cultural shifts in our nation’s history, he began noticing a pattern. Whether he studied seatbelts, smoking, or other major cultural shifts, he found the same pattern. Lasting transformation rarely began with policy. Ideas spread through conversations, media, education, businesses, churches, and communities until they simply became “the way we do things.”
His research led him to a simple framework for understanding how cultural norms are formed.
David Bereit’s Framework for Cultural Change
The moment he shared those three statements, everything clicked. I thought about our safety initiative. No policy created that culture. An idea did. The idea spread from one employee to another until protecting one another simply became the way we do things.
Then I thought about Japan. The stewardship I witnessed there wasn’t the product of someone constantly enforcing rules. It was the result of values passed from one generation to the next until they became cultural norms.
And then it hit me. This isn’t just David Bereit’s research. It’s God’s strategy.
God’s Strategy: Upstream, Not Downstream
Jesus never organized a political movement. He never attempted to reform the Roman government or seize positions of influence. He didn’t start with Caesar. He started with disciples. He invested in twelve ordinary men, transforming the way they thought before sending them out to transform the world.
That pattern echoes throughout Scripture.
Transformation begins with the renewing of the mind. Jesus described the Kingdom of Heaven as yeast working its way through an entire batch of dough — quietly, consistently, until every part was changed. He called His followers the salt of the earth and the light of the world, not because they would force change, but because their lives would influence everything around them.
Influence, not coercion, has always been God’s pattern.
The Chain of Transformation
Building Kingdom Cultures
As Christian business leaders, that should fundamentally change how we think about the marketplace. Every organization is creating a culture. Every leader is shaping values. Every business is teaching people what is normal, what is celebrated, and what is tolerated. Whether we realize it or not, every organization is discipling someone.
Perhaps we’ve spent too much time trying to change what’s downstream. God has always worked upstream. If policy is downstream from culture, then Christian business leaders are not standing on the sidelines of cultural change. We are standing at its source.
“Perhaps one of the greatest callings of Christian business leaders isn’t simply to build successful companies. It’s to build Kingdom cultures.” — Krystal Parker
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