Goodness is not an exclusive club

Sometimes, in an effort to differentiate ourselves and our groups or to make ourselves stand out, we tend to accentuate what makes us unique. Marketing and strategy refer to this as differentiation and positioning.

The tragedy is when we embrace an “us vs them” perspective, drawing lines, and adopting a mindset of exclusivity.

Wouldn’t it be more worthwhile if instead of focusing on competing for a piece of the market share pie, we grow the market, the category, the industry?

Wouldn’t it be more worthwhile if we differentiate ourselves not merely for competition or exclusivity, but to find our niche and improve how we can complement and harmonize?


Luke 9:46-50. Whoever is not against you is for you.

[DAILY GOSPEL INSIGHTS AND REFLECTION FOR MANAGEMENT AND ORGANIZATION 269: SEPTEMBER 26, 2022]

In between gullibility and skepticism

We cannot be too trusting; we may be fooled especially by those who act in bad faith. This makes us gullible.

We cannot be too doubting; we may lose opportunities of relating with those who act in good faith. This makes us unhealthy skeptics.

The challenge, yet again, is to find the golden mean. This makes us faithful.


Luke 16:19-31. If they will not listen either to Moses or to the prophets, they will not be convinced even if someone should rise from the dead.

[DAILY GOSPEL INSIGHTS AND REFLECTION FOR MANAGEMENT AND ORGANIZATION 268: SEPTEMBER 25, 2022]

To freely flourish is to not be afraid of inquiring

What is a dumb question? Oftentimes, students or people in general are afraid to ask questions because we might ask “dumb questions” – questions that reveal our lack of knowledge and understanding of a subject matter.

Now that I’m on the other side of the classroom as a teacher, I realize that dumb questions are perfectly fine especially at the introductory phases of a module. What is frustrating is what I would call “ignorant questions” – questions that reveal a person’s deliberate ignorance over the topic. Maybe the student did not read or watch a pre-assigned material. Maybe the student did not actually try to understand a subject matter; they merely wanted to rely on being spoonfed what and how to think.

A fulfilling dialogue in a classroom, whether physical or digital, is when we clarify our (mis)understanding. In good faith, there are attempts from all parties to understand a subject or a phenomenon. And the invitation is for teachers to cultivate a psychologically safe space and for students to have the courage to understand and to inquire.


Luke 9:43b-45. Its meaning was hidden… And they were afraid to ask

[DAILY GOSPEL INSIGHTS AND REFLECTION FOR MANAGEMENT AND ORGANIZATION 267: SEPTEMBER 24, 2022]

What others say versus what we say about a person

Oftentimes, professionals in a field that deals with people frequently can build a “public persona” or a reputation that may not necessarily be who the person really is.

Do we settle for what we see on the surface or do we risk getting to know the person more? We cannot be reasonably expected every person in this world.

But maybe, the discipline is to lessen our judgement of others when we know someone’s reputation, not who the person really is.


Luke 9:18-22. Who do you say that I am?

[DAILY GOSPEL INSIGHTS AND REFLECTION FOR MANAGEMENT AND ORGANIZATION 266: SEPTEMBER 23, 2022]

Taking a stand breeds natural opponents

I recall someone expressing that if a person has never encountered an opponent, then that person likely never took a stand in any contentious issue.

Maybe this is why suffering is not necessarily punishment; it is a natural by-product of pursuing change for the good.


Luke 9:7-9. Herod the tetrarch

[DAILY GOSPEL INSIGHTS AND REFLECTION FOR MANAGEMENT AND ORGANIZATION 265: SEPTEMBER 22, 2022]

If managers were medical doctors

The tragedy of mainstream and greedy capitalism is that the rich get richer, while the poor get poorer.

But if managers were medical doctors, would managers search for opportunities to maximize profits or opportunities to address disengagement and quiet quitting behaviors in organizations?

If managers were medical doctors, would managers externalize costs or partner with communities to pursue sustainable development goals?

If managers were medical doctors, would they swear allegiance to pesos and dollars or, similar to the Hippocratic Oath, they would swear towards a set of virtues, vocations, and the covenant for shared prosperity?

I honor my medical doctor and nurse friends who have immensely helped me, my loved ones, and society. Truly, a profession in the medical field is a vocation.

Hopefully, in the near future, we could say that management and entrepreneurship are vocations too.


Matthew 9:9-13. When he heard this he replied, ‘It is not the healthy who need the doctor, but the sick. Go and learn the meaning of the words: Mercy is what pleases me, not sacrifice. And indeed I came to call not the upright, but sinners.’

