Posted: April 24th, 2025

Discussion Thread: Christianity in Business

 

Read and react to the following 2017 article by Lloyd Sandelands (in the Resources section) in the context of leadership that includes important financial responsibility in a sport business position with a focus on how a sport organization engages with the outside market.

Include Biblical integration in the topic with a Scripture connection or reference citations and reference to at least two sources in addition to those provided in the prompt.

SMGT 506

Discussion Assignment Instructions

The student will complete 4 Discussions in this course. The student will post one thread of at least 400 words by 11:59 p.m. (ET) on Sunday of the assigned Module: Week. The student must then post 2 replies of at least 200 words by 11:59 p.m. (ET) on Sunday of the following assigned Module: Week. For each thread, students must support their assertions with at least 2 scholarly citations in APA format. Each reply must incorporate at least 1 scholarly citation in APA format. Any sources cited must have been published within the last ten years. Acceptable sources include relevant articles that are external to the course (i.e. must be in addition to the course text and other course materials provided).

See discussions, stats, and author profiles for this publication at: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/302978881

  • The Real Mystery of Positive Business: A Response from Christian Faith
  • Article  in  Journal of Business Ethics · November 2017

    DOI: 10.1007/s10551-016-3186-7

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    1 23

    Journal of Business Ethics

    ISSN 0167-4544

    J Bus Ethics

    DOI 10.1007/s10551-016-3186-7

    The Real Mystery of Positive Business: A
    Response from Christian Faith

    Lloyd E. Sandelands

    1 23

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    The Real Mystery of Positive Business: A Response from Christian
    Faith

    Lloyd E. Sandelands1

    Received: 27 July 2015 / Accepted: 19 April 2016

    � Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht 2016

    Abstract I ask why an increasing number of business

    scholars today are drawn to an idea of ‘‘positive business’’

    that they cannot account for scientifically. I answer that it is

    because they are attracted to the real mystery of positive

    business which is its incomprehensible and unspeakable

    divinity. I begin by asking why the research literature has

    yet to speak of positive business plainly and with one

    voice. I find that it lacks for the right words because it

    comes to human being in business as a science attuned to

    its objects rather than as a religion attuned to its spirit.

    Next, I say what I can about the real mystery of business,

    keeping in mind that we can say about it only what we can

    say about God. This brings me at last to the Christian

    insight that human being, in business and everywhere else,

    is the mystery of Jesus Christ in whom we are reconciled to

    God. Business is positively human as it invites us to be as

    Christ, to be a fully human person in joyful communion

    with others in God. This, in sum, is how to speak plainly

    and with one voice of the positive business that our hearts

    desire but our science cannot say.

    Keywords Positive business � Being � God � Metaphysics �
    Thomas Aquinas � Christian humanism

    Introduction

    Imagine a business as a joyful solidarity of persons for the

    common good. Imagine its good to be that of each person

    and that of all persons together. Imagine its solidarity to be

    that of an integral communion of persons who are unique

    and fully alive in their individuality. And imagine its joy to

    be that of being fully human, the joy greater than any

    passing pleasure. Pure fantasy? There are businesses today

    that reach for this ideal and have been described in its

    terms, including such names as AES, Herman Miller,

    Menlo Innovations, Reehl Manufacturing, ServiceMaster,

    Southwest Airlines, Tom’s of Maine, and Zingermans’

    Community of Businesses (see, e.g., Baker 2011; Bakke

    2005; Benefiel 2008; Blanchard and Barrett 2011; Chappell

    1993; De Pree 1997; Hoffer-Gittell 2005; Nayar 2010;

    Ouimet 2010; Pollard 1996; Sheridan 2013; Weinzweig

    2010). This ideal is given voice by William Pollard, CEO

    of ServiceMaster:

    In ServiceMaster, leadership begins with our objec-

    tives: To honor God in all we do. To help people

    develop. To pursue excellence. And to grow prof-

    itably. Thus, our role and obligation as leaders

    involves more than what a person does on the job. We

    must also be involved in what that person is

    becoming and how the work environment is con-

    tributing to the process (p. 129).

    This ideal is remarkable because stands athwart a broad

    cynicism about business today—too often celebrated by

    novelists and Hollywood—that sees business as a selfish,

    cruel, and unrepentant scramble for wealth, a worship of

    Mammon. And this ideal is perplexing because it calls

    business executives to run business in a new way. What,

    they ask, should the business of business be, if it is not

    & Lloyd E. Sandelands

    lsandel@umich.edu

    1 University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA

    123

    J Bus Ethics

    DOI 10.1007/s10551-016-3186-7

    Author’s personal copy

    http://crossmark.crossref.org/dialog/?doi=10.1007/s10551-016-3186-7&domain=pdf

    http://crossmark.crossref.org/dialog/?doi=10.1007/s10551-016-3186-7&domain=pdf

    business itself (Sandelands 2009)? And to what end should

    business point, if not to the profits of business owners

    (Friedman 1970)?

