Pope encourages business leaders who put employees first

Pope encourages business leaders who put employees first
Pope Francis arrives for a meeting with a group of 90 business leaders from France on January 7. Photo: CNS/Vatican Media

VATICAN (CNS): Competition, the market system and need to answer to stockholders can and do challenge business owners and leaders who want to put the needs of employees and the common good first, Pope Francis said on January 10.

“Persevere and don’t be discouraged,” the pope told 90 business leaders from France who were making a pilgrimage to Rome, accompanied by Bishop Dominique Rey of Fréjus-Toulon.

“I find it very beautiful and courageous that, in a world often marked by individualism, indifference and even the marginalisation of the most vulnerable, some entrepreneurs and business leaders have at heart the service of all and not just the service of private interests or restricted groups,” the pope said. “I have no doubt that this represents a challenge for you.”

Pope Francis said the clash between ideals and reality, which he spoke about on January 1, the feast of Mary, Mother of God, is also at play in the lives of business leaders who want to operate “according to the heart of God,” but find themselves having to deal with “the economic and financial systems currently in place, which often make a mockery of the gospel principles of social justice and charity.”

He stressed that when that happens, the leaders must not “try to camouflage” the fact, but they must bring it to their prayer, which is the best place “to unify the beautiful and the ugly things of which life is made up, to grasp better the interweaving and the meaning in God’s perspective.”

Pope Francis also told the business leaders that what he has told pastors about “smelling like the sheep” applies to them as well and involves knowing their employees, their talents, dreams and struggles.

He added that the best exercise of authority is to share it when possible, recognising and encouraging every employee to contribute what he or she can to the business.

“The Christian manager is called to consider carefully the place assigned to all the people in his or her company, including those whose duties might seem of lesser importance, because each is important in God’s eyes,” he said. 

Pope Francis said that even if being the boss sometimes means making tough decisions, there should be a general approach of allowing “each person to give the best of himself or herself, to feel that he or she is participating, to bear his or her share of responsibility and thus contribute to the good of the whole.”

___________________________________________________________________________