Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Rev. Robert Sirico: The spiritual secrets of business success
Rev. Robert Sirico: The spiritual secrets of business success
Apr 18, 2026 11:51 AM

What are the keys to properly analyzing business opportunities, discovering new markets, and troubleshooting barriers to growth? Business degrees, books, and seminars may equip leaders with a technical knowledge of these problems – but in a new podcast, Acton Institute President and Co-founder Rev. Robert A. Sirico identifies two core mental and spiritual traits that incline entrepreneurs toward success.

Rev. Sirico joined best-selling author and top-rated Forbes leadership speaker Brad Formsma in episode 64 of “The Wow Factor,” a podcast that promises “Words Of Wisdom from extraordinary leaders to help you grow in business and beyond.”

Despite their deep subject matter, they speak with the familiarity of two people whose families have been intertwined for decades. They recall how Rev. Sirico preached at the funeral of Brad’s grandfather, Don, at Lagrave Avenue Christian Reformed Church – “the cathedral of the Christian Reformed Church, if they had cathedrals,” as Rev. Sirico called it.

This podcast, which introduces the life and philosophy of Acton’s co-founder to the audience, contains his familiar story of how a childhood encounter with a neighbor who survived the Holocaust opened his eyes to offenses against human dignity.

“This sense of the injustice that I had seen done to Mrs. Schneider … was prompting me” to be involved in the left-wing activism of Los Angeles and the West Coast’s counterculture, he said.

“I was lost in those years,” Rev. Sirico said. “When you’re lost, it doesn’t mean you’re not opinionated.”

In time, “a whole paradigm switch” led him to see the goodness of business – and that goodness makes good business.

A pivotal moment, he said, came from meeting French tire magnate François Michelin. Michelin modeled servant leadership by personally serving others rather than exclusively writing checks to charitable causes (commendable as that would be). His concern ignited his personal need to assure the safety and quality of his products – and their resultant reputation for excellence drove sales.

Another revelation came when Michelin took the time to speak to a low-seniority employee who interrupted his discussion with Rev. Sirico, treating the man in a humble and respectful manner. The ability to deal with interruptions, Rev. Sirico told Formsma, is “evidence of … a person’s flexibility”:

If you do not have flexibility in business, you will not survive. You will not seize market opportunities. You will not be able to be a good servant to other people, to your consumers, because you won’t see the things – you will have already had the blinders on, and you’re going down one path, and nobody can interrupt you.

Flexibility and servant leadership are mon factors of success.

In the course of the 47-minute podcast, the two men also discuss:

The spiritual reality behind generosity, philanthropy, and concealing vs. revealing good deeds;“The real flaw of Marx”;The reason “a lot of nonprofits can go a long time and really not do very much” – and how they can avoid this fate;How the arc of Rev. Sirico’s activist career bent from opposing “prejudice against gay people” to fighting “prejudice against business people”;How business can e a mode of transcendence and creativity;The simple economic reality that results in “freeing people up bine their intelligence”;The inner emotional world of Jesus’ Parable of the Talents; andThe proper interpretation of Jesus’ statement, “It is easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter into the kingdom of Heaven.”

You can listen to Rev. Robert A. Sirico and Brad Formsma on episode 64 of “The Wow Factor” on the podcast’s website or on Apple Podcasts.

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
Protestants and Natural Law, Part 2
In Part 1, we saw that the infrastructure of Protestant social teaching is not nearly as sophisticated as Roman Catholic social teaching and that natural law has often been viewed as a bridge between the church and the world. Historically, natural law has been used as a bridge category to appeal to people of all races, classes, cultures, and religions. Its public value stems, in part, from its ability to speak beyond those who share a mitment to sacred Scripture...
Vatican and Stem Cells
The clash between scientists and moralists that Jordan highlights below is displayed also in reaction to the ments by Cardinal Alfonso Trujillo of the Pontifical Council for the Family concerning munication of those involved in embryonic stem cell research. ments are reported here, and scientists’ reactions here. Meanwhile, the Church wholeheartedly supports the use of adult stem cells (which has already proven effective), as indicated by this story about a Missouri priest. ...
Book Review: The Scandal Of The Evangelical Conscience
Ron Sider, The Scandal Of The Evangelical Conscience: Why Are Christians Living Just Like The Rest Of The World? (Grand Rapids: Baker Books, 2005), 144 pp. “Summing Up Sider’s Legacy” Ron Sider’s recent book, The Scandal of the Evangelical Conscience, is a noteworthy achievement. One the one hand, it represents an plete shift away from left-leaning government-oriented solutions to social and economic problems that characterize the first edition of his popular Rich Christians in an Age of Hunger. This movement...
Balmer’s Partisan Polemics
Noted evangelical scholar Randall Balmer castigates the religious right in a recent piece in the Chronicle of Higher Education. The critique, in my view, amounts to little more than a slightly more sophisticated version of Jim Wallis. The criticisms leveled by Balmer and Wallis are the same ones made by leftist enemies of the religious right for decades; the difference is that Balmer and Wallis are evangelicals themselves and, therefore, their critiques are “internal” and, for some, pelling. I happen...
Obama, Where Art Thou?
From Barack Obama’s speech to Jim Wallis’s Call for Renewal (worth the read, if for nothing more than to gain an insight on how he sees his crowd. Study one’s rhetoric and style and you’ll know how they view their audience): Democracy demands that the religiously motivated translate their concerns into universal, rather than religion-specific, values. It requires that their proposals be subject to argument, and amenable to reason. I may be opposed to abortion for religious reasons, but if...
Biotech and Bioethics
“If you look at all the discussions surrounding biotechnology, I feel that we are clearly focusing too much on ethics.” Toine Manders, Dutch liberal member of the European Parliament, on discussions in the European Parliament about stem cell research. From “Debate on stem cells holds back EU research drive,” Financial Times, June 14, 2006. (HT: WorldMagBlog) “It is because the moral sciences tend to show us such limits to our conscious control, while the progress of the natural sciences constantly...
Prayer for Independence Day
Lord God Almighty, in whose Name the founders of this country won liberty for themselves and for us, and lit the torch of freedom for nations then unborn: Grant that we and all the people of this land may have grace to maintain our liberties in righteousness and peace; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen. –U.S. Book of Common Prayer, “Independence Day,” (1979), p....
Technology and Globalization Transform a Town
Read about Racine, Wisconsin in the New York Times, “On Lake Michigan, a Global Village,” by Steve Lohr. Gary Becker is mayor of Racine, and according to the article, “Racine’s future, Mr. Becker believes, lies in forging stronger links with the regional economy and global markets. Reinvention can be unnerving, he acknowledges, but he says it is his hometown’s best shot at prosperity and progress.” “In the past, Racine was a self-contained economy,” Becker said. “But that is not an...
Because It’s Worth Rereading….
Happy Independence Day, everyone: IN CONGRESS, JULY 4, 1776 The unanimous Declaration of the thirteen united States of America When in the Course of human events it es necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another and to assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature’s God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they...
Christians on Superman
Christian reviewers take the new take on the Man of Steel many different ways: Steven Greydanus likes it. Thomas Hibbs doesn’t. Keith Howland likes it. Peter Chattaway doesn’t (very much). None of these has anything on Acton’s own Jordan Ballor, however, who analyzes the film with penetrating insight (or X-ray vision, as one is tempted to say…). ...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved