Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
To whom is given: A new documentary on the Christian call to business
To whom is given: A new documentary on the Christian call to business
Mar 3, 2026 1:25 PM

There is often a temptation among Christians to segment and categorize “Christian calling” into our own preferred buckets, deeming certain jobs, careers, or vocations as more worthwhile or “sacred” than others.

Yet our public ministry doesn’t begin or endwithin the walls of a church building or the confines of a conversation about conversion. Ourpublic worship and witness is not limited to work and service within a specific subset of “Christian-oriented” businesses or institutions.

In a new documentary from Values & Capitalism, we get a more visible, tangible picture of how rich and varied Christian vocation can be. Anchored by Christian leaders and thinkers such as Christopher Brooks, Gregory Thornbury Katherine Leary Alsdorf, and Dave Blanchard, the documentary follows the paths of 3 different business leaders.

From an pany entrepreneur to a pastry chef to the owners of an electrical contracting firm, we see plex and remarkable ways that God unexpectedly calls people to various forms of creative service, weaving together spiritual calling and neighbor-love with economic and cultural transformation.

For Greg McEvilly, founder of Kammok, the “sacred-secular divide” was a real obstacle. “I’ve always had this love for business…and also this love for the Lord and for ministry,” he says. “Growing up, I saw those as two diverging paths.” McEvilly gave up on his dreams of starting a business, choosing seminary instead. Yet upon beginning his studies, he soon realized that his dreams of owning a business were closely connected to his heart for ministry.

“It reshaped my theology,” McEvilly explains. “God really started rekindling a passion for entrepreneurship and business and then giving me a broader vision for how my business could be a way for me to live out my faith in a really incredible way and have a transformative impact on a broader scale.”

For Winnette McIntosh Ambrose, an MIT-educated engineer who left the bio-medical field to became a pastry chef, the vocational shift involved a significant re-imagining of what it means to glorify God through our work. Before making the entrepreneurial leap, she was routinely faced with a question: “How can you leave your fruitful and honorable work in vision-saving technology to, well, bake treats?”

Her response took a cue from the Economy of Wonder and the gratitude that it inspires. “As human beings, we’re created with one main purpose, and that is to glorify God, and to do that in whatever sphere we might be in,” she explains, pointing to Colossians 3:23. “…It was this idea that whatever I was doing, that I should be doing it heartily and for the Lord.”

The church as institution plays a significant role in building up the body, but the subsequent empowerment isn’t meant to end there. If we let it fade, leaving the most basic tools on the table, we’ll miss out on numerous opportunities to build culture, love people, and serve those around us for the glory of God.

“Church is the conscience of culture. We make sure that culture understands its higher moral calling,” Brooks explains. “But business is the creator of culture. They look at market conditions and they assess needs and desires and wants, and in an anticipatory way, they create products, goods, and services that actually bring to life what’s in our hearts and our imaginations. And if they work together plementary ways like that, then our societies flourish.”

Photo: Values & Capitalism

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
Don’t Look Up looks down on you
The most popular film on Netflix right now is either a successor to Dr. Strangelove or a self-righteous and overly obvious attempt to shame the average American. But it does have a lot more of Leonardo DiCaprio than you’ve seen before. Read More… The techno-gossip that passes for objective knowledge these days assures us that the Netflix movie Don’t Look Up was watched extensively—more than 321.5 million hours streamed. Does that mean about 150 million people around the world watched...
Elections in Hong Kong ratify Beijing’s control
The Hong Kong of old is quickly descending into a Beijing-controlled client state, with recent elections ensuring CCP-loyal functionaries enjoy top legislative positions. Read More… The People’s Republic of China (PRC) pletingthe destruction ofthe old Hong Kong. The last vestiges of free expression and democratic choice are disappearing. On January 4, the media site Citizen News closed due to the deteriorating legal environment. Theorganization explained: “We all love this place, deeply. Regrettably, what was ahead of us is not just...
Here’s how to offer reparations in a free society
The topic of reparations is often a nonstarter for many conservatives, but it shouldn’t be. There are classical liberal alternatives to simple government payouts that can begin to repay black Americans still suffering from the repercussions of Jim Crow racism. Read More… Today we mostly associate the idea of reparations for America’s black population with left-wing politics, and that’s no surprise. Only Democratic candidates for president, such as Marianne Williamson, mention reparations as part of their political platform. However, the...
The twilight of Christianity, the loss of authority, and our fragmented selves
The pervasive crisis of meaning contemporary Americans experience is directly related to a loss of moral agency and legitimate authority. That crisis manifests itself in ideological fervor, grasps at power and wealth, and immersion in mob activities that occasion in violence. Is there any hope for moral cohesion short of a Third Great Awakening? Read More… Political theorists have engaged in much debate concerning the “quarrel between the ancients and the moderns,” such quarrel evidence of the opposing claims of...
The Djokovic affair proves our elites no longer believe in fair play
Although the deported world-class tennis pro has few defenders, his cause is one we all should care about, because excellence is something we should all care about. Read More… Fair play and the rule of law are essential conditions of our civilization, regulating private and public life. We would be ashamed to look for success, prosperity, victory without them. People whom we suspect of unfair dealings or illegality stand to lose everything concerning their reputation, to say nothing of what...
Lenin’s ugly legacy of identity politics
The arch Russian revolutionary Vladimir Lenin died this day in 1924. Myths abound about his beliefs. They’re not what you think. They’re worse. Read More… “I broke sharply with all questions of religion,” said Vladimir Lenin, with typical vituperation. “I took off my cross and threw it in the rubbish bin.” Such was a metaphor for the dark turn made by Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov, who came to be known by an alias, “Lenin.” He was born April 22, 1870, in...
It’s time individuals, not the government, make choices about COVID-19 risk
After almost two years, several vaccines, and a variant that is far less deadly, it’s now up to individuals and families to decide how best to cope with the virus, not government. Read More… “The central question we face today is: Who decides?” That’s the opening line of Justice Neil Gorsuch’s concurrence to the Supreme Court’s Jan. 13 opinion striking down the Biden administration’s vaccine mandate that was to be enacted through the Occupational Safety and Health Administration. Justice Gorsuch...
COVID-19 has exposed politicians who think themselves above the law
Whether Boris Johnson in the U.K. or Pelosi, Newsome, Whitmer, and Lightfoot in the U.S., political elites tend to think the rules are only for the little people. What we need is a return to the true citizen legislator. Read More… Each morning’s headlines in the British press bring new details of parties happening inside Boris Johnson’s government while the rest of the United Kingdom and much of the world was locked down in isolation because of the COVID-19 pandemic...
Is Christianity doing more harm than good to American men?
Men are in a bad way in America, with rising rates of depression, suicide, and disengagement from the workforce. And the church is not helping. In fact, it may be making things worse. But there is hope. Read More… Men and boys in America are struggling, and if we don’t do something about it soon, we’ll see the disintegration of the very institutions that allow for sustainable human flourishing—institutions like the family and the marketplace. While it was once believed...
We all hate cancel culture now, even the pope
Recent remarks by Pope Francis denouncing “cancel culture” mentary by left and right. We all seem to be against it. Defining it, however, is the real trick, especially when we’re the ones doing the “canceling.” Read More… In the classic way of religious institutions, the pope picked up the term just as it seems to be going out of regular usage. It feels a bit like yesterday’s news. “Cancel culture.” It wasn’t just that the pope said it, I think,...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved