Giving Is One of the Hallmarks of Christian Living
No one argues with the idea that giving, and giving generously, is expected of every Christian.
But what about Christian business giving?
Is there an expectation that Christian-owned businesses – as entities that exist separate and apart from their owners – should also give?
In The Good Book on Business, I point out that Biblical businesses – ‘households’ in the Bible – are entities that have a powerful standing in the Kingdom, and are God’s first choice for a venue in which to interact with
mankind.
Understanding the Biblical businesses have a special role in the Kingdom, it seems to me that the question should not be: “Do Christian businesses have a responsibility to give?” Instead, the question should be, “How can Christian businesses use their unique set of attributes and special standing in the Kingdom to do more good by giving?”
How can Christian businesses use their unique set of attributes and special standing in the Kingdom to do more good by giving?
Individual Christians are limited in their giving. Generally, their income is limited to that which comes from one person, for example, or the other members of the family. The limited numbers of people also confine the time and emotional energy available to give to others.
However, businesses, because they are accumulations of individuals – owners, employees, vendors, customers and all their families – all united in a common cause, common set of relationships and organized to accomplish — have a far greater capacity to give time, money and emotional energy than individuals.
Whereas an individual may have a certain income, the company typically has a multiple of that income. Whereas an individual may have a spiritual gift, the folks who make up the company have a multitude of spiritual gifts among them. Whereas an individual only has a certain amount of time and emotional energy to give, the company has many more times that amount of time
and energy.
In short, you can do a whole lot more with the assets and capability of a company than you can as individuals. For example, one person may be able to donate a half day on a weekend to working at a food bank. The company, on the other hand, working as a single entity, could create the food bank. One person may be able to donate to the cost of a surgical procedure
for a child in a developing country. The company, on the other hand, could send the doctor to do multiple such surgeries.
Understanding that, a more precise question then emerges:
How can we use our special attributes of consolidated time, money, spiritual gifts, and emotional energy to give in ways that allow us to have a special and greater impact?
I suspect that very few business owners and executives have ever asked that question. There are lots of reasons for that. But, more important than analyzing the past is planning for the future. The important thing is that you are here, now, and you have the question before you.
Before you jump to solutions, let me suggest that you first give thought to a process for identifying answers to the question. So, instead of you, personally, coming up with the ideas for answers, suppose you could harness the assembled power of the people in your business to develop possible answers.How would you go about that? What would that process look
like?