    Positive Organizational Scholarship

    Into this milieu has stepped a new field of business

    scholarship called Positive Organizational Scholarship

    (POS).1 Founded in 2003 at the University of Michigan

    (see Cameron et al. 2003), POS ‘‘is concerned primarily

    with the study of especially positive outcomes, processes,

    and attributes of organizations and their members… [it]

    does not represent a single theory, but it focuses on

    dynamics that are typically described by words such as

    excellence, thriving, flourishing, abundance, resilience, or

    virtuousness, … [and it] is distinguished from traditional

    organizational studies in that it seeks to understand what

    represents and approaches the best of the human condi-

    tion’’ (p. 4). If not stated in so many words, positive

    organization or positive business is as above: a joyful

    solidarity of persons for the common good. Its positive

    outcomes, processes, and attributes are for the common

    good of persons and organizations; its dynamics of excel-

    lence, thriving, flourishing, abundance, resilience, and

    virtuousness are those of integral human solidarity; and its

    ‘‘best of the human condition’’ is the joy of human persons

    fully alive. In 2011, eight years from its founding, positive

    organizational scholarship was recognized as a subject for

    an Oxford Handbook which gathered 79 chapters from 152

    authors from around the world (Cameron and Spreitzer

    2012). The burgeoning interest in POS has not been con-

    fined to business scholars but has come also from business

    students and activists who are likewise drawn to its humane

    promise.2

    Positive organizational scholarship is of natural interest

    to business ethicists because it speaks to their central and

    abiding question; ‘‘What is the first good of business; the

    good that makes sense of and gives order to its other

    goods?’’ Turning from the prevailing idea that the first

    good of business is profit or shareholder value, POS points

    toward a rival first good, which in its founders’ words is

    ‘‘the best of the human condition’’ (Cameron et al. 2003,

    p. 4), and lately ‘‘the highest aspirations of humankind’’

    (Cameron and Spreitzer 2012, p. 2). In so saying, POS

    orients business to a good of a different kind than economic

    value; not to a good that Aristotle in Metaphysics (XII, p.3)

    and Thomas Aquinas in Summa Theologica (prima pars,

    question 5) called ‘‘pleasant’’ because it pleases in some

    way (as might wealth or power), and not to a good that they

    called ‘‘useful’’ because it leads to pleasant goods (as

    wealth might buy consumer goods); but to the good that

    they called ‘‘honest’’ which is not good because it is

    pleasant or useful but is good because it is loved for its own

    sake. The good of positive business, loved for its own sake,

    is the honest good of human being itself (‘‘the best of the

    human condition,’’ and ‘‘the highest aspirations of

    humankind’’). This is the good of human virtuousness (see

    Manz et al. 2008). And this is the good that underlies and

    informs virtue ethics (Pinckaers 1995).

    However, while positive organizational scholarship

    offers many synonyms for this good—such as flourishing,

    purpose, resilience, compassion, and high-quality connec-

    tion—it has yet to pin down the fundamental idea of the

    positive that underlies and joins these. Critics of POS thus

    point out that its many ideas about ‘‘the positive’’ have yet

    to come into one voice (see Caza and Carroll 2012; Dutton

    and Glynn 2007), that its many ideas of the positive are not

    clearly distinguished from ideas of the negative (Fineman

    2006), and that in some cases what is called positive may

    be the negative of political or class oppression (Simpson

    et al. 2014). And indeed, even the POS handbook editors

    Cameron and Spreitzer concede the criticism. After noting

    that there are scores of ideas about what ‘‘positive’’ means,

    they come to the surprising conclusion that:

    Precise conceptual definition, however, does not

    necessarily provide scientific clarity: consider for

    example, definitions of terms such as ‘‘love’’ or

    ‘‘effectiveness.’’ people know what love is through

    experience rather than through an explanation of its

    conceptual boundaries or nomological network

    (Cameron and Spreitzer 2012, p. 2).

    With these words we can ask whether, in their struggle

    to define the positive, POS scholars have come upon that

    dilemma familiar to students of business ethics generally,

    namely that the human good is beyond science to say. This

    is to see, as philosopher Hume (1777) admonished, that an

    objectivizing science can be about only ‘‘what is’’ and not

    about ‘‘what ought to be.’’ The idea that Cameron and

    Spreitzer come to—that people know the good of positive

    business in the same way that they know the good of

    love—suggests that a science of POS can speak no more

    authoritatively of the former than it can of the latter. Per-

    haps it is POS’s adherence to the ways and means of sci-

    ence—in hopes perhaps to claim its legitimacy and

    authority—that has been its hidden liability. Perhaps, the

    good of positive business is the sort of thing that must be

    known in another way, the sort of thing that must be

    known, with philosopher and polymath Pascal (1950), not

    1 http://www.positiveorgs.bus.umic.edu/.
    2 Among the latter are the Economy of Communion as part of the

    worldwide Focolare movement (see Gallagher and Buckeye 2014)

    and the Blueprint for Better Business, http://www.blueprintforbusi

    ness.org/.

    L. E. Sandelands

    123

    Author’s personal copy

    http://www.positiveorgs.bus.umic.edu/

    Blueprint

    Blueprint

    by reason alone, but by reason informed by the heart and

    by faith.

    In this article, I address this philosophical dilemma by

    asking why positive business scholars are attracted to an

    ideal of positive business that they have not yet been able

    to reckon with scientifically. By article’s end I hope to

    establish that this is because they are attracted to the real

    mystery of business which is its incomprehensible and

    largely unspeakable divinity. Positive business, I find, is

    the real presence of the divine that we know in our hearts

    before we know it by the reason. This positive good is not

    (as typically supposed) an exception to the rule of business,

    but is the rule of business because God is always with us

    (even if we are unaware of or deny His presence). Of

    course the idea that God is with us is hardly new and hardly

    my own. It is ages old (dating at least to Aristotle); it is the

    subject of virtually every theology; and it is especially and

    pointedly the lesson of Christianity which identifies us with

    God intimately in the person of the God-Man Jesus

    Christ.

