Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
How should Christians respond to economic disruption?
How should Christians respond to economic disruption?
Jan 20, 2026 6:02 AM

I graduated from college in 2008 at the height of the Great Recession. It wasn’t the greatest time to be looking for a job, but nevertheless, I somehow managed to get hired at a global FORTUNE pany. I had conquered! I had succeeded!

Alas, within a few months, several of my fellow coworkers were let go and their jobs were offshored to the Philippines and Mexico. It was the first in a series of layoffs e, and I soon realized that the only reason I was able to survive was because I was the youngest, cheapest, and least experienced worker at the office.

Soon enough, all 250 people in my department were “dissolved,” our jobs rendered obsolete due to “changes in the industry.” In turn, my child-of-the-80s optimism was promptly replaced with fear, resentment, and pessimism.

But why? The world is growing increasingly connected! Poverty and hunger are on the decline! Freedom and opportunity are reaching new corners of the world! Technological innovation is allowing us to do more with less!

Yet in America, we are no longer living in the safe, secure, insulated, post-war era. It’s the same old story of creative destruction but at a new, break-neck speed: more global, more rapid, more dynamic. Through this lens, many of the primary drivers of our newfound prosperity — innovation, automation, offshoring, immigration, and trade — are also the drivers of our disruption.

So what is the Christian response to such disruption? Is there a way of viewing these constant “threats” to our fortability, and convenience as opportunities?

As Christians, many of us understand the poor standard “spiritual tools” for such seasons — prayer, fasting, discipleship, worship, gratitude — and each of these is important. But if we misunderstand God’s design and purpose for business and economics, the church is at risk of misapplying these same tools, responding out of a mindset of security and scarcity rather than risk and abundance.

And in many ways, the modern church has adopted and co-opted a very “worldly” view of work. The world says work is primarily about material provision for ourselves and our families. It’s about carving out your niche and achieving and succeeding and climbing the ladder. Or, if you’re a millennial like myself, it’s about “following your passion” and “living your dreams” — about “doing what you love and loving what you do.”

But while work can and often does produce these things, does this really represent its essence and purpose and design? What if work isn’t ultimately about us?

As theologian Lester DeKoster puts it, work is, first and foremost, service to others, and thus to God — or service to God, and thus to others. From the Wall Street banker to the garbage man to the school teacher to the doctor to the microchip engineer to the software developer to the father and mother, all of our work is about service to neighbor.

When shift our perspective toward God and neighbor, everything flips upside down. Calling is no longer about “following your passion” or self-actualization, though that may be a byproduct. It’s about obedience to God. Work and career are no longer about personal provision, though that will likely be a result. They’re about providing for others. Work is no longer about protecting our turf or sitting still in our “niche.” It’s about creativity, inclusion, collaboration, petitive development. From here — and only from here — can we effectively apply the range of spiritual tools God has given us bringing prayer and prophecy, wisdom and discernment, miracles and Gospel transformation to all areas of our work, from the assembly line to the board room to the Silicon Valley garage to the home nursery.

“Work restores the broken family of humankind,” DeKoster writes. “Through work that serves others, we also serve God, and he in exchange weaves the work of others into a culture that makes our work easier and more rewarding … As seed multiplies into a harvest under the wings of the Holy Spirit, so work multiplies into a civilization under the intricate hand of the same Spirit.”

When economic change hits, that fundamental switch makes all the difference, turning signals of disruption into signals for creative service.

No longer are people seen as “stealing our jobs.” They are being included in an intricate web of service, relationship, and fellowship. No longer is job disruption or industry shake-up an occasion to mope about what was or wasn’t “our job” or an “American job” in years gone by. If someone or pany or country is able to do something faster, cheaper, or better, it’s an opportunity to either improve our service or shift our focus elsewhere. It’s an opportunity to adapt and retool, to create and innovate on behalf of our neighbors, as fortable and inconvenient as it may be.

The temptation to dwell on the illusion of economic security will remain strong — to cherish and fight for fortable control we’ve enjoyed thus far. But to do so requires us not only to succumb to an unworkable fantasy about the global economy, but to distort God’s design for work: to give way to selfish impulses, to suppress our own creative potential and exclude the creativity of countless others.

America is not insulated from petitors, whether we pretend to be or not. And that is not cause for fear and territorialism and protectionism. Rather, it is a good and beautiful and promising thing, if only we’d respond accordingly — reorienting our hearts and hands from a work that secures, consumes, and collects to one that serves, creates, and sustains.

This is an edited transcript from a speech given to North Central University’s School of Business in Minneapolis, MN, on September 15, 2017.

