workplace - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz Catholic News New Zealand Sun, 15 Mar 2015 21:48:35 +0000 en-NZ hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://cathnews.co.nz/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/cropped-cathnewsfavicon-32x32.jpg workplace - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz 32 32 70145804 Christians under pressure to hide faith at work https://cathnews.co.nz/2015/03/17/christians-under-pressure-to-hide-faith-at-work/ Mon, 16 Mar 2015 14:05:22 +0000 http://cathnews.co.nz/?p=69126 A new report in the United Kingdom claims that Christians feel pressured to keep their faith hidden at work. A public consultation carried out by the Equality and Human Rights Commission also showed Christians are being mocked by colleagues for being bigoted. Christians are also discriminated against when it comes to wearing religious symbols, the Read more

Christians under pressure to hide faith at work... Read more]]>
A new report in the United Kingdom claims that Christians feel pressured to keep their faith hidden at work.

A public consultation carried out by the Equality and Human Rights Commission also showed Christians are being mocked by colleagues for being bigoted.

Christians are also discriminated against when it comes to wearing religious symbols, the report showed.

Almost 2500 people took part in the consultation.

It found widespread public confusion and misunderstanding about the legal status of religion.

Continue reading

Christians under pressure to hide faith at work]]>
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Faith in the workplace https://cathnews.co.nz/2014/04/15/faith-workplace/ Mon, 14 Apr 2014 19:16:01 +0000 http://cathnews.co.nz/?p=56770

Bosses all over the Western world have been warned. Unless they make allowances for the religious faiths of their ever more diverse workforces, they will suffer lawsuits, official rebukes and protests from staff. Employees increasingly expect to be able, for example, to dress in accordance with their faith while at work, and be given appropriate Read more

Faith in the workplace... Read more]]>
Bosses all over the Western world have been warned.

Unless they make allowances for the religious faiths of their ever more diverse workforces, they will suffer lawsuits, official rebukes and protests from staff.

Employees increasingly expect to be able, for example, to dress in accordance with their faith while at work, and be given appropriate times and places for prayer.

The latest admonition came last month in new guidelines from America's Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, pointing out the steady rise in religious-discrimination cases (3,721 last year, up from 1,709 in 1997) and setting out what that means.

For example, businesses must respect the personal styles of their staff—Rastafarian dreadlocks, say—if these are inspired by faith.

And religiously attired workers must not be hidden away to avoid upsetting customers of a different faith.

European firms are still absorbing the impact of last year's victory by a British Airways worker who won damages at the European Court of Human Rights after she was denied, temporarily, the right to wear a cross with her uniform.

In advice updated last month, Britain's Equality and Human Rights Commission urges firms to meet religious needs, even if expressed by only one employee, as long as they do not infringe the rights of others. Continue reading.

Source: The Economist

Image: The Telegraph

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Dealing with the workplace jerk… https://cathnews.co.nz/2012/09/28/dealing-with-the-workplace-jerk/ Thu, 27 Sep 2012 19:30:25 +0000 http://cathnews.co.nz/?p=34224

By Lucy O'Donoghue Doesn't it just bug your socks off the way someone in the workplace - your boss especially - manages to rub you so ridiculously up the wrong way? You cringe to think what frustration and subsequent lack of charity emanates from you - how this doesn't feel at all like ‘living the Read more

Dealing with the workplace jerk…... Read more]]>
By Lucy O'Donoghue

Doesn't it just bug your socks off the way someone in the workplace - your boss especially - manages to rub you so ridiculously up the wrong way? You cringe to think what frustration and subsequent lack of charity emanates from you - how this doesn't feel at all like ‘living the Gospel'.

A while back I had a really lame boss. With all due respect and charity, and acknowledging my own glaring imperfections at times, I still maintain that this boss was, well, off the charts. I'd even taken to reading books like "It's OK to Manage Your Boss." Of course, sometimes you have to skip to Chapter 9 "How to deal with the ‘jerk' boss". That's helpful, but as a Christian, I needed some guidance that took account of God's presence, his Grace and His mercy (and my need for all that) - practical was great, but not enough.

Then I read Heather King's Redeemed: Stumbling Towards God, Sanity and Peace that Passes Understanding'. Following her journey from 20 years of alcoholism to sobriety and then to the Catholic faith, she recalls her short-lived career as a lawyer in a Beverley Hills law firm, working for "Frank, a sole practitioner, [and] a cigar-smoking bachelor eight years my junior who specialized in personal injury and employment discrimination." By way of anecdote, she helped soften my heart, reduce the stress…and lose 10 pounds in three weeks (ok, not quite).

My work experience at the time mirrored Heather's. She had come in with great optimism, "yearned to contribute", only to find the place in "stupendous disarray" full of disillusioned and cynical folk. Nevertheless, she worked like a Trojan, in search of constant affirmation, nay adulation, for the ideal that she always thought was ‘the law'.

"Unfortunately, nothing could have impressed Frank less, and I never quite recovered from the shock that he found my best, most sacrificial efforts barely worthy of notice. Instead, he viewed me as a pitiful crackpot and I got stuck doing not only my own work, but the work of Eric, the toadying paralegal, as well. Eric had a bald spot and clammy hands, twiddled a knockoff Mont Blanc pen and wore blazers with gold insignia over the breast pocket, like the captain of a yacht….In lieu of working, Eric wrote memos to Frank, filled with suggestions of work I could do, that began, "Your Royal Highness" and ended, "I await your bidding."

The comical descriptions went on. I lay in stitches of laughter late into the night relieved to know I wasn't the only one whose feeble attempts to ‘keep calm and carry on' were ever-threatened by the seething rage bubbling just beneath the surface…

"Underlying every other loathsome aspect of my job was the fact that I hated Eric with a black and festering hatred. [Ooh, ouch…really?] I burned with it, writhed with it, fanned the flames of it morning, noon and night by pinpointing, categorizing and analyzing his infinite character defects: his stupidity, his cunning sloth, his soft, slug-like hands. Behind my closed office door, I worked on it like a sculptor working molten wax: a mass of indignities and slights, whose contours I endlessly, obsessively reshaped."

The power of brutal honesty, humour and frankness in dealing with life's struggles is, I think, a hallmark of a mature spiritual life. Call a spade a spade. The catch, of course, is not to rest in the negativity but to work through it and learn from it, and reach out to God's love and mercy. That's how we can be freed from the frustration. Indeed, when Heather recalls leaving the law firm, and taking the time to apologise to Eric for any moments where she had failed in charity, despite his "puffing and preening" response, she realized she was suddenly free. The person in the workplace that had held her "bondage" through her anger and resentment was really "someone almost as pathetically insecure" as she realized she was. Now, that's the power of God's grace and our seizing it. And I like the sound of that.

Lucy O'Donoghue lives in South Asia with her O'D husband (true Irish right there). Lucy changes her mind every week what she wants to ‘be' or ‘do' in her life, much to her husband's and parents' dismay. Nevertheless, she has spent the last few years earning her bacon in the humanitarian sector in Africa and South Asia and is currently completing a Master of Arts in Catholic Theology at the Augustine Institute.

Heather King is a Catholic author, blogger, speaker…and ex-bar fly, sober alcoholic, former lawyer from Los Angeles. Her writing has been rated by Catholic, Christian and secular media alike. Heather is set to come on tour to New Zealand in April 2013 - more info, click here.

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