Monday, December 12, 2016

Building a faith-infused worldview 2 - The road not taken

In the first post in this series on how one builds a faith-based worldview, I enlisted the great troubadour Bob Dylan to help us explore the certainty that whatever we are or do in life, however we interpret and assess what we see around us, someone or something will inform this process (http://whollystretch.blogspot.ca/2016/11/youre-gonna-have-to-serve-somebody_30.html).

I followed this with some writing I had already done on this subject, just to get us started. This was a discussion of how one might look specifically at an important sphere of human endeavour in which I have great interest--economic life. Is it possible to bring any kind of faith-based approach to that arena which presents two of the world's three great temptations: money and power? I found Catholic social thought of significant help in this regard (http://whollystretch.blogspot.ca/2016/12/building-faith-infused-worldview-1.html).

Now in this third post, I will have to get a bit more personal than I normally prefer to do. Last year I was approached by the former president of Trinity Western University, Dr. R. Neil Snider, to contribute to a book he was editing on the history of that centre of learning where I served for many years as Dean of Business & Economics and Professor of Management and Business Ethics.

Specifically Neil asked me to lay out how God prepared me personally to be a business professor in a faith-based university. This led me to contemplate how I was able to develop a worldview that brought value-added to my teaching and publishing at TWU. While this does not constitute a recipe for everyone to develop the kind of worldview we are exploring, it is an illustration of the process I want talk about with you over the next several posts.

So here it is: eight years of a young man's life that saw my fledgling interest in a worldview driven by faith-informed principles, values, and aspirations develop and grow.

                                             ----------------------------------------------

When President Snider asked me to write a brief chapter on how God prepared me to give leadership to the Business and Economics program in its early years, my mind immediately went to Robert Frost’s beloved poem, The Road Not Taken. Readers will remember the key lines: Two roads diverged in a yellow wood…[I] looked down one as far as I could
To where it bent in the undergrowth, Then took the other…Two roads diverged in a wood and I—I took the one less traveled by, And that has made all the difference. Nothing could provide a better metaphor than that poem for how the Lord took me from normal and expected point A to very unanticipated point B.


Let’s start at the edge of that yellow wood. Sitting in my MBA class at Queen’s University in 1970, I had no idea that in a scant eight years I would be an assistant business professor— and eventually Professor and Dean-- in a Christian university in Langley BC. First of all, I had never heard of Langley, much less what was then called Trinity Western College. Secondly, while in my youth I had thought that I might become a teacher, I had certainly never considered being a post-secondary educator. And finally, I knew next to nothing about how one went about integrating one’s faith with one’s career.

How, then, did God prepare me to move from Ontario to the Canadian west coast, taking the only two grandchildren on either side of the family and giving up on a promising career in the mainstream culture, to set out on a road very much less travelled by, the world of private, faith-based education?

The answer seems wonderfully simple at first glance. If I had a one-paragraph chapter to write, I would say that I got a job in business, decided to attend seminary for a year to increase my knowledge of the Bible, worked as a college professor, returned to seminary to complete the degree program in which I was enrolled, made friends with people who had heard of TWU, applied to work there, and Bob’s your uncle. And from my vantage point as a retired person, it seems like it went just about that fast!

But the richness of that eight-year interval, along with the incredible broadening of my worldview that occurred during that period, makes it pivotal to the shape taken by my professional life.

A brief look at each of those steps from Kingston to Langley may be instructive in illustrating how God’s work with a person can lead down some quite unexpected paths, and through some equally unanticipated woods.

I set off to Queen’s determined to become a chartered accountant, but my encounter with actual accounting courses, coupled with my exposure to the study of marketing, led me to pursue instead a career in marketing management. This was, as I thought then, an easy career path to visualize for many decades out.

I have to say that my years in market research and product management were both enjoyable and successful. In spite of this, they were not entirely satisfying. There were aspects of the forces that drive marketplace decisions, plus the politics of office life and what it took beyond sheer competence to get ahead, that caused me to reflect upon my career choice. For the first time I began to think about business ethical dilemmas, a subject that was never considered in my university education. Unexpectedly, the opportunity arose during this period for me to teach a business course for the local community college. I thoroughly enjoyed that experience. It was at this point that I felt my chosen professional path beginning to diverge.

[That is not to say that there is anything inherently wrong with a career in business—quite the contrary. To be given the opportunity to provide needed goods and services, create employment and wealth, contribute to the good of society, and to handle the temptations posed by money, power, and ethical challenges both competently and Christianly, is a wonderful calling. But not everyone is suited to it.]

At the same time as I was wondering about my professional life, I was thinking of how I could make myself more useful to my local church, where my wife and I were very involved with youth leadership. A good friend, an engineer by profession, had interrupted his career to attend Trinity Evangelical Divinity School near Chicago, and came back very excited about the experience. I decided to take a year off to do the same.

As much as I learned tremendously from my professors and research done at the seminary, just as broadening was my exposure to fellow Christians from a host of denominations and countries. Never again would I be satisfied with easy answers or the feeling that one had learned all that there was to know. A year was hardly enough to satisfy my longing for this new learning environment, but our first child was born during our time there, and the need to be gainfully employed was too compelling to ignore.

Consequently, I took the plunge and decided to try full-time post-secondary teaching, this in a town I knew little or nothing about other than the usual stereotypes—Sudbury Ontario, where, as Canadian songster Stompin’ Tom Connors warbled, “Well the girls are out to bingo and the boys are getting’ stinko. We think no more of Inco on a Sudbury Saturday Night.” This was not a likely incubator in which to hatch a career as a business ethics professor in a Christian university!

Stompin’ Tom to the contrary, we had a wonderful time in that somewhat remote mining town. The Business Administration Department at Cambrian College was a great place to work, and I particularly enjoyed the interactions with young people, both in the classroom and on the campus. Wanting to put my year of seminary education to use outside of church activities, I taught courses for the college’s extension program in Apologetics and Church History. These proved to be quite popular. I began to think that I was finding my niche, but perhaps not quite. I still felt inadequately prepared to place my faith in the center of my career, although I was not at all sure what it would take to make that happen.

Just as important to subsequent events, I was invited to replace a rather well-known Sudbury pastor, Jim Cantelon, who was moving to greater Toronto, as host of a Sunday night open-line radio program aimed specifically at young people. In dealing with diverse topics in which youth have a particular interest, I took an explicit Christian approach. This was challenging, to say the least, as nothing in my church upbringing, university education, or even seminary experience had taught me to integrate my faith with so many everyday topics and ethical dilemmas. I loved the experience, and was asked to speak to classes and groups all over the city, as well as having a steady stream of students coming to my office to talk.

Consequently, we decided that we would return to Chicago-land, now with two children in tow, to complete my seminary degree and to see where God would take us from there. I enrolled in the master’s program in biblical studies, with a major in Old Testament, which required that I complete a thesis. This is, as they say, when it all came together.
The chair of the Old Testament program, knowing of my MBA and business experience, suggested that I do my thesis on the topic of usury; i.e., the charging of interest on loans which was, of course, forbidden between fellow Israelites in biblical times. 

While thesis creation can be, for many people, drudgery with a capital D, it was for me a magical time. I dug into the Old Testament in ways I had never thought possible (or necessary) in my conservative church upbringing. I was amazed to find any number of eternal principals underlying those often strange applications to life in biblical times:
  1. The sanctity of the family unit as the building block of society.
  2. A culture characterized by justice (distributive, restorative, and retributive) and the rule of law.
  3. Life balance.
  4. Personal integrity.
  5. Wholesome relationships; i.e. a fellow Israelite was never to be exploited in any fashion as a means of achieving self-gratification--whether sexually, economically, or politically.
  6. Loving others as one would oneself.

Many of these had obvious application to doing business Christianly, of course. But I also had to put the usury doctrine into its proper economic context, leading me to an eye-opening study of God’s purposes for economic life. Never having studied anything remotely connected to business ethics at university, I now felt able to integrate my faith to my discipline in creative and original ways that could be transformational in the marketplace.

And at just that same time, a fellow seminarian with an Evangelical Free Church background said to me, “Have you heard that they are looking for business professors at Trinity Western College?” My response--“Where’s that?” I soon found out.