    In and from Christ, we learn in detail ‘‘who’’ we are in the

    eyes and heart of God. Christian humanism, I conclude, is

    the real and abiding mystery of

    positive business.

    I begin by asking why positive organizational scholar-

    ship has yet to speak precisely of positive business. I find

    that it lacks the right words because it comes to business as

    a science attuned to its visible objects rather than as a

    religion attuned to its invisible being. Science is faith in

    ourselves.3 It consists of the things we ‘‘create’’ when we

    render our experiences in abstract terms of ‘‘objects’’—

    objects which, even after we have invented them, we may

    presume to be real and to have been there all the while.

    Religion is faith in God. It consists of the things we

    ‘‘discern’’ when we take their real being into our own and

    by reason aided by faith ascertain what they are and mean.

    Next, I say what I can about the real mystery of positive

    business, bearing in mind that it is nothing less than the

    mystery of human being which is nothing less than the

    mystery of God. Finally, I examine in brief the Christian

    insight that these mysteries are one in the real person of

    Jesus Christ who reconciles man to God. This is to see that

    business is ‘‘positive’’ when it invites us to be as Christ;

    which is to be a person in joyful communion with the

    Father; and which, as we noted at the outset, is to take part

    in a joyful solidarity of persons in the common good. This,

    I suggest, is how to speak plainly and in one voice of

    positive business.

    When Science Fails

    Science speaks vaguely of positive business because it

    lacks the vocabulary to speak of it clearly, or indeed to

    speak of it at all. It has words for the objects of business

    (individuals, groups, tasks, jobs, leaders, followers, owners,

    employees, products, services, buyers, sellers, etc.) that it

    relates as cause to effect, but it has no words for the spirit

    or being of human persons in communion. This is a

    problem especially when it comes to the distinctive qual-

    ities of positive business—of joy, solidarity, and common

    good—which are not objects or attributes of objects that it

    can see and size-up, but are appearances of a human being

    or spirit that can be known only by some other means. Let

    us consider each.

    Joy is a condition of the human spirit, of being ‘‘one’’

    or ‘‘right’’ with being itself. It is not simply a physical or

    sensory experience of pleasure but is more profoundly a

    metaphysical and spiritual emotion. As noted by the

    Christian theological historian Pinckaers (1995, p. 132),

    both the Fathers of the Church and later St. Thomas

    understood joy to be linked with faith and hope, to be a

    direct effect of love or charity, and to be one of the signs

    of virtuous human action. It is, in a word, the feeling of

    ‘‘the best of the human condition’’ and ‘‘the highest

    aspirations of humankind.’’ Such a feeling cannot be the

    focus for the science of man because it is subjective

    rather than objective—subjective not only because it is a

    personal feeling but also because it is about a ‘‘one-ness’’

    or ‘‘right-ness’’ or ‘‘best-ness’’ or ‘‘aspiration’’ of being

    that cannot be objectively defined. It is the kind of thing

    Hume (1777) discounts as a mere sentiment, a soft

    feeling about what ‘‘ought to be’’ rather than a hard

    indication of what ‘‘is.’’

    A solidarity of persons is a substantial form in which

    each person is at once a member of an integral com-

    munion or ‘‘body’’ of persons (he or she is one in being

    with others) and his or her own personality (he or she is

    one in his or her own being). This duality of being—of

    communion and person—is likewise of the spirit that

    science cannot observe. Science can speak of this duality

    only in terms of one object or the other—as a commu-

    nion or as a person—but not both at the same time

    (Sandelands 1998). Where psychology sees the individual

    psyche it does not see the communion, which it turns

    into what it is not, an aggregate or collection of psyches.

    On one account, communion is an entativity, a perception

    of individuals in a group (Campbell 1958). On another

    account, it is a cohesion, a number of individuals who

    want to belong to a group (Janis 1972). For psychology,

    3 I speak of science as a faith because it rests upon an extra-rational

    premise in the same way that religion does. Both faiths rest on beliefs

    born in rationally unjustified intuitions. Belief in natural cause and

    effect, like belief in supernatural God, comes neither by the logic of

    induction or by the logic of deduction (Hume, 1748), but by simple

    and direct intuition (what philosopher Alfred Whitehead called

    ‘abduction’). It is thus a sophistry to argue, as the modern atheists do,

    that one faith is more logical and reasonable than the other.

    The Real Mystery of Positive Business: A Response from Christian Faith

    123

    Author’s personal copy

    the solidarity in ‘‘solidarity of persons’’ is not real but is

    a figure of speech for a number of individual psyches.

    And where sociology sees the communion it does not see

    the individual psyche, which it too turns into what it is

    not, an instance or expression of the social whole (e.g., a

    position, office, or role). On one account, the individual

    psyche is an instance of like-mindedness (Toennies 1879/

    1957). On another account, it is a residual of a division

    of labor (Durkheim 1893/1944). For sociology the person

    in ‘‘solidarity of persons’’ is not real but is a figure for

    the social whole. Thus, the sciences of psychology and

    sociology offer views of the solidarity of persons that are

    false to its being. Each tells the lie of putting a half-truth

    in place of the whole truth.

    Finally, the common good locates the solidarity of

    persons in the moral order of what is right and just. It is

    the good of every person and of the community as a

    whole. And it is likewise not of nature but of the spirit.

    The common good is the good of persons on behalf of a

    greater being which they ‘‘realize’’ (literally make real)

    in solidarity. This greater being has different names.

    Aristotle (1999) spoke of it as the ‘‘transcendent third’’

    and found it the ground of all true friendship. Thomas

    Aquinas (1990) spoke of it as ‘‘God’’ who is spirit and

    being itself. By either name science cannot speak of it

    because it cannot see how persons are ordered to one

    another in a greater being. For being about nature sci-

    ence cannot be about what is above and transcends

    nature (about what is literally ‘‘super-natural’’).

    Our interest in positive business thus compels us to look

    beyond today’s science of business which casts aside

    human elements of spirit. We cannot abide its nominalism

    which turns all things human into objects of psychology

    and sociology which have no solidarity of persons, no

    common good, and no joy. As Lewis (1944, p. 71)

    famously observed, the paradox of natural science applied

    to man is that the more ‘‘nature’’ we find in him the less

    ‘‘man’’ we find in nature:

    We reduce things to mere nature in order that we

    may ‘conquer’ them. We are always conquering

    Nature, because ‘Nature’ is the name for what we

    have, to some extent, conquered. The price of con-

    quest is to treat a thing as mere Nature. Every con-

    quest over nature increases her domain. The stars to

    do not become Nature till we can weigh and measure

    them; the soul does not become Nature till we can

    psychoanalyze her. The wresting of powers from

    Nature is also the surrendering of things to Nature.

    As we are soon to see, natural science fails to grasp

    the positive in business because it cannot reach the

    human in it. Its mistaken ontology begins in a mistaken

    epistemology.

    To See or to Behold

    When we cannot get to where we want to go we do well to

    ask if we have gotten off on the wrong foot and set off in

    the wrong direction. What if human being is not a ‘‘what’’

    that we can see exteriorly with eyes on objects in space and

    time, but is a ‘‘who’’ that we must behold interiorly with a

    heart open to spirit and being? These two ways of coming

    to the human in business—these two epistemologies of

    seeing and beholding—open upon two different worlds.

    Between them goes all the difference in what we can

    understand of positive business.

    The seeing that begins in faith in science and the

    beholding that begins in faith in religion are easiest to grasp

    by example. Consider the two young women below:

    First, see the women; see that they are sisters, see that

    the younger is on the left, see that the older is married, see

    that both somehow resemble their mother and their father,

    and see that when others are asked on a questionnaire both

    are liked and admired. Inspect the sisters from different

    angles and in different ways; see that the younger is

    slightly taller, and see that the older has a fairer com-

    plexion and shorter and thinner hair. Give the sisters the

    Oregon Research Institute’s International Personality Item

    Pool test of human personality (the so-called ‘‘Big 5’’

    personality test); see that the younger is a little more

    introverted, see that both are highly agreeable, see that both

    are conscientious, see that both are open to experiences,

    and see that the older is a little less emotionally stable.

    Give the sisters IQ tests to see that both are very intelligent.

    Put the sisters in a footrace to see that first one wins, then

    the other. See them this way and that, give them test after

    test, and you will learn many objective facts about them,

    but they will not be present to you and you will not learn

    who they are.

    Now behold the women; take the sisters to heart. Open

    your being to theirs to receive their inner and outer beau-

    ties. Marvel at the verbal dexterity and sparkling humor of

    L. E. Sandelands

    123

    Author’s personal copy

    the younger. Be lit up by her as her sister is lit up by her.

    Wonder at the alert responsiveness of the older. Have your

    light brought out by her as her sister has her light brought

    out by her. Take in and feel their love for one another.

    Reach out to each to learn how each opens and reaches

    back; how the quieter younger reaches out boldly to meet

    you with confidence and spontaneity; and how the more

    loquacious older opens up so completely that you feel

    utterly ‘‘known’’ and loved. Dwell with the two awhile and

    feel how each moves in spirit; how the younger expands

    outward to find joy in all that is; and how the older con-

    centrates inward to leave no nuance unrecognized and

    unappreciated. And be with the two over a life to find that

    more you learn of them the more there is to learn. Try to

    make a final claim about either one to find that any such

    slips through your hands. Seek to find yourself; behold how

    each becomes part of you, how you become a part of both,

    and how you and they become a kind of ‘‘one.’’ Behold

    these two women and they are present to you; in them you

    find life and before that you find being and before that you

    find

    God.

