Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
How a Christian restauranteur navigated the pains of a pandemic
How a Christian restauranteur navigated the pains of a pandemic
Oct 2, 2024 2:33 AM

As “executive stewards,” Christian business owners are called to weigh market forces and seek a profit, but we are also tasked with stewarding much more.

Read More…

The pandemic-era lockdowns caused immeasurable pain to countless businesses, with restaurants experiencing disproportionate levels of pain and suffering.

According to the National Restaurant Association, food-service industry sales “fell by $240 billion in 2020 from an expected level of $899 billion,” and by the end of 2020, “more than 110,000 eating and drinking places were closed for business temporarily, or for good.” Even now, as the economy re-opens, operational costs are soaring and labor supply is low.

In an essay for Christianity Today, Peter Demos of Demos’ Restaurants and Demos Family Kitchen offers a personal reflection on how his Christian faith has served as a fort and steadfast guide in navigating the business challenges of the past year.

“I watched sales drop at each of our locations anywhere from 60 percent to 90 percent as we shifted from dine-in services to carry-out and delivery only,” explains Demos. “As a result, I had to lay off employees, something I had never been forced to do apart from closing a location.”

Demos’ predicament is now all too familiar to American restauranteurs. But for Demos, whose restaurant’s stated purpose is “to glorify God in all we do by serving others,” the prospect of mass layoffs was not just a difficult financial reality. It presented unique questions for how he was supposed to weave his faith into executive leadership:

As a Christian, I’ve always been open about how my faith drives everything I do and shapes how I run my business. The decision to dismiss employees was agonizing, but I wanted e up with the most ethical and moral way to care for those who worked for us … What’s the most gracious way to cut employees in the middle of an economic crisis and a pandemic?

None of us had been through this before, and there were no easy answers. We made sure to keep on the payroll a few individuals who needed to maintain health insurance to care for serious medical issues. We created a three-tier list of employees, ranked by skill level and attitude. We ended up having to lay off those on the bottom tier; thankfully we never had to move to the second tier.

But I wanted to help those I had to let go. I looked for ways to offer support even after they were no longer on my payroll. I emailed them on a regular basis with information about ways to file for unemployment and other available benefits. But people were still angry even after we reached out to try to help. Some didn’t believe the layoffs were necessary and disputed our motives, even going as far as calling us “fake Christians.”

Like most businesses across America, Demos’ restaurant continues to struggle with the unforeseen aftershocks of the pandemic, ranging from acute labor shortages to supply chain disruptions to the ongoing polarization and politicization around mask-wearing and other safety protocols:

Other employees returned only to quit once stimulus checks were received. Much likenearly every restaurant in America, we became and continue to be short-staffed. We are now encountering a staffing crisis of such proportions that we have been forced to re-close some locations or reduce hours at others. While we have hundreds of individuals apply to each job posting, despite offering pay 50 percent higher than minimum wage and exclusive sign-on bonuses, they simply do not show up to interview.

The lack of willing workers has strained the entire industry and is now impacting our manufacturers and supply chains. Everything from aluminum lids for our to-go pans to chicken and ketchup packaging are running low. We have over 40 items currently on a watch list that may run out this week. We are talking daily and sometimes more with our distributors to stay on top of it and try to find substitutions, which is simply not always possible.

To navigate these challenges, Demos has kept in close counsel with other Christian business leaders and restauranteurs, which helped ground his struggle in the context of creative service and hopeful perseverance. While the industry norm was to dwell in fear, resentment, and scarcity-mindedness, his faith and trust in God gave him fresh perspective and helped him focus on gratitude.

“I found that these [other Christian restaurant] owners tended to have more positive outlooks and recognized this was a season that God would see them through,” he writes. “…When worry would rear its ugly head during the worst of the pandemic, I reminded myself that I trust a God who is in control, I would ask his forgiveness for my unbelief, and I would start being thankful for what he provided.”

In the final chapter of his book, Work: The Meaning of Your Life, theologian Lester DeKoster writes about these same struggles, calling the art of “executive stewardship” an “awesome obligation” of economic life — one that Christians ought to embrace and inhabit with wisdom and humility.

“Whatever work we do puts our selves into the service of others and at the same time sculpts the kind of self each is ing,” writes DeKoster. “… But certain jobs unite work and wage (and price) in someone’s decision … Theirs is the gift for merging all economic variables into price tags and wage rates – and their choices are as sculpting of their own selves as any others.”

As “executive stewards” we are called to lean into economic decisions with our consciences, balancing a host of factors toward an ideal that transcends earthly inputs and considerations.

“The twin tracks of work and wage do not meet, and cannot be scientifically related,” DeKoster writes. “They are bridged by morality, not by mathematics. And it is in the self-sculpting choices of wage and price scales that managers must make the twin tracks merge – under the all-seeing eye of God. It is here that justice, as defined by the will of the Creator and revealed in his es to bear upon the economy.”

Demos’ story offers just one possible approach. But as business owners continue to faithfully shepherd their enterprises away from the brink of economic collapse, his example points to a way of thinking and operating that can offer a stark contrast to the fears and economic assumptions of our post-pandemic age.

In the simple ways we weigh and steward executive decisions — wage rates, product quality, hiring and firing, layoffs, caring for those who fall on misfortune — we remind the world that business is not just about economic self-provision, but also about human fellowship, bound together by human persons with ethical obligations to each other.

“I can see how our staff developed closer relationships as we weathered the storms of 2020 together, adapting and even expanding our business to shipping food nationwide,” Demos concludes. “And I can see signs of spiritual growth. A year like last year reminds us of our real bottom line: We believe it is our job to share the gospel through the business God gave us. It is his business, not ours.”

Demos’ story reminds us that mastering the art of executive stewardship will not only lead to more fruitful businesses; it will lead to more abounding diversity and fellowship across the economic order. It creates economic value across civilization, but it does so by creating social and spiritual value in ways that are both unseen and eternal.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Old Europe’s new despotism
Noting the celebration of the 200th anniversary of the birth of Alexis de Tocqueville, Samuel Gregg analyzes the current situation in Europe. “Tocqueville’s vision of ‘soft-despotism’ is thus one of arrangements that mutually corrupt citizens and the democratic state,” and clear signs of this ‘soft-despotism’ are emerging, contends Gregg. Read the full text here. ...
Liberty and license
Max Blumenthal over at Arianna Huffington’s overhyped new blog, “The Huffington Post,” concludes that “the struggle for America’s future is not a conflict between political parties, but between two ideologies. One values individual freedom, the other, clerical authoritarianism. True conservatives should choose sides more carefully.” Blumenthal misunderstands the true nature of freedom, ignoring the moral foundation of freedom and lumping it in with “clerical authoritarianism.” As Lord Acton says, “Liberty is not the power of doing what we like, but...
NYT freak show
A New York Times editorial today argues that spreading concerns about the ethical validity of chimeras (human-animal hybrids) are unfounded. Here is a summary of the argument: 1) Strange and disturbing possibilities are more like science-fiction than real science. These “should not distract us from ing more mundane experiments with chimeras that will be needed to advance science.” 2) This is just the next logical progression. There’s no real substantive difference between transplanting organs or tissues and splicing genes. 3)...
The moral imperative of our time?
In his “Bad Economics, Bad Public Policy and Bad Theology,” columnist Raymond Keating makes the case on OrthodoxyToday.org that the Religious Left offers “assorted biblical passages that speak of aiding the poor, the necessity for charity and justice, or other vague generalities, and then simply assert that these quotations support the particulars of their big government philosophy. Of course, this ranks as either ignorant or disingenuous from a theological standpoint.” Keating examines resurgent activism by liberal/leftist religious leaders on environmental...
Game review: Food Force
The United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) has found a new way to get the word out about its efforts. Food Force is a free downloadable video game (for the PC and Mac) designed by the WFP, in which the users will “Play the game, learn about food aid, and help WFP work towards a world without hunger.” Within the context of the fictional nation of Sheylan, the player embarks on a series of missions intended to give users a...
‘Kyoto is Doomed’
Iain Murray at Tech Central Station writes that the EU is going to have a lot of trouble meeting its obligations under the Kyoto Protocol, and this could have disastrous economic effects. He writes of recent statements from Spanish officials: This is a clear indication that at least one government has realized that Kyoto brings a severe economic cost with it, contrary to the protestations of the European Commission and Kyoto boosters around the world. Murray concludes, “The reality, then,...
Review Acton books
Interested in reading and reviewing various publications for your blog? Head on over to Mind & Media, a blog-based book reviewing service. The Acton Institute has placed three titles from the Lexington Books Studies in Ethics & Economics series, edited by Acton director of research Samuel Gregg. One of the books is Within the Market Strife: American Catholic Economic Thought from Rerum Novarum to Vatican II, by Acton research fellow Kevin Schmiesing. e a reviewer ...
The flawed fast food tax
Fast Food Tax Redux As I alerted you to more than three weeks ago, Detroit mayor Kwame Kilpatrick has proposed a 2% tax on fast food restaurants, in a vain attempt to cover the city’s fiscal woes. Here’s a sneak preview to this week’s ANC feature, “The Flawed Fast Food Tax,” in which I conclude: As a rule, governments should not seek quick and temporary fixes to structural budget problems. Sin taxes like the fast food tax are quick fixes...
Big story on small loans
Today’s Christian Science Monitor has a story on the increasing use of micro-loans by Christian aid and development groups. According to the story, “Religious organizations are increasingly adopting the Talmudic sentiment that the noblest form of charity is helping others to dispense with it.” Ron Sider, in the twentieth anniversary edition of his book, Rich Christians in an Age of Hunger, strongly endorses the use of micro-loans as a means of getting desperately needed capital to those who need it...
Mistaken mastectomy
According to the AP, Molly Akers has filed a lawsuit against the University of Chicago Hospitals, seeking more than $200,000 in damages for the pain, suffering and lost wages she suffered when her healthy right breast was surgically removed. The mistake was the result of a lab mix-up, and in a statement released on NBC’s Today Show, the hospital expressed regret for the mistake. Akers’ lawyer, Bob Clifford, is using the case as an opportunity to speak against proposed tort...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2024 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved