Show Notes
In episode 5 of Season 7 of The GenSend Podcast, Shane Pruitt, Paul Worcester, and Lacey Villasenor offer a clear vision for how bivocational and covocational ministry is a strategic advantage for reaching your campus and community, especially if you’re a leader who’s navigating ministry alongside school, work, or life. Discover practical rhythms for managing your time, avoiding burnout, and leading from a place of spiritual health. Be challenged to rethink calling, not as a single lane, but as a life lived on mission wherever God has placed you. This conversation will equip you to lead faithfully right where you are, with what you have.
What You’ll Learn:
- How to define and distinguish bivocational and covocational ministry
- Why bivocational ministry is becoming a key strategy for the future of the church
- The difference between striving for “balance” and living in “harmony”
- The evangelistic advantage of being in the marketplace and everyday environments
- How your current job or major can become a mission field, not a distraction
Helpful Resources:
★ Find more resources to lead the next generation on mission at https://GenSend.org
★ Subscribe to The GenSend Podcast on your favorite podcast platform
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Shareable Quotes:
“See it all as a marathon. If you sprint in every area, you’ll burn out and not be great for anyone.” —Shane Pruit
“Your goal isn’t how much ministry you can do; it’s how much you can empower others to do.” —Paul Worcester
“When students see someone with a marketplace job teaching the Bible, it expands their vision of calling.” —Lacey Villasenor
“If you’re covocational, you’re in good company—Jesus was a carpenter, and Paul was a tentmaker.” —Shane Pruitt
“As a covocational leader, you get to model the lifestyle you’re trying to reproduce.” —Paul Worcester
“When you meet real needs, people start asking, ‘Why are you here?’—and that opens the door for the gospel.” —Lacey Villasenor