This past week we had the great pleasure to Welcome Fr. Robert Sirico of the Acton Institute to our campus at Belmont University.
Fr. Sirico spoke about how the entrepreneur, endowed with particular natural talents, is the primary agent of economic progress in the modern world, and that even though a free society is highly dependent upon the entrepreneur for its material existence, the vocation of business is relatively under appreciated within the religious community.
“Instead of praising the entrepreneur as a person of ideas, an economic innovator, or a provider of capital, the average priest or minister thinks of people in business as carrying extra guilt. Why is that?” Rev. Sirico has said. The consequences of a divorce between the world of business and the world of faith is potentially disastrous for both worlds, he says.
Enterprise and Faith
Dr Jeff Cornwall writes an good blog about faith and business. It is strange that this article came to my attention the same day I was reading about Evangelical Capitalism, and how this same issue for reconciling faith and welath creation can often cla…
Towards a Definition of Spiritual Entrepreneurship
Inspirational Sources: Saint Businessman, Religion and Entrepreneurism — Connected Trends, I’m on a journey. Why? To where? For what? I have no idea. Ever since…
Towards a Definition of Spiritual Entrepreneurship
Inspirational Sources: Saint Businessman, Religion and Entrepreneurism — Connected Trends, Faith and Business I’m on a journey. Why? To where? For what? I have no…