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An Historical Perspective on the Interplay of Christian Thought and Business Ethics
Darlene Bay1*,
Kim McKeage2,
and
Jeffrey McKeage3
1 Brock University
2 Longwood University
3 Independent Scholar
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: Darlene.bay{at}brocku.ca.
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Abstract |
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To provide effective guidance for business decisions, a set of ethical principles must be stable over time, rather than responding to changes in the business environment for expediency sake. This article examines the ability of religious principles to maintain such stability by reviewing the historical relationship between commerce and Christianity, beginning with early Christianity and concluding with the Enlightenment. The changes in five constructs are examined: ownership of land, acquisition of wealth, attitude toward work, charging of interest and acceptability of trade. For each construct, the attitude evidenced in early Christianity was, at least to some degree, inimical to business as we view it today. That perspective changed over time, with the practice becoming at first acceptable and later even admired. The authors conclude that ethical principles based on referents from outside business are ineffective as a check on the undesirable effects of business on society.
First published on June 26, 2008 Business & Society 2008, doi:10.1177/0007650308319739

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