Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Redemptive entrepreneurship: In a globalized economy, who is our neighbor?
Redemptive entrepreneurship: In a globalized economy, who is our neighbor?
May 5, 2025 8:36 PM

In our globalized and interconnected world, we inhabit vast networks of creative exchange with widely dispersed neighbors. This leads to real and munities far and wide—a great and mysterious collaboration. But as we continue to strengthen those social bonds across economic life, how do we stay faithful and attentive to our more munity spheres?

It’s a challenge for creators and workers across the economic order—to use our economic freedom to meet human needs, but do so through a healthy and holistic vision of human dignity munity. We often encounter these questions through narrow dichotomies of “localism” vs. “globalism,” but what if our approach to loving our neighbors was a bit more integrated prehensive?

In a series of personal reflections at Praxis Labs, entrepreneur Jon Kontz wrestles with the possibilities, pondering Jesus’ famous question, “Who is my neighbor?”, and proceeding to explore the various tensions between our pursuits of sweeping institutional change and intentional, personal investment and connection.

“Entrepreneurs disrupt the ways neighbors connect to each other,” he writes, noting how many of our interactions are now simply taking place through “new and improved” economic channels. “…But a side effect of this disruption is that I am less likely to choose to attend to and relate to my actual neighbors.” After all, “choosing to be a neighbor is choosing risk,” he continues. “To some extent it is relinquishing control over attention and resources.”

It’s a peculiar paradox—how we can be so risk-averse in our proximate and personal lives, even as we find it appealing to jump off various cliffs to start new businesses, get pay raises, or close deals. Kontz admits to the stronger allure of the latter in the modern economy, as well as its subsequent traps, noting how easy it was for he and his wife to be distracted by personal ambition and their quests to “add value” and “change the world.”

“We began to see that the personal ambition we had e at some cost to munity, and to our character,” he writes. “The separation of our relationships from our resources, and our vocation from the people we saw every day, was a separation we e to expect within our neighborhoods, churches, panies. Yet while we had developed the resource-capacity to be valuable neighbors, we were deficient in the skills and habits needed to mitment within plexities munity.”

The question became clear: “Could I bury myself munityandprotect my ambition to change the world?” he asked.

Kontz would eventually find his answer and inspiration in the Clapham Sect, the group of 19th-century English abolitionists who were not only determined to disrupt the economic and political order of their day, but also to invest their personal lives in building relationships with African slaves—neighbors who would have been strangers had the abolitionists simply been absorbed in their cause, important though it was.

Through mitment to slave-as-neighbor, and especially through mitment to villager-as-neighbor, they chose plex situations I tend to avoid.While I struggle to choose neighbors who might need something from me, let alone those who might sap my resources and health, and consume my vocation, they embraced the limitations and risks of their neighbors near as well as far.

…They didn’t divert their attention or time, but rather chose to accept and navigate plexity…The Clapham Sect made many quietly inconvenient choices…These choices are noteworthy because they shaped the posture these innovators would need to change the world. They would need the skill to remain hopeful in the midst of near-imperceptible progress; the insight to discern right from wrong in messy situations; and the perspective to embrace personal fort. All these were formed through the mitments of being neighbors. Though they ultimately would square off against the established religious, economic, and cultural forces of their day, their virtues were formed in much more nuanced and less public situations. As they mitting actual resources to actual neighbors in physical places, excellence plexity became their way of life, even as the stakes grew to world-changing scale.

It is here—at the intersection of creative service and hospitality—that the modern economic creator, innovator, and laborer ought to reside, whatever our status, station, or situation.

Part of this realization led to Kontz being more intentional in his church munity, cultivating and investing in human relationships and institutions outside of work. But it also meant a shift in imagination when it came to his business and economic activity.

Kontz, pany designs medical technology, started to see the beauty of the creative service that was already taking place. Then, he began to see new ways of aligning pany and products around a particular vision of human relationship munity:

The products I make as an entrepreneur either decrease or increase neighbors’ ability to mitted and connected to one another. This hit me as I helped design a technology to facilitate medical referrals. munities of doctors use medical referrals to connect their patients with other doctors. When designing our product, we had a choice to make. We could decrease the relational dimension between doctors and patients in ways that would increase efficiency…However, those choices to optimize efficiency would have sub-optimized the relational currency between the doctor and the patient in a time of transition, which would decrease the likelihood that vulnerable patient populations would stay connected to their care plan once they were no longer with their doctor. So we decided instead on a design that would allow the doctor to choose and schedule the medical referral with the patient present, scheduling the appointment as an extension and outflow of their relationship.

As Kontz makes clear, with a broader context and imagination for innovation, we needn’t be trapped or paralyzed by false dichotomies of “local vs. global,” “for-profit vs. non-profit,” or “social entrepreneurship vs. hustling for the bottom line.”

If we absorb a fuller vision of human flourishing—one that sees the interdependence of creative service and economic success with hospitality, vulnerability, munity flourishing—we will see stronger improvements and better innovations across every sphere of human interaction.

“To disrupt in a way that munities’ ability to mitted neighbors takes a special vision, an alternative imagination,” Kontz concludes. “It takes a script much deeper than personal ambition; it takes a vision for munity and mitment to be mitted neighbor.”

Image: Businessman Map, Pixabay License

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
Why is NYC Discriminating Against Churches?
New York City owns almost 1,200 public school buildings that sit empty on nights and weekends. To earn some extra e, the city rents out the empty schools to tens of thousands munity groups for any meetings that might be of interest to munity: Boy Scouts, drama clubs, labor unions senior citizen groups, etc. In 2011 alone, the NYC issued over 122,000 permits for using the schools. But there is one group that is forbidden from using the facilities: churches....
How Churches Can Protect the Poor Against Predatory Lending
Near the top of the list of things I despise panies that take advantage of the plight of the poor and desperate. But just above that on my list is something I hate even more: being poor and desperate. That’s why I loathe payday panies that charge usurious interest rates—and why I’m not yet ready to see them abolished. Here’s how payday lending works. If you have a job (and pay stub to prove it), a payday pany will allow...
Economic Freedom Isn’t Enough
We know that, for economies to thrive, people must be free to start their own businesses without taxing regulations, that free trade must be the de facto means of doing business, and that cronyism and corruption must be eradicated. But that’s not enough. At the Institute for Faith, Work & Economics, blogger (and former Acton intern) Elise Amyx says we have to have human flourishing as well. Economic freedom is only ponent of human flourishing. We should think about it...
Hostility Towards Religion Continues To Grow In America
Liberty Institute, a legal organization in Plano, Texas, has released the report, “Undeniable: The Survey of Hostility to Religion in America, 2014 Edition,” featuring more than 1,300 cases of religious hostility, persecution and/or Constitutional violations of rights in the United States. According to the report, Hostility to religion in America is still growing. Because religion is so vital to a free and well-ordered society, our goal is to expose and document this growing hostility to help Americans confront and reverse...
Worldwide Flight From Family Is Killing Us
In the 1970s, Paul Ehrlich tried to warn us: human beings were in trouble. We were reproducing so rapidly, Ehrlich opined, that millions of us would soon be starving. Ehrlich got one thing right: we are in trouble. But he pletely wrong about overpopulation. Today, just the opposite is true. There aren’t enough of us human beings. And a lot of people are seriously disinterested in making more. Nicholas Eberstadt calls this the “flight from family.” All around the world...
7 Figures: Statistics on Global Christianity
Each year the International Bulletin of Missionary Research lays out in summary form an annual update of significant religious statistics. Here are seven sets of figures based on their latest report: 1. Global population by religion: Christians – 2.38 billion; Muslims – 1.7 billion; Hindu – 1 billion; atheists – 136 million; Jews – 14 million. 2. Membership by 6 ecclesiastical megablocs: Catholics – 1.2 billion; Protestants – 441 million; Independents – 407 million; Orthodox – 280 million; Anglicans –...
Women and the Academy Awards
Patricia Arquette’s passion is fabulous, says Elise Hilton in this week’s Acton Commentary, but she’s wrong on economics: Ms. Arquette’s passion is fabulous, and I’m sure that’s what makes her a great actor. But she’s wrong on economics. The “women make 23 cents less than men” canard is far less accurate than Arquette thinks it is. Women are more likely to work part-time, to choose careers that pay less but offer more flexibility in scheduling (such as teaching) and often...
Death And Redemption In Ukraine
Bohdan Solchanyk was not a materialistic young man. He did not seek worldly pleasures, but rather took delight in his studies, his fiancee, his faith. What Bohdan wanted -what they both wanted – was live in the Ukraine with dignity and freedom. Bohdan’s dream died last week at a peaceful protest against the government, where he and 80 others were “brutally shot and killed by government snipers in the central square of the capital of Ukraine, as the world’s TV...
Landmark Human Trafficking Case Concludes With $14 Million Settlement
While sex trafficking gets a lot of attention in the media, labor trafficking is actually mon. It largely affects middle-aged men, most of whom are looking for ways to support themselves and their families. Often faced with overwhelming poverty, these men make ill-informed and risky choices, hoping that what they are being told by potential employers is true. In a landmark case, a Gulf pany, Signal International, has been ordered to pay $14 million in damages to men they had...
Keeping The Poor Impoverished And Incarcerated
While payday loans can help some people out of a financial jam, they tend to prey on the poor and create a usury situation. Now that same predatory financial monster is moving into a new territory: bonds, courts fees and fines. Take the case of Kevin Thompson, a 19-year-old who was fined for speeding and failure to renew his license. Although he had a job, he could not afford to pay the $810 fine the court handed down. What happens...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved