Prophets and Profits: Fulfilling Our Baptismal Responsibilities in the Workplace

 

“You, my child, shall be called the prophet of the Most High” (Canticle of Zechariah).

 
 
 
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“It’s not personal; it’s just business”: a common phrase spewed by many a savvy business manager to justify uncomfortable or unjustifiable yet profitable decisions.

You can imagine my surprise when it came from the pastor’s mouth. Perhaps it was a momentary mental lapse on his part, as Catholic social doctrine is rooted in the simple fact that persons are never to be treated as means to an end but are ends in themselves.

Unfortunately, when performing managerial, administrative, or otherwise “business” acts, reverence for the inherent dignity of persons often takes a back seat or is evacuated all together. The truth is that it is easier to deal with a difficult situation by excusing the decision as “just business,” by reducing the action to merely transaction, than to wrestle with the moral implications, especially if an encounter with another person is involved.

Created in the Imago Dei

We first discover recognition and reverence for the human person in the story of creation, when “God created mankind in His Image” (Genesis 1:27). In other words, when we affirm the human dignity inherent in another person, we are affirming the goodness of God Himself. Therefore, the reverse is true: When we deny human dignity, we deny the goodness of God that’s present in that person.

To be sure, as long as the human family has walked the face of the earth, people have been trying to take advantage of one another. However, the false dichotomy around business and the human person manifested itself in a new way during the Industrial Revolution as the owners of the factories of production exploited workers, often through child labor and deadly working conditions.

The Church responded with Pope Leo XIII’s 1891 encyclical “Rerum Novarum.” He wrote, “The following duties bind the wealthy owner and the employer: not to look upon their work people as their bondsmen, but to respect in every man his dignity as a person ennobled by Christian character.” Said differently, our value as human persons is not reducible to our economic output. Our value is rooted in our personhood, imprinted with the very life of God.

Pope Leo was clear that we should not view labor and capital as being at odds with one another but rather as different parts of the same body, “just as symmetry of the human frame is the result of the suitable arrangement of the different parts of the body.” He promoted the cooperation of labor and capital to support the common good of humanity.

On the 90th anniversary of that watershed document, Pope John Paul II reiterated his predecessor’s message:

“Since work in its subjective aspect is always a personal action, an actus personae, it follows that the whole person, body and spirit, participates in it, whether it is manual or intellectual work. It is also to the whole person that the word of the living God is directed, the evangelical message of salvation, in which we find many points which concern human work and which throw particular light on it” (“Laborem Exercens”). 

Prophets of the Most High

By virtue of our baptism, we are sharers in the threefold office of Christ as priest, prophet, and king. And, as Zechariah commissioned his son, St. John the Baptist (Luke 1:76), so are we sent to evangelize the world with the knowledge of salvation.

It’s a guarantee that whether you are a small business owner, corporate executive, or other business professional, you will encounter challenges. The coronavirus pandemic proved that no one is exempt from this fact. One of the greatest business challenges we encounter is an inability to pay our workers, which sometimes necessitates a reduction in workforce. The temptation is to fall back on Michael Corleone’s phrase, “It’s not personal; it’s just business,” as revenue slides and expenses surmount, sometimes for unforeseen circumstances (like a pandemic).

Resist that temptation! It is our responsibility to develop sustainable business strategies to provide work for our people. Sometimes we fall short of the mark, but it is personal. Each one of our workers is a person, loved into being by our Creator, with his or her own subjective personality and ideas, with a family, with friends, with neighbors. Regardless of world circumstances, as baptized Christians, it is our responsibility to affirm their human dignity. Therefore, even as we deliver the devastating news of layoffs, we must also do whatever we can to provide support for those people, through things like resume assistance, recommendation letters, or even a homemade meal.

As Catholic businesswomen, we must not only avoid reductionist phrases such as “It’s not personal; it’s just business,” but we must also approach our business practices with an intentionality that moves away from transactional exchanges and toward Eucharistic encounters. From our daily emails to our open door policies that invite untimely visits, we are challenged — and we have a responsibility to recognize and revere the imago Dei of the person before us. If, with each interaction, we communicate, “This is my body, given for you,” others will have Christ’s love for them made present. Hopefully, they will recognize it and respond in kind.


Vanessa Crescio is an accountant with the Archdiocese of Saint Louis. She earned an MBA from Notre Dame and worked in the real estate and banking industries prior to serving in church management roles at the parish and diocesan levels. She is working toward a Master of Theological Studies at Newman University and is interested in thinking through co-responsibility in the Church and developing leadership programs to form Catholics to serve the Church with not only their knowledge, skills, and abilities but with the servant heart of Christ. Read more of her writing here, and follow her on Instagram.