Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Rev. Robert Sirico: The spiritual secrets of business success
Rev. Robert Sirico: The spiritual secrets of business success
Jan 13, 2026 12:43 PM

What are the keys to properly analyzing business opportunities, discovering new markets, and troubleshooting barriers to growth? Business degrees, books, and seminars may equip leaders with a technical knowledge of these problems – but in a new podcast, Acton Institute President and Co-founder Rev. Robert A. Sirico identifies two core mental and spiritual traits that incline entrepreneurs toward success.

Rev. Sirico joined best-selling author and top-rated Forbes leadership speaker Brad Formsma in episode 64 of “The Wow Factor,” a podcast that promises “Words Of Wisdom from extraordinary leaders to help you grow in business and beyond.”

Despite their deep subject matter, they speak with the familiarity of two people whose families have been intertwined for decades. They recall how Rev. Sirico preached at the funeral of Brad’s grandfather, Don, at Lagrave Avenue Christian Reformed Church – “the cathedral of the Christian Reformed Church, if they had cathedrals,” as Rev. Sirico called it.

This podcast, which introduces the life and philosophy of Acton’s co-founder to the audience, contains his familiar story of how a childhood encounter with a neighbor who survived the Holocaust opened his eyes to offenses against human dignity.

“This sense of the injustice that I had seen done to Mrs. Schneider … was prompting me” to be involved in the left-wing activism of Los Angeles and the West Coast’s counterculture, he said.

“I was lost in those years,” Rev. Sirico said. “When you’re lost, it doesn’t mean you’re not opinionated.”

In time, “a whole paradigm switch” led him to see the goodness of business – and that goodness makes good business.

A pivotal moment, he said, came from meeting French tire magnate François Michelin. Michelin modeled servant leadership by personally serving others rather than exclusively writing checks to charitable causes (commendable as that would be). His concern ignited his personal need to assure the safety and quality of his products – and their resultant reputation for excellence drove sales.

Another revelation came when Michelin took the time to speak to a low-seniority employee who interrupted his discussion with Rev. Sirico, treating the man in a humble and respectful manner. The ability to deal with interruptions, Rev. Sirico told Formsma, is “evidence of … a person’s flexibility”:

If you do not have flexibility in business, you will not survive. You will not seize market opportunities. You will not be able to be a good servant to other people, to your consumers, because you won’t see the things – you will have already had the blinders on, and you’re going down one path, and nobody can interrupt you.

Flexibility and servant leadership are mon factors of success.

In the course of the 47-minute podcast, the two men also discuss:

The spiritual reality behind generosity, philanthropy, and concealing vs. revealing good deeds;“The real flaw of Marx”;The reason “a lot of nonprofits can go a long time and really not do very much” – and how they can avoid this fate;How the arc of Rev. Sirico’s activist career bent from opposing “prejudice against gay people” to fighting “prejudice against business people”;How business can e a mode of transcendence and creativity;The simple economic reality that results in “freeing people up bine their intelligence”;The inner emotional world of Jesus’ Parable of the Talents; andThe proper interpretation of Jesus’ statement, “It is easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter into the kingdom of Heaven.”

You can listen to Rev. Robert A. Sirico and Brad Formsma on episode 64 of “The Wow Factor” on the podcast’s website or on Apple Podcasts.

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
The Economy of Wisdom: How Knowledge Empowers Service and Stewardship
“Blessed are those who find wisdom, those who gain understanding, for she is more profitable than silver and yields better returns than gold.” –Proverbs 3:13-14 InEpisode 5ofFor the Life of the World: Letters to the Exiles, Evan Koons asksabout the purpose of knowledge, wonderingwhether it’s simply ameans to greater levels of self-fulfillment, or if there’s something more. “Is knowledge just a tool that we use to leverage to get more stuff?” he asks. On the contrary, as he goes on...
Entrepreneurs Have Increasingly Positive Role In Global Economy
Entrepreneurs – those people among us who seek to serve others through business – are an optimistic bunch. So says the 2014 Amway Global Entrepreneurship Report, published annually by Amway Corporation, the world’s largest direct pany. It’s a good thing entrepreneurs are optimistic; they have a lot of work to do. According to Amway Chairman Steve Van Andel: Entrepreneurs play an important role in growing economies. They create jobs, petition and munities grow and flourish. As the business environment has...
How Corrupt is Your State Government?
Political corruption is the use of legislated powers by government officials for illegitimate private gain. While it isn’t as endemic in the U.S. as it is in some countries (Somalia, North Korea, and Afghanistan being the most corrupt), the problem still exists. According to the Justice Department, in the last two decades more than 20,000 public officials and private individuals were convicted for crimes related to corruption and more than 5,000 are awaiting trial, the overwhelming majority of cases having...
Why the Ten Commandments Still Matter
Imagine you were tasked with creating rules for a nation or a civilization and could only choose ten. Which would you choose? You’d be hard-pressed to find a better list than the Ten Commandments. As Dennis Prager says, “No Document in world history so changed the world for the better as did the Ten Commandments.” In a new video series, Prager University clarifies what the Ten Commandments means and explains why they are as relevant as ever to our society....
7 Figures: Homicides Around the Globe
Homicide and acts of personal violence kill more people than wars and are the third-leading cause of death among men aged 15 to 44, according to a new report by the United Nations. The Global Study on Homicide 2013 was released last week by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime. Here are seven figures you should know from the report: 1. Intentional homicide caused the deaths of almost half a million people (437,000) across the world in 2012....
Against Consumerism in Christian Higher Education
Over at The Gospel Coalition, Hunter Baker reviews Abraham Kuyper’s newly translated Scholarship, pilation of two convocation addresses given to Vrije Universiteit(Free University). He offersa helpful glimpse into Kuyper’s viewson Christian scholarship, as well as howtoday’scolleges and universitiesmightbenefit from heedinghis counsel. mending the bookto both students and university leaders, Baker believes Kuyper’s insights are well worth revisiting, particularly amid today’s “tremendous upheaval in higher education”: All universities, and certainly Christian ones, face a landscape in which students have been largely...
United States: Home Of Child Labor?
Children have always worked in our country. On farms, in factories, in family-owned businesses, children have worked and continue to do so. However, we know that children face increased risks for injuries and fatalities in many jobs, and that working often means that children are not in school. In a Minneapolis suburb where a school is under construction, a union boss stops by the non-union work site to check on things. He saw something surprising: a boy, who appeared to...
‘Rape Culture:’ Plausible, But Is It True?
The recent Rolling Stone debacle has brought to the forefront of national discussion a very serious issue: does America have a “rape culture” on college campuses? This is an important issue for a couple of reasons. First, no person, male or female, should ever fear or experience sexual assault, especially in a place they feel “at home,” such as a college campus. As a society, we have to do everything we can to make sure sexual assault never happens. This...
Bitcoin is (Nearly) All Dead
Earlier this year I declared that Bitcoin was (nearly) dead. But as The Princess Bride’s Miracle Max once explained, “There’s a big difference between mostly dead and all dead. Mostly dead is slightly alive. With all dead, well, with all dead there’s usually only one thing you can do.” Right now, Bitcoin is only mostly dead. As an investment, it was the worst of 2014. As a currency, it was destroyed by the IRS by a single sentence (“For federal...
The Decline of War and the Rise of ‘Proximate Peace’
The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime recently released a report on intentional homicide (see this post for more on that report). Around the world, there were about 475,000 homicide deaths in 2012 and about six million since 2000, making homicide, the report notes, “a more frequent cause of death than all bined in this period.” While the rate of homicides, particularly in the Americas, remains disturbingly high, the fact that they exceed deaths due to war is should...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved