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The Odd Couple. - Church on Sunday, Work on Monday: The Challenge of Fusing Christian Values with Business Life - Good Work: When Excellence and Ethics Meet - Faith, Morals and Money: What the World's Religions Tell Us About Ethics in the Marketplace - book review
Commonweal, June 1, 2002 by Thomas Baker
Church on Sunday, Work on Monday The Challenge of Fusing Christian Values with Business Life Laura Nash, Scotty McLennan Jossey-Bass, $23.95, 316 pp. Good Work When Excellence and Ethics Meet Howard Gardner, Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi, William Damon Basic Books, $26, 288 pp. Faith, Morals and Money What the World's Religions Tell Us About Ethics in the Marketplace Edward G. Zinbarg Continuum, $22.95, 182 pp.
Business and religion have always made an ugly couple. From the Busy Folks' Bible Class at George Babbitt's local church to J. F. Powers's Billy Cosgrove, we imagine that businesspeople inevitably get religion all wrong. Somehow, they pollute it with eagerness for success, cheery optimism, and a propensity for dishonesty when the going gets tough. Their religious goal, if they have one, is to be in the bishop's foursome at next year's diocesan golf outing. It's no wonder that churches generally want (except for fundraising, of course) to keep their distance.
In the Catholic Church we've had several generations to live with Vatican II's reminder that what we do with our working lives has ultimate significance. But there aren't many signs that church programs, preaching, or parishes have found effective ways to get that message across. Yes, we have Domino's Pizza founder Tom Monaghan's Legatus, where Catholic CEOs get together to celebrate church teaching (a tradition "second to none," brags its Web site). But in general, church ministry is ministry to people who need help desperately--not to people who work.
Church on Sunday, Work on Monday tries to explain why churches have done such a poor job relating to churchgoers as working people. Laura Nash, a Harvard Business School researcher, and Scotty McLennan, dean for religious life at Stanford (and yes, once the prototype for Doonesbury's Reverend Scott Sloan), are a surprisingly good combination to tackle this lacuna. Unlike most business books, their work is well written and succinct--great reading for both people inside the church as ministers and working people who want a basic introduction to the issues.
Why the great divorce between faith and work? Most business people, Church on Sunday says, are basically optimistic: in theory and even in practice, they tend to like change, building, competition, and fixing problems. Meanwhile, churches of almost every stripe are built to keep change at bay, even when it's the only way forward. This clash between the go-getters and the keepers of the flame emerges inside businesses too, but there the torch passes along to a new generation sooner or later--or the business goes under. That torch-passing doesn't often happen in churches.
The businesspeople interviewed in Church on Sunday don't pull any punches pointing out how little interest their churches take in what they do for a living. When they hear preaching about business--if they hear it at all--it's to expose commerce as a nasty symptom and perhaps a root cause of materialistic malaise. (Just last month, I heard a blanket condemnation from the pulpit of all advertising as exploitation, and all media as manipulative. All?) The result: people who feel their church doesn't know very much about, and mostly doesn't respect, what they're doing most of their waking hours.
The solution, of course, may not lie inside the churches at all. A growing industry of nondenominational but vaguely spiritual books, workshops, and groups is already talking about fairness, leadership, and vocational choice. Much of this sort of talk ends up as compromised and Babbitt-like as you might imagine (the dreadful Jesus, C.E.O. is just one example). But the best of it does give people some sort of structure for "principle-centered living," as the Mormon management thinker Stephen Covey calls it. To be sure, his turgid but endlessly best-selling The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People is more a gospel of personal empowerment than the whole gospel. But Covey's success comes from acknowledging that most people work in a complex, nondenominational world--and that the average business person does want, in some way, both to do good and to do well. If churches want to reach business people, they could do worse than start from those assumptions.
They could also give some attention to Good Work. Here the question raised by its three psychologist authors is: Every profession at its best can produce "good work"--work that is expert and advances the common good, and that somehow isn't motivated entirely by money or greed. How does that happen?
The book, like Church on Sunday, is based on interviews with practitioners, but here the focus is on two fields within which there is a constant tension between money and professional responsibility: genetic science and journalism. The conversations describe the pressures you'd expect to hear about: reporters ordered to pursue dopey stories rather than real news; scientists competing fiercely for grant support and professional prominence. Many are good stories yet they are discussed and analyzed at far too great a length. Furthermore, with only two professions under discussion, the book seems much longer than it needs to be.