Christians have likely been struggling with the place of business in the life of faith ever since Paul’s days as a tentmaker. Just how do the spheres of private devotion and public business intersect in a meaningful way? Paul Stevens has been exploring this question since his earliest working days in his father’s steel business. His Doing God’s Business tells how readers can find lasting and satisfying meaning for marketplace involvement in the light of the Christian faith and tradition. Stevens explores the potential of business as a location for practicing everyday spiritual disciplines and as a source of creativity and deeper relationship with God.
Any Christian library collection will find it a top pick. Christians have long struggled with business pursuits and faith’s place in such affairs, and Doing God’s Business: Meaning and Motivation for the Marketplace surveys this struggle, considering how to honor God in the marketplace. From practicing everyday disciplines to cultivating integrity and handling global challenges to God’s mission, Doing God’s Business is a guide for personal, spiritual and business achievement and any Christian library collection will find it a top pick…
Good thoughts, but questionable exegesis I found this book very interesting, and I think the author makes some important and valid points about the intrinsic value of work and how Christian faith informs our work life. Stevens is very well-read and well-studied and refers to many other authors and theologians from both modern and historical times. His book even suggested to me some dangerous thought patterns and attitudes I hold toward work and life in general. However, I have some serious doubts about his interpretation of some…
good intentions, mediocre result Stevens meant to write a better book than this, one that would provide affirmation of those Christians – the vast majority – who don’t work a day job in paid professional ministry. What he actually wrote was not very encouraging.