Over the years at TWU, these lessons learned from earlier life found their way into both program development and the approach to individual courses. I structured my courses and the strategic plans for the Business major around what I called the four C’s:

  1. Competence – There is no substitute in the marketplace for personal competence; therefore, we built considerable rigour into our expectations for students.C
  2. Calling – Unique among Canadian Schools of Business, we emphasized that a business career was no less a calling from God than was education, pastoral ministry, or pre-med and nursing programs. Of course, this approach has implications for how one views business objectives and the nature of ethical dilemmas.
  3. Character – In conjunction with the liberal arts, the Student Development Department, and the chapel program, we placed much emphasis on how a character infused with biblical virtues, priorities, values, and goals was indispensable to living for God in the marketplace.
  4. Crisis – There is nothing like a crisis in business life (and there are crises aplenty) to test one’s competence, one’s sense of calling, and the strength of one’s character. Case studies, “real world” research, guest speakers, and so on were used to deal frankly with the problems, temptations, and dilemmas that are all part of marketplace realities.
The business major soon grew to become the largest single area of study in the University. This could not have happened without the participation of a host of fellow professors involved in its growth: the late Dr. Kenley Snyder, the founder of the business faculty, laid the foundation for the growth of the program; Robin Dalziel and Teri Jones, both professional accountants, developed that popular program choice while also achieving full accreditation with the various accounting bodies; Kevin Sawatsky, a gifted lawyer set the bar for quality teaching, and now gives the University senior administrative guidance; the late Dr. Harold Harder, interrupted his TWU academic career to work with MCC in Bangladesh and subsequently founded the International Development program within our Business Faculty offerings; Dr. Michel Mestre, formerly a Fortune 500 consultant, showed students what strategic thinking really meant; Lt. Col. Rick Menking, gave leadership to the program option of Information Systems; and finally Dr. Senyo Adjibolosoo, from Ghana, whose International Institute for Human Factor Development transformed the way in which one regarded Economics. Each of these contributors has his or her own story of God’s preparation in making the Faculty of Business & Economics the success story that it became.















Thursday, December 1, 2016

Building a faith-infused worldview 1 - A little help from the Catholics


While the city of Abbotsford is often referred to as the Bible Belt of British Columbia, it isn't always obvious that this descriptor means anything more than that there are a lot of churches there (over 100 in a city of 140,000, plus four Sikh temples). 

A quartet of involved Abbotsford residents decided to test whether there was any value-added to the life and culture of the community from the presence of all these places of worship and its religious adherents. They approached a number of individuals to research and write chapters on a host of areas of life's endeavours, including social justice, the arts, politics, inter-faith relations, post-secondary education, business, and K-12 education (both public and independent). I was asked to write the latter two chapters, the first on the basis of my long career as a business professor, consultant, and practitioner, and the latter because of my 27 years as a public school trustee. 

The chapter on local business practices required that I come up with some kind of framework for evaluating the way commerce is done in Abbotsford. I looked for something that incorporated many of the components of what I would consider faith-informed worldview thinking. I found excellent thinking from an article entitled "Catholic Social Thought and Business Ethics," written by Jim Wishloff and published in Review of Business, Vol. 25, No. 1, Winter 2004. 

What follows is my section on business. It contains interviews with many businesspeople that the vast majority of readers of this blog don't know. But their comments are illustrative of what worldview thinking and practice could look like in economic life. I believe that you will find it instructive as we try to come to conclusions about consistent, integrated Christian living. 

A.    Introduction
I'm gonna buy me two wings of silver
Yes Lord to fly me home
I'm gonna buy me two wings of silver
Yes Lord to fly me home
And when I get my silvery wings
Then an angel choir will sing
I'm gonna get me two wings of silver to get me home

Gordon Lightfoot, Rich Man’s Spiritual
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wsWw5-UvGqo

He was a veteran manager with a large Canadian transportation company. To his surprise, his son (soon to become my student at Trinity Western University) informed him that he had become a Christian. The father, no friend of religion, responded:
“Well, what you do with your life is your own affair. But when you get into business, avoid dealing with people who call themselves Christians. Get yourself a nice, clean atheist if possible. Then you will know where you stand.”

The father’s jaundiced view was not atypical of non-religious people. Such an assessment of the reliability of businesspeople that professed a religious faith was common among the Boomer generation and the eras that preceded it. While there were examples of exemplary practice to the contrary, everyone had a story of how they had been badly used by Christian businesspeople. Abbotsford was no exception.

The marketplace has not changed for the younger generations of businesspeople. It remains a place where the potentially corrupting forces of money and power loom large. Ethical dilemmas still present themselves in puzzling grayscale, rather than in pure black and white. Opinion polls continue to place business relatively low on the scale that measures respect for societal institutions.

What does this low respect mean for the city we love where businesspeople that make their faith a matter of public record abound?

B.    Plus ça change, plus c'est la même chose?

Loosely translated, is the newer generation of Abbotsford businesspeople any different from the Baby Boomers, or does “same old, same old” prevail? Is their professed faith bringing anything that could be construed as value-added to their business practices and to the culture of the community?

To find out, I interviewed a number of business owners from the broad spectrum of churches represented in Abbotsford, all successful in their various economic pursuits, and mostly under 45 years old (well under in some cases). Their companies range in size from a six-person operation to large organizations that distribute their products worldwide.

My conclusion: While illustrations of the more disappointing and disillusioning behaviour will always exist, there are inspiring and creative alternatives that many younger Christian businesspeople are providing, from which much can be learned.

That is not to say that these entrepreneurs wear their Christianity on their sleeves in the same way as the eager young salesperson in the Hollywood movie The Big Kahuna (a ‘must see’ for all Christian businesspeople). I asked one contributor what it means to have a business that reflects one’s faith. He admitted that his convictions are more implicit than explicit in his work. “There is no separation between the sacred and the secular,” he said with a laugh, “but there are no bible verses with the paycheques.” He added that his faith informs what it means for him to be a human and a Christian, and shapes how he relates to his team and his customers--a common view among the interviewees.

It is also true that these younger businesspeople of faith are under no illusion that God will necessarily prosper their businesses because of their desire to be faithful to his principles, values, and objectives. As one participant affirmed, he doesn’t believe that God will automatically bless the business, but always asks God for wisdom in making decisions.

What I found is that their faith-informed worldview encompasses a range of priorities and practices, including strong moral character; management by mission and values rather than strictly by what the market dictates; treating employees as full-orbed people; showing respect for creation; sharing their gains with the vulnerable and marginalized; and holding to their values even when best business practice would suggest something different.

C.    The place to start—what would a more faithful, value-added approach to decision-making and business practice look like?

This is the obvious first question. What makes business activity “Christian”? So we begin with this cautionary note regarding what Christian business practice is not.

Ken Baerg is the economic development officer for the city of Abbotsford. Ken brings the unique perspective of having been a provincial director of the Christian Labour Association of Canada; then following this, he was an advocate for employers in the construction industry; now, he is a public servant responsible for promoting the economic interests of our community.

In all of these contexts Ken has dealt with successful businesspeople, many of whom are also active in church and related causes.  Certainly he was able to cite a number of examples of the faithful, value-added approach I’ve been discussing. Regrettably, Ken has also encountered those who simply equate their business success with God’s blessing; i.e., “I am prospering; therefore, I must be in God’s favour.” Baerg believes that it is dangerous to make this equation, as it typically has nothing to do with any unique business practices.

Baerg’s succinct observation about people who reduce their Christian business practice to an equation defining blessing was, “They cheapen the Christian currency. Putting a cross or a fish on your letterhead has nothing to do with living out one’s faith.”

While supportive of Baerg’s reservations, Patrick Giesbrecht, president of the Abbotsford Chamber of Commerce and a marketing consultant, expressed considerable optimism. Patrick feels that the churches have improved their methods of challenging businesspeople to “do it right”--that a more complete view is being taught compared with 20-50 years ago.
There is more congruency in the younger generation of businesspeople that whatever one puts one’s hand to is done for the glory of God; that is, the social mindset should be congruent with the business mindset.

This objective of ‘doing things for the glory of God’ must be translated into meaningful principles, attitudes, and practices that provide on-the-ground guidance to business practitioners. Catholic Social Thought (CST) is very useful in this regard. In response to the question, “What justifies an institution’s existence?” the author articulates this response:
The human person…is and ought to be the principle, the subject, and the end of all social institutions…The ruling purpose of the economy is not power or profit, but human well-being in its totality…The justification of enterprise is the contribution the enterprise makes to human flourishing, the correspondence of the economic activity with God’s plan for [humanity]. (CST 3:1892, 3:2426)

Human flourishing. This principle can be applied to one’s products and the way in which they are produced. It can also be the modus operandi for how one treats all humans who have a stake in business activities: customers, employees, suppliers, and the broader community.

1.     Products that contribute to human flourishing…and that doesn’t exclude cow manure!
Certainly several of the Christian businesspeople I interviewed were drawn to business because of the nature of the products. John MacKenzie was never interested in business per se. His personal passion was ecological agriculture—how we grow food, how we use land, and what we eat. He studied field-based science at Washington State University and planned to teach high school.