[DAILY GOSPEL INSIGHTS AND REFLECTION FOR MANAGEMENT AND ORGANIZATION 264: SEPTEMBER 21, 2022]

The convenience of reacting versus the journey of insighting

If we look at stories, media, and most popular platforms of communication, they are designed to stimulate “engagements” and “interactions”. In a sense, the structures that surround us make it very easy to react.

But does liking, haha-ing, and sharing really mean we are engaging the content and the author? Does commenting on a post really mean there is authentic human interaction?

In a world that expects instant reaction, maybe the invitation is to take the time to absorb and make sense, then release back into the world the meaning we add. Maybe the insights we share could be what another may need to brighten their day.


Luke 8:19-21. Hear the word of God and act on it

[DAILY GOSPEL INSIGHTS AND REFLECTION FOR MANAGEMENT AND ORGANIZATION 263: SEPTEMBER 20, 2022]

The nature of light is to conquer darkness

Light cannot and does not choose who it touches; it merely drives darkness away. Hopefully, managers and organizations become like light; satisfying the real needs of all their stakeholders because their very nature is to radiate their light.


Luke 8:16-18. Those who enter may see the light

[DAILY GOSPEL INSIGHTS AND REFLECTION FOR MANAGEMENT AND ORGANIZATION 262: SEPTEMBER 19, 2022]

Can organizations serve multiple “masters” without degenerating?

Ever since I was an undergraduate student (maybe even during high school), I have always wondered whether individuals or organizations can serve multiple stakeholders without sacrificing one. Jim Collins, as he popularized in his book Built to Last, contended that organizations that are truly built to last are capable of overcoming the “tyranny of the ‘or'” and embracing the “genius of the ‘and'” .

This is way easier said and written than done. In our research on social enterprises, businesses, and organizations with social purpose, managers can experience tensions in balancing different bottomlines. Those who are able to serve the master of profits and the master of social development are typically veteran entrepreneurs with the luxury of experience, networks, and other resources. These changemakers typically serve as catalysts that stimulate an ecosystem of support—composed of businesses, civil society, and government—towards the fulfillment of a mission.

In her award-winning presentation titled “Two routes to degeneration, two routes to utopia: A critical realist approach to performativity in alternative organizations” at the Academy of Management Annual Meeting 2022, Dr. Genevieve Shanahan discussed why organizations degenerate in terms of their goals and in terms of their structure. She contended that mission drift happens when organizations have to pivot their goals to practically compete with dominant players in the industry. If these organizations persist, they risk being competitively beaten by the same dominant players. In terms of organizational structure, if individuals or top-level leaders are invested in more mainstream and profit-driven initiatives, the organization will abandon its social mission. On the other end, if top-level leaders resist being pragmatic in the face of the great forces exerted by the industry, the organization cannot move forward in its vision.

Overcoming these extremes requires continuous reflection both by the leaders of the organization and its members. Shanahan shares two strategies: symbiotic and interstitial. The former is concerned with strategies for gradually changing the current system in ways that are acceptable to dominant powers while also laying the groundwork for future emancipatory struggles. The latter is focused on creating new models of empowerment in the margins of society, frequently in contexts where they do not appear to pose a direct threat to the dominant powers.

For a social purpose organization to truly achieve its mission, it requires a reflective dance—understanding the extremes and finding the golden mean. Too much deferment to the ruling powers renders an organization a sell-out; too much stubborness does not practically accomplish the necessary steps to actually make things happen.

Thus, to truly serve multiple “masters”, an organization can never do it in autopilot. Or else, it will be pulled into many different directions, and it risks losing its identity and mission in the process. Maybe this is why the gospel mentions that no one person can serve two masters—it is too difficult. But if it is not just one person, if it is a collective, an organization that dares to do so, maybe there is a miracle waiting at the middle of the seemingly extreme. Where the organization overthrows the ‘tyranny of the or’ and imbibes the ‘genius and compassion of the and’.


Luke 16:1-13. No one can serve two masters.

[DAILY GOSPEL INSIGHTS AND REFLECTION FOR MANAGEMENT AND ORGANIZATION 261: SEPTEMBER 18, 2022]

If organizations were the soil and its people were the seeds…

Do we protect the seeds from being trampled by vultures?

Do we remove rocks that dry the seeds out?

Do we remove thorns that choke the growing plants?

Or do we make sure the soil is rich and fertile, so that the seeds may achieve their destiny of flourishing?


Luke 8:4-15. The parable of the sower

[DAILY GOSPEL INSIGHTS AND REFLECTION FOR MANAGEMENT AND ORGANIZATION 260: SEPTEMBER 17, 2022]