My Faith and Work Story Series:

My Faith and Work Story interviews from the Nashville Institute for Faith and Work provide real-life examples of what it looks like to engage the brokenness of the world in light of the good news of Jesus through our daily work.

This interview features Alumni of the NIFW Gotham Fellowship, Eli Haney and Todd Foster. They discuss how they experienced God’s provision and presence through seasons of uncertainty with job changes, transitions, and job loss.

This interview features Visual Artist and Alum of the NIFW Gotham Fellowship Beth Reitmeyer.

This interview features Dr. Brian Lindman, Cardiovascular Medicine, Medical Director of Structural Heart and Valve Center, and Associate Professor of Medicine at Vanderbilt University

 

Gotham Fellowship: Stories of Impact

The Nashville Institute for Faith and Work’s 9-month intensive called Gotham culminates each year with a cultural renewal project designed to help our Gothamites use their training to shine light on situational or systemic darkness in their sphere of influence.

Chris Redhage, CUltural renewal at Provider trust

Chris Redhage, an Alumni of the Nashville Gotham Fellowship and Co-Founder of Provider Trust, shares how this company is seeking cultural renewal in the space of Health Care Compliance.

Thomas Hunter, Mental Illness in the criminal justice system

Nashville Gotham Alumni Thomas Hunter and Sheriff Daron Hall share the story of the Davidson County Behavioral Care Center and how they are working to decriminalize mental illness in the criminal justice system.

 
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Jay Cherry, Emergency Employee Fund

As the capstone to his yearlong study in NIFW's Gotham program, c/o 2017 alumni Jay Cherry proposed an Emergency Employee Fund at his Fotune 500 Company to help both drive profits and keep fellow employees engaged by tangibly meeting a need. Watch Jay's story on our YouTube page.

Bill bainbridge, affordable housing idea

Real estate agent Bill Bainbridge knows the Nashville housing boom is diminishing the city’s affordable housing, so for his 2016 cultural renewal project, he decided to do something about it. Read more about Bill’s idea in The Tennessean