However, with the encouragement of his businessman/father Ken, John returned to Abbotsford and eventually purchased Anita’s Organic Mill, a certified producer of organic flours, mixes, and hot cereals, located near Chilliwack. John compares buying Anita’s to joining a cause. His relationship with the business provides an emotional drive that moves well beyond merely an intellectual and economic pursuit. “It’s my personal thing,” he went on to say about his business practice, “but it emanates through the company.”

For instance, among his core values, John strives for personal health; that is, he practises a lifestyle that energizes his body. Consequently, he aims to get superior ingredients into people’s hands.

Eventually, MacKenzie would like to further his education in sustainable business and then finally pursue that academic career in order to teach his principles of ecological stewardship and personal health. He is already practising what he one day hopes to preach:

From sourcing grains solely from farms using sustainable, organic agricultural practices to packaging with eco-friendly materials, caring for the environment is a top priority. We are a member of Get Local BC, and purchase from local organic farmers whenever possible. Anita's Organic also recently invested in new milling equipment to reduce waste by 15 per cent, and decrease grain dust for a better work environment. (http://anitasorganic.com/)

Bill Vanderkooi grew up in a dairy farm family and studied animal science at the graduate level, in his case Michigan State. He, too, is guided by certain core values, including persistence, patience, and providence (God’s timely intervention). 
But unlike MacKenzie, Bill was always interested in the family business; however, he has taken it in a whole new direction. He founded the Nutriva Group, which:
… focuses on developing and managing whole food value chains that begin with progressive, environmentally responsible farm practices and end with functional food products that embody natural nutrition innovation to improve the health and well-being of Canadians. (http://www.nutrivagroup.com/)

Nothing is overlooked in Vanderkooi’s relentless pursuit of ecologically progressive methods, right down to the cow manure. An anaerobic manure digester reduces ammonia and methane emissions, separates phosphorus from the remaining effluent, and delivers methane fuel for a generator that supplies electricity to the demonstration farm complex. This digester is the first of its kind in Canada.

In an article featuring Nutriva in Toronto’s Globe & Mail (August 24, 2010, Farmer rips page from corporate strategy handbook), much is made of Bill’s pervading sense of mission:
A key underpinning of Nutriva Group’s early success is Mr. Vanderkooi’s sense of mission, said Trevor Throness, owner of Strategic Corporate Resolutions Inc. in Abbotsford, a business strategy group, and a business adviser to Mr. Vanderkooi.
“The best entrepreneurs are not doing it for money, they’re about trying to fix a problem, and are convinced they have a better solution,” Mr. Throness said. “They don’t view money as something to spend on themselves, they see it as capital to invest.”

I queried Bill as to what this means in practical terms. His response was that profit is necessary to achieve the goal of making a difference. He went on to detail that difference in three ways:
·  The need to educate people regarding nutrition.
.  Compassion for the less fortunate.

      ·  The need to impact federal policy concerning nutrition and lifestyle choices.
That investment is already taking a significant form:
We focus out effort on partnering at various levels of our business (technology, production, processing).  A recent example is Science World’s commitment to work with the Bakerview EcoDairy  (one of Nutriva’s divisions) to complete, upgrade, and help with promotion of our agri-tourism operation.
Science World is, of course, the well-known science centre in Vancouver. The organization’s interests vary broadly, with advances in nutrition being included among them.
A patriarch of agribusiness in Abbotsford is Vanderpol’s, founded sixty years ago by Mike and Phil Vanderpol’s paternal grandfather Willem. Typically associated with egg and dairy products, Vanderpol’s has expanded into fruit, high-end pet food ingredients, and cold storage. Phil speaks with excitement about the nature of their business:
We’re stewards. It’s not really ours. One has an opportunity to contribute and eventually pass on. Our job is to build a sustainable business in both the quality of the products and the values of the company.
The brothers see the ability to feed people nutritiously as a huge mandate. To that end they have invested heavily in research and development. For example, Vanderpol’s is the only Canadian company that produces milk protein concentrate, which they market to the Middle East, Asia, South America, and Europe.
But food products are not the only commodities that have the potential for the promotion of human flourishing. Shawn Neumann, president of Domain7, a web design company, describes his approach as “putting real human needs at the heart of everything we do—we call it ‘humanizing the web’.”
He notes that the web is a tablet upon which many things can be written—pornography, violence, love, and diversity. The great thing is that it can solve human problems.

