Document Type

Article

Publication Title

Journal of Markets & Morality

Abstract

Many Christians struggle with the challenge of living out their faith-based identities in the pluralistic workplace. The social psychology of religion is useful for understanding the difficulties and inhibitions that Christian businesspeople face. It elaborates on mental models that inform appropriate action at work as well as expressions of contested identity in a potentially unreceptive environment. Moreover, the social psychology of moral imagination details how one central and salient component of a person’s identity marshals mental models from other identity components to formulate and justify alternatives to the status quo. Moral imagination can explain how faith integration often occurs in the workplace, and it can be understood as an expression of God’s common grace for the business world as a means of reaching understanding and appealing to conscience across moral and theological foundations.

First Page

21

Last Page

41

Publication Date

2015

Comments

The author would like to express his gratitude to James and Judith Chambery for their support of his scholarship through the James & Judith Chambery Chair for the Study of Ethics in Business at Calvin College.

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