Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Work as religion: the rise of ‘divinity consultants’
Work as religion: the rise of ‘divinity consultants’
Nov 22, 2025 2:35 PM

Traditional religion is increasingly being replaced by a series of “new atheisms,” leading many to search for spiritual meaning elsewhere, particularly in the workplace.

As a result, modern workers are more likely to view their economic activity through spiritual vocabulary, using terms like “calling” and “vocation.” Yet without the right transcendent source and ethical arc, such a development can simply lead us to new fads of self-actualization and faux self-empowerment.

As The Atlantic’s Derek Thompson recently argued, “everybody worships something,” and “workism is among the most potent of the new peting for congregants.” Work has evolved from “a means of material production to a means of identity production … promising identity, transcendence, munity.”

Unfortunately, Thompson concludes, despite its grand goals, “workism is making Americans miserable,” leading to “collective anxiety, mass disappointment, and inevitable burnout.” Recognizing these risks, churches have long sought to fill the void by connecting work to love of God and neighbor – manifest more recently in a rapidly growing faith-and-work movement.

Now, however, thanks to a new crop of work/life gurus and missionaries, there is another belief system on the market. In an extensive profile for the New York Times, Nellie Bowles highlights an emerging industry of “divinity consultants” and “corporate clergy” who seek to reinvigorate “spiritual well being” in the workplace through a mix of counseling, liturgy, and “ancient wisdom.”

“They go by different names: ritual consultants, sacred designers, soul-centered advertisers,” Bowles explains. “They have degrees from divinity schools. Their business is borrowing from religious tradition to bring spiritual richness to corporate America.” Such consultants are unaffiliated with any formal religion and seem to shy away from any particular notions about God, aiming instead to mix syncretistic spirituality with their romantic ideas about the workplace.

As Bowles explains:

Those who have chosen this path have founded agencies – some for-profit, some not – with similar-sounding names: Sacred Design Lab, Ritual Design Lab, Ritualist. They blend the obscure language of the sacred with the also obscure language of management consulting to provide clients with a range of spiritually inflected services, from architecture to employee training to ritual design.

Their larger goal is to soften cruel capitalism, making space for the soul, and to encourage employees to ask if what they are doing is good in a higher sense. Having watched social justice get readily absorbed into corporate culture, they want to see if more American businesses are ready for faith.

Depending on the business need, a consultant’s work can vary widely, from space design and branding to staff management and organizational rituals. The goals, too, are diverse, whether focused munity building, “self-care,” or “meaning-making.” In each case, consultants take their cues from traditional religious beliefs and practices, which inform their themes and shape the proposed rituals and structures.

For the founders of Sacred Design Lab, for example, organized religion is viewed simply as a “technology for delivering meaning” – something that can be applied to help workers find connection in their jobs and satisfy inner longings. According to Evan Sharp, co-founder of Pinterest, Sacred Design Lab’s consultants used these insights to help him apply “major religious practices” in the office. “Some of the rituals I grew up with in Protestantism really have emotional utility,” Sharp said.

There is plenty to admire in such efforts, to be sure. As already noted, our society is facing a crisis of meaning, and the allure of success-seeking has turned work into a friendly idol. These consultants seem to recognize at least part of this problem, just as they seem to have hit on partof the solution. “Regardless of what you and I might think about it, the fact is that people are showing up in the workplace with these big deficits in themselves when es to belonging and connection to the beyond,” said Angie Thurston, a co-founder of Sacred Design Lab.

Such consultants seem to recognize, for example, that work is not ultimately about us, pointing instead to themes like “collective liberation” mitting to love of neighbor above and beyond narrow self-interest – even while pursuing a profit. Likewise, they preach the glories of workplace as real, munity where we create, cooperate, and collaborate with others. As the Sacred Design Lab website puts it: “We envision a world in which every person is connected to their inherent goodness, known and loved munities of care, and bountifully giving their gifts toward beauty, justice, and wholeness.” From high up in the clouds, these sentiments ring true.

At the same time, much of mon vocabulary seems to neglect the reality that these same features are inherent to work, business, and trade – regardless of whatever innovative rituals and liturgies the consultants have been keen enough construct. At times, capitalism can surely feel “cruel” and “soulless,” but at its core, human exchange is human exchange, whether it takes place in a Walmart checkout aisle, the assembly line at a widget factory, or the consultant-constructed board rooms of Fortune panies. When we understand this, it seems far more likely that our deficit of meaning has more do with our spiritual allegiances and economic imaginations than the “grind” of the modern workplace or the inadequacies of corporate bureaucracies.

In perusing their proposed solutions, one gets the sense that such consultants don’t really understand their secularized spiritualism is not at war with the cold-hearted viciousness of capitalism rather than the secular spirituality often found therein. While mon advice of “divinity consultants” may not directly contradict formal religious beliefs, adherents should be careful they do not find themselves slowly adrift in yet another religion that idolizes work itself. In some sense, we seem to be witnessing one version of “workism” rising up against another – cleverly making our own golden calves as we try desperately to smile our way to retirement.

In his book Work: The Meaning of Your Life, theologian Lester DeKoster explains the futility of such efforts. Instead of trying to infuse meaning into work “from the outside,” DeKoster encourages us to simply locate the meaning that’s already there, and orient our hearts and hands accordingly:

All of our efforts to endow our lives with meaning are apt e up short and disappointing. Why? Because all our passion to fill the meaning-vacuum through multiplied activity in the home, the church, munity, or whatever stumbles over that big block of every week’s time we have to spend on the seeming meaninglessness of the job. The spare-time charities cannot tip the scales. Redoubling our efforts only obscures the goal.