    Seeing and beholding the two sisters thus are profoundly

    different epistemic acts from which to glean profoundly

    different things. To ‘‘see’’ the sisters with the eyes of sci-

    ence is cast them as objects apart from our self that we can

    experience with our senses and remark about with our

    reason. This is the modern religion of empirical science

    conceived in the enlightenment philosophies of Francis

    Bacon and Rene Descartes. In this religion, we are the

    (small ‘g’) gods who decide what the facts of the sisters

    will be. Apart from what we decide, the sisters have no

    facts. In contrast, to ‘‘behold’’ the sisters with the heart of

    religious faith is to welcome them into our being as spirits

    to love and know as we love and know our own. By

    receiving their being into our own we become ‘‘one’’ with

    them, not in the scientific relation of subject and object that

    philosopher and theologian Martin Buber (1958) called ‘‘I-

    It’’ but in the religious relation of being he called ‘‘I-

    Thou.’’ This is the ancient religion of metaphysics con-

    ceived in the classical philosophy of Aristotle and extended

    in the theology of Thomas Aquinas. In this religion the

    ‘‘uncaused cause’’ of Aristotle or the (big ‘G’) God of

    Aquinas creates and sustains the sisters as they are and

    before any ideas we have about them.

    Let us now turn from the two sisters to the human ele-

    ment of business. What can we know of it by seeing it in

    the faith of science? And what can we know of it by

    beholding it in the faith of religion? Before observing that

    by these faiths we know different things, let me hasten to

    say that we compare them here with no intention to pro-

    nounce on the adequacy or sufficiency of either faith to

    predict or explain how people think or behave in business.

    Our interest is not psychological but philosophical; to

    observe that where science depicts people as objects (ac-

    tors) who act in economically rational ways, religion

    understands people as beings in communion who act to be

    closer to God. And where the one depicts a theoretical ideal

    far from our native understanding of positive business, the

    other depicts a living reality that keeps with that

    understanding.

    Homo Economicus

    People in business are objects:

    autonomous individuals who

    are rational and motivated by

    self-interests

    Business is not an integral whole

    but is a coincidence of self-

    interests in a market or

    hierarchy

    Imago Dei

    People in business are embodied

    spirits: unique persons who

    form and are informed by

    others and who seek to ‘‘be’’

    with one another in communion

    (and ultimately in God)

    Business is an integral whole; a

    joyful solidarity in the common

    good (which is ultimately the

    good of God)

    In the faith of science, the human element of business

    consists of objects related as cause and effect. This faith is

    typified and writ large in the science of economics which

    describes man, not as a human person in communion, but

    as an idealized economic actor in markets or hierarchies,

    and which calls this man homo economicus. Indeed, the

    history of this idea of man illustrates well how science

    objectifies the human element of business and turns it into

    an ideal apart from the real. As chronicled by Mele and

    Canton (2014), homo economicus can be traced to the

    moral philosopher-cum-economist Adam Smith (1981)

    who wrote of how the economic self-interests of the

    butcher, brewer, and baker convene in the ‘‘invisible hand’’

    of the market. But, as Smith was a moral philosopher first

    and economist second, he saw man as more subtle and

    socially attuned than a self-interested economic actor

    simply. However, when Mill (1874) later wrote of man in

    his philosophy of utilitarianism, the subtleties in Smith

    began to give way to a narrower and more hypothetical

    actor oriented to selfish ends. And finally, by the time of

    the so-called ‘‘neo-classical synthesis’’ of scientific eco-

    nomics in the last century (see Robbins 1945), there was

    nothing left of man but the idealized ‘‘economic actor’’

    who is all self-interest and rational calculation—pure homo

    economicus.4 As depicted in the figure, economic man is

    not a recognizably human person, but is an idealization fit

    to a theoretical model. And with this idea in mind, business

    4 This is an admittedly sweeping and crude rendering of economic

    science. Today there are new strands of thought about the psychology

    of homo economicus, including those of behavioral and now neural

    economics. Nevertheless, despite their nuance and sophistication,

    these new strands remain, philosophically speaking, forms of one and

    the same scientific idealism.

    The Real Mystery of Positive Business: A Response from Christian Faith

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    is not as an integral whole unto itself but is a coincidence

    of individual self-interests in markets and hierarchies. This

    coincidence of interests is not recognizably a human

    communion, but is again an idealization fit to the theoret-

    ical model. As professor of finance Martijn Cremers (2016)

    points out, it makes no difference to economists that homo

    economicus is an idealization (i.e., that no real person is

    actually autonomous or motivated mainly by self-interest

    or that no real business is actually formed as a rational

    nexus of contracts), so long as he can be employed in

    arithmetic models to predict prices and the buying and

    selling of goods and services in markets (see also Friedman

    1968). In a word, it is no strike against their scientific faith

    that homo economicus is not real.

    In contrast, in the faith of religion the human element of

    business is as it is everywhere, an instance of humanity that

    consists of all persons in the communion of God. This faith

    is writ large and plainly in the theological idea of man as

    the image of God—the so-called imago Dei—an idea as

    old as the Hebraic religion of Abraham and that has been

    cultivated since by the faith traditions of Judaism, Chris-

    tianity, and Islam. This idea consists of humanly embodied

    spirits, who form and are formed by others, and who seek

    to ‘‘be’’ with one another in union with God. As depicted in

    the figure, when discerned in business, this idea renders

    employees as human persons who form and are formed by

    one another in the integral solidarity of the business. For

    theologians, in contrast to economists, it matters utterly and

    totally that this image of the human element in business,

    which has been revealed to us by God, is metaphysically

    real and is not a man-made idealization fit to a theory. It is

    a strike for religious faith that its human being is a vibrant

    one of spirit, of a joyful solidarity of persons in the honest

    good of being rather than the pleasant or useful good of

    having.

    When we come to the human element of business in the

    second way of faith in religion we grasp it in a radically

    different and richer way, according to its spirit. We

    understand that while this spirit can be more or less real-

    ized and more or less apparent to us in the conduct of a

    given business (in Aristotle’s terms, in ‘act’), it is a real

    possibility of every business (in Aristotle’s terms, in ‘po-

    tency’) because every business is human. Spirit is a real

    essence of persons in business, not a theoretical construct

    such as the economic actor. And so whereas people in

    business cannot actually be as the ideal of homo eco-

    nomicus pretends—namely purely selfish actors linked in a

    market or hierarchy—they can actually be as the real imago

    Dei portends—a joyful solidarity of persons in the common

    good of God.

    Thus, the rival epistemologies of ‘‘seeing’’ and ‘‘be-

    holding’’ engender rival understandings of things, be these

    sisters or businesses. However, and although all things can

    be regarded in either way, ours is the age that sees more than

    it beholds. Natural science sees the facts of everything and

    the being of nothing—it sees that birds fly, fish swim, babies

    cry, the two sisters love, and business people exchange

    goods and services in markets, but it does not know bird, fish,

    baby, sisters, or business people. By its outlook, we may gain

    technical power and advantage over things by making them

    objects that we can manipulate and manage (including

    people who we too often regard as objects like any other), but

    this technical power and advantage come at the expense of

    being with the things themselves. By its outlook, we miss the

    real being of things and in the process miss our own real

    being which subsists in and through them. In this way and

    over and over again, we confirm poet Wordsworth’s lament

    that ‘‘we murder to dissect.’’5

    The Mystery of Being in God

    We have seen that our world divides philosophically along

    the lines of our two faiths: one of objects and facts, the

    other of spirit and being. One is an overt world of matter

    and mechanism in Cartesian dimensions of time and space.

    The other is a mysterious world of divine being before and

    beyond objects, causes and effects, and dimensions of time

    and space. In what follows we come to see that however

    much we may try to locate positive business in the objec-

    tivity of the former, it belongs squarely in the spirituality of

    the latter.

    Positive business subsists in the epistemic and onto-

    logical act of beholding that is faith in religion. It is the

    form of business we come to when we are open to its

    human being, a being which is ever present as a possibility

    and which is originally and ultimately of God, who is being

    itself. Standing on the tall broad shoulders of Aristotle

    (1999) (who he called simply ‘‘the philosopher’’), Aquinas

    (1990) discovered that all things exist by two related acts of

    being. The 1st act is of substantial existence which asserts

    being against non-being. By this act, we who are human

    exist as both a finite and infinite being. Like other finite

    beings—such as a rock or river or rose—we are a material

    body that takes up space and exists only for a time. But

    unlike finite beings, we are also a spirit in the image of God

    5 William Wordsworth, 1888, from the poem ‘‘The tables turned.’’

    This line appears in the penultimate stanza and bears repeating here

    along with its following:

    Sweet is the lore which Nature brings;

    Our meddling intellect

    Mis-shapes the beauteous forms of things:–

    We murder to dissect.

    Enough of Science and of Art;

    Close up those barren leaves;

    Come forth, and bring with you a heart

    That watches and receives.

    L. E. Sandelands

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    that does not take up space or exist only for a time and that

    we are called to realize by our actions. In spirit we are self-

    possessed and self-aware. And in spirit we choose, with

    Shakespeare’s Hamlet, ‘‘to be or not to be.’’ The 2nd act of

    being enlarges upon the 1st as a communication and

    sharing of being with others. In this act of self-communi-

    cation, we who are human express (literally ‘‘press out’’)

    our being to form relationships with others. As theologian

    Norris W. Clarke (1993) observes, this 2nd act is a rela-

    tionality that tends toward communion as its natural ful-

    fillment. In our case, this 2nd act of self-communication

    joins the 1st act of substantial existence to form not one but

    two real finite and infinite beings—the human person and

    the human communion.6 Thus, our being in beholding is

    being in relation; it is at one and the same time personal

    and communal—a ‘‘solidarity of persons.’’ We come to be

    in communion as we convey our being to others and

    receive their being into our own. In this way and in humble

    docility, we desire and will the good of the other as we

    desire and will our own. Moreover, we experience this

    common good of love of neighbor as self as joy (again, the

    joy that is the direct effect of love, the sign of virtuous

    action, and the feeling of ‘‘the best of the human

    condition’’).

    According to Aristotle, real being is defined by what it is

    for—its ‘final cause’ or purpose is the first and determining

    cause of its other causes (i.e., of its material, formal, and

    efficient causes). Thus, our real being (the substantial

    existence we communicate) is defined by what we are for.

    As we have just seen our human being is for relationships

    with others. As we choose who we are ‘‘for’’ we decide

    ‘‘who’’ we are, whether we are more or less, large or small,

    noble or base, saint or sinner. The crucial question for us in

    practice then is what relationship is our first and greatest

    purpose? Here Aquinas (who we ought to call simply ‘‘the

    theologian’’) delivers us beyond Aristotle to recognize that,

    no matter what our faith or lack thereof, our human being is

    ineluctably theological; that our being in relation to one

    another is ultimately for being in relation to God. Thus and

    whether we know it or not, our first and greatest purpose is

    God. We exist to unite with Him; He who is Being itself

    and whose essence is to exist. And we do this by uniting

    with one another in His real being. Our joy in being with

    others in this life is a foretaste of our ultimate joy of being

    with God in the next. Thus, for Aquinas, the practical

    question of our lives is easily put: ‘‘How can we be more

    and more in God?’’ It is the practical question of real being

    in every corner of our lives, including our lives in business.

