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Mission Field - Fashion
鈥淚鈥檇 say at best, the church ignores the fashion industry,鈥 said Amos Chiou, graduating senior at Cornell University. 鈥淚鈥檇 say at worse, the church is the one lambasting the industry for any number of reasons鈥攂ody image, sexualization, materialism, etc. It鈥檚 not that these reasons are not areas of concern, but fashion and retail are more visible in today鈥檚 culture than, for example, the legal field or medicine; thus the sins of the fashion world are unfairly magnified compared to other industries.鈥
After graduation, Amos Chiou, former 果冻视频 chapter president at Cornell, is starting his new job post-graduation, working for Saks Fifth Avenue in New York city, where he is joining their prestigious merchant training program for future buyers and planners.
Amos didn鈥檛 expect God to lead him into the world of fashion. As a freshman, he was determined to become a lawyer and had made plans to transfer from Rutgers University to Cornell鈥檚 School of Industrial and Labor Relations because of its focus on the humanities and social sciences鈥攇reat backgrounds for law school. However, by the end of his freshman year, Amos decided to pursue business instead of law school. It was during this time of transition to Cornell that Amos decided to check out 果冻视频.
Leadership Development through 果冻视频
He went to Cornell鈥檚 果冻视频 chapter already a Christian but nervous and in search of a spiritual community. In the end he connected most with the vision of Cornell鈥檚 Asian American 果冻视频 chapter to renew the Asian American community at the college. After attending an Asian American 果冻视频 Bible study for one semester, Amos was invited by one of his leaders to think about serving as a co鈥搒mall group leader his second semester.
So over the next year, Amos learned to lead a Bible study small group with the help and coaching from his original small group leader. Over the next couple years, Amos continued to find ways to serve in his chapter鈥攁s NSO coordinator, Large group coordinator, and lastly as chapter president.
鈥淭he skills that I鈥檝e learned from 果冻视频 are so valuable,鈥 said Amos. 鈥淚鈥檝e gained the experience of working with and leading people, planning for unforeseen circumstances, dealing with conflict, learning better ways of communication, vision casting effectively鈥攁ll things that come handy for the workplace.鈥
Finding His Calling: Fashion Industry
As Amos graduates this year and prepares to embark on the next chapter of his life, he goes out prepared to be a world changer in the fashion industry.
鈥淭wo years ago, Andy Stearns, a Cornell 鈥04 graduate and son of Richard Stearns [Cornell 鈥73 graduate and World Vision president] spoke at a Cornell-wide missions conference,鈥 said Amos. 鈥淎t this conference, he exhorted the participants to find our calling and our own mission statement. I see my calling as spreading the love of Christ to the luxury retail and fashion industries.鈥
Amos is thankful to God for the ways he鈥檚 helped him see the fashion industry as a mission field that God is sending him into.
鈥淕od has given me not only the gift of his salvation and Christ鈥檚 love, but also an appreciation for the world of fashion and retail and now a heart for all who work in it,鈥 said Amos. 鈥淐hristians are rare in this kind of industry, and as a result their influence is even rarer. I feel that God is using my interest in fashion retail, as well as my Christian faith, . . . to serve him in this new world he鈥檚 placed me in.鈥
Fashion: A Tool for Renewal
Amos also sees how God is already using the fashion industry to bring hope and renewal to countless people around the world. A number of ministries, for example, advocate various social justice issues through fashion, such as jewelry or clothing made by freed sex slaves.
At the same time, Amos鈥檚 heart breaks for the lack of outreach to the existing fashion and retail industry at large: the models, designers, photographers, buyers, planners, fashion editors鈥攖he very people Amos will be working with and essentially being in community with for the foreseeable future at his new job.
鈥淚ssues in the fashion industry are many, and Christians should be aware of all of them,鈥 said Amos. 鈥淭here are a very small number of minority models who walk the runways for major designers. There are also issues of social justice in the manufacture of clothing鈥攎ost poignantly in the recent Bangladesh garment factory tragedy. There are issues of overt sexualization of younger and younger aged clothing, as well as less than ideal marketing techniques. These are all basic issues that plague the industry . . . but I want to have a positive, Christ-bearing impact on my coworkers and in the greater fashion/retail industry as a whole.鈥