Shawn outlines three strong beliefs that underlie the company’s approach to customer and employee well-being:

·       Every individual and organization has the potential to be great—our team, and the customers we work with.
·       The web is a powerful transformational force—it levels the playing field, gives a voice to the voiceless. The web will undermine and transform, and that can be good.
·       There doesn’t need to be dissonance between technology and beauty. It’s hard to bring these together in a web-design without one dominating the other, but when it happens it’s glorious.

Neumann takes his desire to make a difference for customers much further than many companies would go. His values cause him to root for the underdog: “The web can level the playing field for the smaller player.” To this end, not locking people in is important to Shawn. Great business is built on trust, but also on choice. Domain7 may not always be the best fit for all of its customers. Accordingly, Domain7 developers set their customers’ sites up on an open platform that allows clients to take their sites to another vendor who may, in the future, be able to help them more.

2. Human well-being in its totality
a) Employees
Management guru Peter Drucker added ‘developing people’ to the classic four functions of management (planning, organizing, leading, and measuring progress toward goal attainment), an addition championed by Japanese businesses much more so than by their North American counterparts. Braden Douglas, a marketing consultant in his early thirties, remarked, “Many professing Christian business owners have highly unhealthy, toxic cultures. They see employees as resources rather than as people.”  Braden, who owns Relevention Marketing Solutions, replaces such transactional relationships with mentoring his employees--building his people up.

The Vanderpol brothers strongly agree with this approach. Their role model is their grandfather who used to lend money to his employees to help them with housing down payments. His son (Mike and Phil’s father) experimented with Employee Share Ownership Plans but found that not all the employees were comfortable with this arrangement. Consequently the company bought the employees out and now utilizes profit sharing.
We share the company’s financials so that employees know how the company is doing. In addition, we meet with every employee quarterly, in a face-to-face open forum, without any managers present. This allows the employees to be totally open. This quarterly meeting has evolved from a complaint session to a very productive exercise.

Recognizing that employees spend the better part of their waking hours at work, John MacKenzie strives to develop a culture of celebrating people and relationships: “We have structure, although little hierarchy, but it’s a trusting structure.” His recipe for employee relations: good honest work; come to work; work hard; go home to your families; live a balanced life. He believes in paying competitive wages and, like the Vanderpols, practises profit sharing.

Esther DeWolde, CEO of Phantom Screens, views her employees as holistic human beings who
bring their hands, hearts and souls to work.
For this reason we brought on a corporate chaplain who is available 24/7. He comes on site one day per week, walks the floor, talks to everyone, providing advice and counseling.  He doesn’t go into spiritual matters unless invited. This chaplain is not on the payroll, neither is he part of management. His interactions with my employees are totally confidential. 52% of employees have a “critical conversation” with him per month, whereas the typical employee assistance program has 4% usage.

Shawn Neumann also treats his employees with respect, allowing them discretion in selecting contracts. For example, if a conscientious objector (not uncommon among the local Mennonite population) is uncomfortable dealing with a website related to, say, the military, Shawn encourages that employee to pass the contract to someone else.

These cases are not presented here to suggest that there won’t be difficulties with employees. Indeed, unwanted challenges exist even in the healthiest cultures. But, the challenges are not insurmountable, and gratitude for one’s employees can exist even when confronted with an ordeal. Ken Giesbrecht owns Globe Printers, the largest full service print shop in the Fraser Valley. He is grateful for what his employees bring to the table:
Over the years, I’ve come to realize that it’s people that drive Globe’s success and I’m grateful for a fantastic team of employees that make it possible to serve the valuable clients whose commitment and trust continue to make this whole venture possible.

Consequently, when an employee took time off because his child had leukemia Ken paid his full wages until he returned.

Nevertheless, Giesbrecht found that he had to let an employee go for performance and attitude reasons. The man’s response at the time was, “Who am I to question the Almighty Ken?” Interestingly, he came back to Ken some time later asking if he could be re-hired.

Lawyer Kevin Boonstra of Kuhn & Company has found that an employer’s true character fully surfaces when a termination situation arises. His experience is that the vast majority of his Christian clients want to do what is right and fair, rather than to take a hard negotiating line and stick as closely as possible to the minimum that the law requires.

b) Partners in the distribution channel
Most businesses work with a variety of other organizations in getting their products and services to the ultimate customer.