Image:Free-Photos (CC0)

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
Tesla Motors Releases a Car for the Masses That Runs on Coal
Electric cars are not a new invention, nor are they as popular as they once were. (They debuted in 1890 and by 1900 electric cars accounted for around a third of all vehicles on the road.) But over the past decade, thanks to Elon Musk and Tesla Motors, electric cars have e much more interesting. Tesla rolled out the first fully electric sports car in 2008 and a fully electric luxury sedan in 2012. And earlier this month they unveiled...
Money and Moral Absolutes
In medieval Europe merchants would often writeDeus enim et proficuum (“For God and Profit”) in the upper corners of their accounting ledgersorA nome di Dio e guadangnio (“In the Name of God and Profit”) on partnership contracts. These words reflected their authors’ conviction that banking and finance were economically useful endeavors,saysSamuel Greggin this week’s Acton Commentary. Luis Molina and the many other Christians who explored these areas throughout history were not searching for greater marketplace effi­ciencies. Their concern was moral....
Roundup: Samuel Gregg on Pope Francis and Overpopulation, Pope Leo XIII and Modernity, and Constitutional Conservatism
New articles from the indefatigable Samuel Gregg, research director of the Acton Insitute: Amoris Laetitia: Another Nail in the “Overpopulation” Coffin, The Catholic World Report Here the pope signals his awareness of the efforts of various organizations—the UN, the World Bank, the IMF, the EU, particular US administrations—to push anti-natalist policies upon developing nations. A Revolutionary Pope for Revolutionary Times, Crisis Magazine Between 1878 and 1903, Leo issued an astonishing 85 encyclicals. Many dealt squarely with the political, social, and...
North Koreans face new challenges after they defect
They faced potential starvation, imprisonment, torture, and made a dangerous journey to freedom only to discover new struggles that they never could prehended in their former lives. Stories and reports of North Koreans fleeing their country aren’t particularly unusual. There are dozens of books written by or about North Korean defectors. Last week, thirteen North Koreans who worked for a restaurant fled to South Korea. It’s also been recently reported that a high-ranking colonel from North Korean military’s General Reconnaissance...
Leftist Shareholders Attack Corporate Free Speech
On its website, Trinity Health trumpets its shareholder activism. Based in Livonia, Mich., the Catholic health care provider boasts operations in 21 states, which includes 90 hospitals and 120 long-term care facilities. For this last, Trinity should be lauded. For the first, however, your writer is left shaking his head. Among Trinity’s list of five shareholder advocacy priorities, two stand out: • uphold the dignity of the human person. • enable access to health care. In other words, issues any...
A Papal Revolution
This year marks the 125th anniversary of Pope Leo XIII’s encyclical Rerum Novarum and the beginning of the modern Catholic social encyclical tradition. In this landmark text, Leo courageously set out to examine the “new things” of his time, especially the changes associated with the Industrial Revolution. These included the emergence of an urbanized working class, the breakdown of old social hierarchies, and the rise of capitalism as well as ideologies such as socialism, munism, and corporatism. On April 20,...
Audio: Samuel Gregg Revisits Regensburg
Samuel GreggOn Monday evening, Acton Institute Director of Research Samuel Gregg joined host Sheila Liaugminas on Relevant Radio’s A Closer Look to examine Pope Benedict XVI’s Regensburg address as we approach the tenth anniversary of its delivery. Greggemphasizes the fact that our understanding of who God is and what his nature is has important implications for how we understand human liberty and rationality, and argues that as western nations have gradually abandoned the Christian religious principles that formerly undergirded their...
Rev. Sirico: Pope Francis’s Love Letter to the Family
“What the pope has brought forth is honest, timely and sensitive,” writes Rev. Robert A. Sirico, co-founder and president of the Acton Institute. “Amoris Laetitia explores plicated pastoral situations that any confessor will know all too well: challenges of how weak and fallen people can authentically live the faith.” In the Detroit News, Rev. Sirico discusses Pope Francis’s love letter to the family: The pope’s reflections are aimed at how to make a solid moral discernment in the midst of...
Lex Luthor, Capitalist Villain
In an earlier post pared the political economy of superheroes in the DC and Marvel universes. And today I have a piece up at The Stream examining the figure of Lex Luthor, the crony capitalist villain featured in Batman v. Superman: Dawn of Justice. As I write in that piece, Luthor is certainly more than a crony capitalist, but he is not less than one, and it is this corruption of democratic capitalism that serves as a backdrop for his...
4 Reasons to Support School Choice from Pope Francis’s ‘Amoris Laetitia’
Pope Francis’s recently released apostolic exhortation Amoris Laetitiahas received considerable attention because of the issue of divorce munion. But the 60,000+ word document has much more to say about family life than the dissolution of marriage. For example, it provides pelling reasons for all Christians (not just Catholics) to support school choice. The term “school choice” refers to programs that give parents the power and opportunity to choose the schools their children attend, whether public, private, parochial, or homeschool. While...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved