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ReVision

The Genius of Commerce

Commerce is an integral and inescapable part of life.

Kingdom Commerce (1)

Therefore He says:
“When He ascended on high,
He led captivity captive,
And gave gifts to men.” 
Ephesians 4.8

The dismal science
These days, the social standing of economists is beginning to rival that of lawyers and politicians. Various schools of economic theory compete, mainly to influence public policy in the political arena, and any politician can find an economist or economic theory to support just about any policy he or she may wish to introduce.

Economics has long been known as “the dismal science,” in part, I suppose, because we have not yet found a working model that all can agree on to guide us in the making and exchanging goods and services. Models as varied as hunter/gatherer, subsistence, feudalism, mercantilism, capitalism, Marxism, and socialism all try to make sense of the ways the money changes hands – or should.

Yet all of them seem to have their Achilles heel, and some more than others.

But an economy, considered as a single objective entity knit together by the systematic interaction of its constituent parts, can be a thing of beauty and genius. That millions of people, working together largely unconscious of and even indifferent to one another, can create so many goods and services to benefit themselves and one another is a wonder that witnesses to the genius of God. He is the ultimate Source of our economic systems and structures, and He inhabits them in order to make Himself known (cf. Acts 14.17). All economic and commercial activity proceeds under the watchful eye of God, and He judges all commerce according to His holy and righteous and good Law.

Commerce to the glory of God?
In Ephesians 4.8, Paul quotes from Psalm 68.18, but, under the inspiration of the Spirit, he adjusts the Old Testament text somewhat in order to bring the revelation of God given to David into the New Testament Kingdom of Jesus Christ. Rather than the ascended God receiving gifts from men, as David has it, Paul explains that the ascended Christ gives gifts to men – all people.

Paul’s focus proceeds along a very specific line, but the fact remains, as the psalmist indicates, that God gives many and varied gifts to people in order that, through them, His glory and goodness might be made known to the world. This includes all the gifts, skills, goods, and services that make up the commerce of the world and the economies of human society, as we see in Paul’s comment to the Lystrans in Acts 14.17.

God intends the gifts He has given to men to be used in ways to glorify Him. God is glorified when His presence – in the form of grace – is manifested in all the time of our lives and all our work. When economics and commerce are pursued with a view to accomplishing God’s glory, then not only does an aura of transcendence superintend the whole – characterized by such things as good stewardship, fairness, generosity, and compassion – but people flourish and know life far richer and more satisfying than they could if they were forced to subsist by themselves.

Ancient principles
Of course, it has not often been the case in human affairs that people have undertaken to govern their commercial activity according to a strictly Biblical model. Indeed, some who have sought to do so, have failed utterly. Especially in the modern era, with the advent of capitalism, the driving force in commercial activity has been the accumulation of wealth, rather than the distribution of grace. Commerce based on the bottom line has turned away from the guidelines of grace and truth encoded in the Law and Word of God, and economic activity has been made a servant of pragmatism rather than divine revelation.

Many of the specific practices God prescribed for the proper working of the ancient Hebrew economy are, of course, no longer applicable. However, embedded in those practices, and in the laws and statutes in which they appear, is a wealth of principles conducive to the wise, fair, compassionate, and prosperous functioning of any economic model. Among these are such familiar matters as the right to private property, just weights and balances, fair and timely wages, minimum use of debt, consideration for the poor, truthfulness in contracts, resource conservation, and the personal freedom to pursue interests and develop abilities and resources.

Yet all of these are set within a framework of love for God and neighbor, where the Kingdom currency of grace, its realization and distribution, is the guiding force for all commerce and economics.

Economics need not be dismal; indeed, it can be practically divine, depending on the extent to which God’s Word is consulted in guiding the way the money changes hands.

For reflection
1.  In how many different ways are you involved in economic activity (commerce) each week?

2.  How confident are you that all such activity is being engaged within a framework of love for God and neighbors?

3.  In what specific ways do you seek to engage in commerce as a means of realizing and channeling the grace of God to others?

Next steps – Transformation: Write out your answers to the three questions above, then go to the Lord in prayer, and ask Him to begin transforming the way you engage in economic and commercial activity, so that His grace may prevail in all these areas.

T. M. Moore

This week’s ReVision study is Part 5 of a 10-part series, “The Kingdom Economy.” You can download “Kingdom Commerce” as a free PDF, prepared for personal or group study. Simply click here. Start your day in the Word of God. Study with T. M. in our daily Scriptorium newsletter, as he walks us through the ongoing work of Christ in the book of Acts. You can subscribe to receive Scriptorium each day at 5:00 am Eastern, or go to the website to download each week’s study in a free PDF.

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Except as indicated, Scripture taken from the New King James Version. © Copyright 1982 by Thomas Nelson, Inc. Used by permission. All rights reserved.

T.M. Moore

T. M. Moore is principal of The Fellowship of Ailbe, a spiritual fellowship in the Celtic Christian tradition. He and his wife, Susie, make their home in the Champlain Valley of Vermont.
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