Don’t Kid Yourself: Family, Business, and Faith are All Connected
In the introduction to his book, Generation to Generation: Family Process in Church and Synagogue (Guilford Press, 1985, p. 1), Edwin Friedman noted that:
All clergymen and clergywomen, irrespective of faith, are simultaneously involved in three distinct families whose emotional forces interlock: the families within the congregation, our congregations, and our own. Because the emotional processes in all these systems is identical, unresolved issues in any one of them can produce symptoms in the others, and increased understanding of any one creates more effective functioning in all three. [emphasis added]
Friedman revealed that dysfunction in one emotional system affects one’s functioning in other emotional systems. It is natural—even predictable—that one takes the malfunctioning ways of managing stress, conflict, needs, wants, desires, goals, or values into the other systems, causing problems in the other systems.
Applying Friedman’s thinking to Christian business ownership, I will submit that most Christian business owners operate in three emotional systems: their family, business, and faith community. The emotional processes in all three systems are identical. For business owners not connected to a faith community, we could substitute a civic community or a significant peer network in the third circle.
One can easily discern how an owner’s dysfunction can affect all three areas. Because of the power Christian business owners hold in a business, it is clear that their personal health or dysfunction will be imprinted onto the company. The results of this imprintation will be seen as a business problem to solve rather than an individual problem the leader needs to address.
As a faith-based psychologist who performs executive coaching for Christian business owners, I may have an owner sitting in front of me who needs and wants change, but it is hard for me not to “see” the “others” in the room, even though they are not physically present. To help my client fully, I must understand (to a point) the owner’s immediate family, business family, and faith family.
This is why a 360-degree review of the owner’s persona and functioning, including one or two family members as reviewers, is vital to uncovering and understanding the owner’s world and how best to move forward.
Only a holistic, decompartmentalized approach to executive coaching of a Christian business owner will achieve maximum, lasting results. Coaches who consider only the business system will surely miss the broader and more critical interactions between the leader’s family and faith systems. All three are essential to understand if the leader will experience lasting change.