Ken Giesbrecht’s practice is to treat suppliers with utmost dignity. “Typically in the printing industry,” he says, “suppliers are pretty beat up and ground down.”

The Vanderpols utilize a distribution network that allows them to reinforce the company values: 
We employ a direct sales force and develop strong customer relationships right down to the chef level. Direct sales is the more expensive route to go but it allows us to be represented as “we are.”

Perhaps the most startling example of respect for partners comes from Esther DeWolde:
We were the subject of a class action suit by some of our American distributors. We won but it cost $1.8 million to prove we were in the right. I had to be on the stand for hours being harassed by their obnoxious lawyer. I had to remind myself by the minute that God loved that lawyer too, and I mustn’t lash out. Only the Holy Spirit kept me, as a scrappy farm girl, from popping him. I had to keep reminding myself, “I may be the only church half of these people ever see.”
  
c) The community
Many of the business leaders presented above feel a strong obligation to give back to the community in a manner consistent with company values. Ken Giesbrecht, as one excellent representative example, donates $30,000 in free printing for Abbotsford’s high profile Run for Water charity:
At Globe Printers, we’ve always upheld that we have a responsibility to be more than just a provider of professional print services, but to also contribute to the greater good of the communities we serve. So when my good friends Ken Baerg and Peg Peters, two of the founders of Run for Water, approached us for print support, we were all ears. And after hearing about their inspiring efforts to provide a clean and sustainable water source for the people of Ethiopia, we were in.


D.    "An ethical man is a Christian holding four aces." (Mark Twain)

One could say that the role models above are simply following best practices as taught in the business schools, recommended by consultants, and implemented by progressive managers. It would be equally legitimate to say that all of these companies are presently prospering, and that being high-minded is easy when all is well (as Mark Twain cynically observes above).

Perhaps the best indicator of consistent faith in action comes when its application is counterintuitive to best practices. Esther DeWolde notes: “Understanding the implications of your own values is an evolutionary process. It’s when you hit the gutter that you find out what is your commitment to them.” In her case, she kept the company chaplain program intact even when the recession halved Phantom’s revenue. Although some layoffs were unavoidable, Phantom provided longer than typical notice, generous severance packages, and assistance in looking for alternative employment.

Brad Brousson at Silver Hills Bakery belongs to the Seventh-day Adventist denomination, whose tenets including keeping Saturday as the Sabbath. Consequently, when the company participates in weekend trade shows they shut down on Saturdays even though it is the busiest day of the show. Neither do they run newspaper advertisements or television commercials on their Sabbath. Nevertheless they are the number one organic bread brand in western Canada, growing at a double-digit rate in a shrinking market.

Doris Woodman-McMillan runs Numbers Unlimited, a bookkeeping services firm. Through a combination of inexperience with certain tax-related issues, and missing information, Doris made a mistake over a three-year period that the client’s outside accounting firm also missed. Revenue Canada eventually ruled against the client and a major tax bill ensued. Doris not only fixed the mistakes, but also (over her client’s objections) refused payment for the next year of bookkeeping services. The outside accounting firm, on the other hand, charged the client $5000 to alter the relevant returns.

“I won’t lie, as some potential clients have asked me to do with their accounting data,” Doris says, “and if I make mistakes, I own them. My integrity is more important than any particular client.”

E. Conclusion
I mentioned near the beginning that strong moral character is of high importance to those whom I interviewed. Kevin Boonstra strongly reinforced this view:
A Christian businessperson is far more likely to fight a situation based on principle (e.g., a human rights case), even when the cost to make it go away would be relatively small. There is a reason for this: principle means something.

I believe that the participants in this study have wonderfully demonstrated his observation. We have reason to be optimistic that role models of strong moral character and faith-infused principles abound in our business community.


1.     Debra Fieguth, “Meet Some of Canada’s Marketplace Missionaries,” Faith Today, May/June 2012.

2.     Laura L. Nash, “The Evangelical CEO,” Across the Board, February 1994.

3.     John R. Sutherland, “Justice: The Key to Business Ethics and Goals,” CRUX, vol. XXXI, no. 1, March 1995.


4.     Jim Wishloff, “Catholic social thought and business ethics,” Review of Business, Volume 25, Number 1, Winter 2004.