    It is the practical question that Herman Miller Corporation

    CEO Max De Pree (1997) identifies as ‘‘authenticity’’:

    Vital organizations don’t grant their members

    authenticity; they acknowledge that people come

    already wrapped in authentic humanness. When an

    organization truly acknowledges the a priori authen-

    ticity of each person and acts accordingly, how many

    ways open up for people to reach their potential (p.

    106)

    Thus, we have come at last to a real and definitive idea

    of positive business, namely that it is the form of business

    in which we are more fully and authentically human as we

    are more fully in God. And thus we have come at last to an

    explanation for the fulsome but unreasoned enthusiasm of

    scholars and practitioners of positive business, namely that

    theirs is the joy of solidarity for the common good that is

    communion in the incomprehensible and unspeakable God.

    The ‘‘real mystery’’ of positive business then is its being in

    God.

    The Christian Humanism of Positive Business

    We have seen that the mystery of positive business calls to

    a transcendent being of joy in solidarity for the common

    good. And with Aquinas we have identified this being with

    God who is being itself. It remains to ask: What is the

    nature of God? And how are we related to Him? With

    answers to these deeper theological questions we can

    venture deeper into the mystery of positive business.

    While every theology has something to teach about

    positive business—not least that positive business is an

    instance and emblem of the divine—one theology is

    especially instructive about how we take part in God.

    Christianity reveals uniquely and powerfully that God

    made us and loves us in the image of His only begotten son

    Jesus Christ. By this revelation—which Christianity

    accepts as a truth before all reason—we know that the

    person of Christ, who is both fully man and fully God, is

    the sign of our humanity and divinity. By his humanity, we

    know that he is an embodied spirit of the same kind that we

    are. And by his divinity, we know that he is our Word and

    Way to God the Father, who is being itself. Christ is thus

    the definitive and final answer to our most human questions

    of who we are in relationship to God, of what we must do

    to have more of Him in our lives, and not least, of how we

    can make His will our own. These first questions of our

    being in God are the first questions of positive business. Let

    us consider each.

    In Christ, we learn who we are in relation to God, in

    three ways at least. First, we exist as he exists, as a being in

    the image of God. In his perfect likeness to God the Father,

    Christ fulfills the Old Testament teaching of Genesis that

    6 As Norris Clarke (1993, pp. 57–58) further observes, the two acts of

    being are logically related—the 2nd presupposes the 1st (there can be

    no being to communicate without being to begin with) and the 1st has

    the 2nd as its final cause (communication of being is the reason for

    being in the first place).

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    man is the one creature defined theologically, not with a

    likeness to other creatures, but with a likeness to God (the

    one creature defined in relation to Being itself). Our like-

    ness to God is the basis of our dignity in positive business.

    Second, we relate to God as Christ relates to God, as His

    son or daughter. As we are each child to the Father, we are

    beloved by Him as Christ is beloved by Him (accepting of

    course the difference that we are ‘‘made’’ by God, whereas

    he is ‘‘begotten’’ by God and thus is God). This love of the

    Father (who is love itself) is the basis of the love we have

    for one another in positive business. And finally we are

    ‘‘one’’ in communion with others as Christ is ‘‘one’’ in the

    Trinity of God. This divine unity is the source and model

    for the solidarity of positive business.

    In Christ, we learn what we must do to be in God. We

    learn about love; that we must love the Father as he does,

    with our whole heart, mind, soul, and strength; and that we

    must love our neighbor and self as he loves us, even to

    point of dying on a cross. We learn about moral conduct;

    that we must obey the ten commandments God gave to

    Moses in the Exodus; and that we must observe his

    teachings and counsels in the Gospels, not least those of his

    Sermon on the Mount. Far from limiting us, Christ’s

    commandments, teachings, and counsels prepare us for real

    being in God and thereby for real being in one another in

    positive business.

    And finally, in Christ we learn how to come to the

    Father. We come to the Father through him. We cannot

    achieve real being in God by our own initiative (it is not

    enough for us to know who we are and what we are to do),

    but can receive it as an unmerited gift only through Christ

    by the grace of his Holy Spirit. Contrary to what many non-

    Christians may suppose, Jesus Christ was not simply a wise

    teacher or a perspicacious prophet; he was and is now the

    one and only human Incarnation of God who joins us to the

    Father in both a negative and positive way. In the negative

    way, he reconciles us to the Father by freeing us from the

    sins in which we have turned away from Him in selfishness,

    by which we alienate and exile ourselves from true being,

    and to which we have succumbed since the first days. By

    ransoming himself by his passion on the cross, Christ

    redeemed us for the Father that we might take part in His

    abundant life—the abundant life that we call upon to be

    truly and fully human in business (where there no shortage

    of selfishness and sin to go around!). In the positive way,

    Christ inspires and empowers us with His Holy Spirit to

    live abundantly in the being of the Father. By his Holy

    Spirit he commissions us to the Church in the same way as

    he commissioned his original apostles. As Pinckaers points

    out (1995, pp. 177–188), Aquinas called this gift and

    commission the ‘‘evangelical law’’ and regarded it the first

    principle of Christian ethics. Through this law, which he

    also termed ‘‘the law of freedom,’’ we are able to transcend

    our selfishness and act freely upon God’s will instead of

    our own. Through its gift of the Holy Spirit, we are able to

    cultivate the virtues of real being in God; beginning with

    the theological virtues of faith, hope, and charity; and

    extending through the rational virtues of prudence, justice,

    temperance, and courage, which the theological virtues

    make possible. Thus, it is no coincidence that among these

    virtues are those today identified with positive business

    (see, Cameron and Winn 2012; Manz et al. 2008) which

    bring about the best of the human condition, namely our

    real human being.

    Thus, it is thanks to Christian theology that we under-

    stand positive business more fully as the real mystery of

    being in God through Jesus Christ. Its joy in the love of

    others and virtuous action is the joy of being with others in

    Christ. Its solidarity of persons is the communion of spirits

    in the body of Christ. And its common good is the ultimate

    good of coming to God the Father through His Son. Let us

    finally bring this exposition to a close by citing two of

    perhaps many affidavits for this Christology of positive

    business. One is the wisdom of St. Paul who, in Corinthians

    1 (12: 12–13), identified our positive humanity with Christ

    as follows:

    Brothers and sisters:

    There are different kinds of spiritual gifts but the

    same Spirit;

    there are different forms of service but the same

    Lord;

    there are different workings but the same God

    who produces all of them in everyone.

    To each individual the manifestation of the Spirit

    is given for some benefit.

    As a body is one though it has many parts,

    and all the parts of the body, though many, are one

    body,

    so also Christ.

    For in one Spirit we were all baptized into one body,

    whether Jews or Greeks, slaves or free persons,

    and we were all given to drink of one Spirit.

    The other is the example of positive organization par

    excellence, namely the universal Church founded by

    Christ upon ‘‘the rock’’ of St. Peter and the Apostles.

    Arguably the most successful and certainly the most

    enduring organization in human history, the Catholic

    Church accomplishes its myriad purposes—of saving

    souls, charity to the poor, social services, support of the

    family, education, warning of the perils of climate

    change, and campaigns to eliminate abortion, human

    trafficking, and political oppression—by calling all per-

    sons to the joyful solidarity that is the love of God in

    Jesus Christ (see Sandelands 2016). Notwithstanding its

    many, varied, and at times sordid human imperfections,

    L. E. Sandelands

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    the Church is truly the continuing incarnation of Christ in

    the world. And from the Church, perhaps uniquely, we

    can glean many of the essential precepts and practices of

    positive business—not least that every person in every

    business shares in the infinite dignity of Christ because

    every person is like him a child of God; that every person

    in every business has a unique part to play in the life of

    the whole because—per St. Paul—the whole is a com-

    munion of persons in Christ; that those persons who lead

    in business have authority over others as did Christ, in fief

    from the Father (see Sandelands 2008); and that leaders

    are responsible to their charges as was Christ to his, to be

    servant to all and especially to the lowest of the low (see

    Greenleaf 1977). Understood in this way, the Church is

    no mere analog of, or metaphor for, positive business;

    rather it is—as is the family (the so-called the ‘‘domestic

    Church’’)—the form and essence of positive business.

    Perhaps this explains why many businesses identified

    today as ‘‘positive’’ think of themselves as ‘‘families’’

    (often explicitly) and/or even as congregations of faith (if

    more implicitly) (see Demuijnck et al. 2015; Gallagher

    and Buckeye 2014; Sandelands 2014).

    Conclusion

    We began this article by asking why people are powerfully

    attracted to an ideal of positive business about which they

    been unable to speak plainly and in one voice. At its end

    we let us confirm that it is because they are attracted to its

    ‘‘real mystery’’ which is its being in God. This being is not

    something that we can point to and ‘‘see’’ in the way of

    science but is something that we must be with and ‘‘be-

    hold’’ in the way of religion. Positive business is thus a

    mystery in the original meaning of that word; that is, an

    encounter with the incomprehensible divine. Positive

    business thereby calls for a theology that can teach us who

    we are in relation to God, what we must do to be in God,

    and not least how we can come to God in spite of our sins.

    Christian theology answers these questions definitively by

    the real person Jesus Christ.

    At article’s end we understand that the reason why

    people are powerfully attracted to positive business is the

    reason why they cannot account for it scientifically. Posi-

    tive business is real being in the God for whom we long—

    to paraphrase St. Augustine, ‘‘our hearts are restless until

    they rest in Thee.’’ As divine being, positive business is not

    to point to and see but is to be with and behold. It is not to

    catalog by a science of objects but is to be ‘‘one with’’ in a

    religion of spirit. The real mystery of positive business is

    revealed, uniquely and truly, by the humanism that is Jesus

    Christ.

    Acknowledgments I thank JBE special issues editor Thomas Maak,

    guest editor Fr. Domenec Mele, two very capable anonymousre-

    viewers, and my colleague and friend Jim Walsh for their invaluable

    contributions to this article.

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      The Real Mystery of Positive Business: A Response from Christian Faith

      Abstract

      Introduction

      Positive Organizational Scholarship

      When Science Fails

      To See or to Behold

      The Mystery of Being in God

      The Christian Humanism of Positive Business

      Conclusion

      Acknowledgments

      References

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