We are sometimes advised to try giving meaning to our work (instead of finding it there) by thinking of the job in religious terms such as calling or vocation. What seems at first like a helpful perspective, however, deals with work as if from the outside. We find ourselves still trying to endow our own work with meaning. We are trying to find the content in the label, without real success. The meaning we seek has to be in work itself. And so it is!

We need not stay torn peting idols of meaning — workism, woke capitalism, corporation-centered religion, or otherwise. Instead, we can shift our allegiances and imaginations toward a deeper and fuller vision of economic life, one based in a true vision of loving our neighbor and human destiny. More importantly, can recognize the One True Source from Whom these blessings flow.

Koebke from Pixabay. Public domain.)

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
Calvin Coolidge and the Commercial Spirit
Calvin Coolidge quipped shortly before his death, “I feel I no longer fit in with these times.” The words came not long before FDR’s ascendency to the presidency and not long after the upsurge of government activism that started in the Herbert Hoover administration. Coolidge, even for his time, was seen as old fashioned, a throw back to simpler values, ethics, and principles. Coolidge cut the name tags out of his suits when he asked his wife to resale them,...
The Christian Post Highlights Wisdom & Wonder
In The Christian Post, Napp Nazworth profiles Wisdom & Wonder: Common Grace in Science & Art. The article looks at the power the Abraham Kuyper translation project will have in transforming the way evangelicals engage the broader culture. Acton’s director of programs and international Stephen Grabill spoke with The Christian Post: While some evangelicals have grown appalled by the increased political activism of their brethren and withdrawn from politics, others have e so deeply tied to partisan and national loyalties...
Acton Moves Up in Global Think Tank Rankings
The Think Tanks and Civil Society Program at the University of Pennsylvania this morning released its “2011 Global Go To Think Tanks Rankings” and associated trends analysis. The full report will be posted here soon. The Acton Institute was ranked No. 12 globally on the “Top Thirty Social Policy Think Tanks” (the same ranking as in the 2010 survey) and No. 39 on the “Top Fifty Think Tanks in the United States” ranking (up eight places). James McGann, the director...
‘Ultimately, all leadership is local’
Franciscan University in Steubenville, Ohio, has launched a new Center for Leadership which university alumnus Rep. Jeff Fortenberry, R-Neb., lauds as a project that “roots young men and women in virtue, forms them as leaders, and grounds them in sound philosophical thought.” David Schmiesing, who directs the center and is also vice president of student life at Steubenville, said, “This is our most explicit and focused effort yet to train leaders for the Church and world.” One of the resources...
St. Thomas Aquinas Week in Grand Rapids
Each year my alma mater, Aquinas College of Grand Rapids, Mich., invites students, faculty, staff, and members of the munity to take part in a wide range of activities throughout the week of January 28th to celebrate the feast of our patron saint. Although this week officially bears the name of a celebration in honor of St. Thomas Aquinas, it is also a special time when members of the Aquinas munity celebrate the college’s heritage in the Dominican tradition. This...
Samuel Gregg: Europe in Demographic Denial
[Thanks to RealClearWorld, ThePulp.it, NewsBusters and for linking to mentary.] Over at the American Spectator, Acton Research Director Samuel Gregg points to Europe’s “perceptible inability” to acknowledge some of the deeper dynamics driving its financial crisis. And these are primarily a “slow-motion population plicated by the exodus of young European Union citizens and the return of hundreds of thousands of immigrants to their homes in developing nations. That is an ominous development for a region where the dependency rate —...
Mall Rats, Bureaucrats, and Credit Card Decline
The Keynesians will have little to cheer about in this story. Yesterday I saw this report from CNN Money that said U.S. consumer credit card debt fell by 11 percent in 2011. Mississippians led the Union by reducing their card balance by 23 percent. While total household debt fell by only 1 percent last year, it is still a towering plishment pared to the U.S. federal debt increase. This is exactly the point Jordan Ballor and I made in our...
What Will It Take To Transform The Mountains Of Culture?
Where is God already at work? Who is making an impact in their sphere of influence? What can you do to make a difference? The “mountains” in my title here describes the ways some have divided culture, erroneously setting apart the areas in which we would need to impact (business, government, media, arts and entertainment, education, the family and religion) in order to realize real, sustainable change in the Christian world. Transformation 2012 is a one-day virtual conference designed to...
Kuyper, Coffee & Markets
I had the pleasure of being a guest on today’s installment of Coffee & Markets, the fine podcast hosted by Kevin Holtsberry and Pejman Yousefzadeh. I got to talk about Abraham Kuyper and his essays mon grace, particularly in the areas of science and art. These essays are available in translation in Wisdom & Wonder: Common Grace in Science & Art, the first selection from the broader three-volume Common Grace translation project. Check out the podcast and some related links...
Week of Prayer for Christian Unity
Beginning in 1908 as the “Octave of Christian Unity,” the eight days from January 18 to January 25 are designated as the “Week of Prayer for Christian Unity” and observed by many major Christian traditions and denominations. All around the world, Christians who sometimes do not always get along so well (to put it lightly) put aside their discord to pray for renewed harmony and reconciliation. For example, in Bucharest, Romania, ecumenical prayer services are being held on nearly every...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved