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Jim Grey's avatar

I think rather that evangelicalism ATTRACTS risk- and failure-averse people. Many evangelical churches preach a certainty: stay within these boundaries and you'll be safe with God. And then once you're in you find yourself surrounded by other people doing their best to live lives of low risk and therefore low failure. Then this kind of life becomes conflated with what a genuine Christian life should be.

John F Lang's avatar

I am wondering if the aversion to taking risk and building something significant in society simply reflects the view in evangelical circles that the "negative world" is no longer a place where a Christian man would want to build something. The thinking might be that it would just require too much frustration and moral compromise. If you try to build a company, for instance, you couldn't hire the people you wanted either because of DEI pressure or because the only people available would be tattoo-covered, nose-pierced weirdos who are more interested in protesting their latest grievance than working. If you stand up for Christian values in a new enterprise, you'd be subject to lawsuits. Most of the new growth businesses are menacing technologies, like robots and AI. So the best thing is to keep your head low and concentrate on serving God (which we should be doing in any event), raising a family, earning good income in order to support the family, and pursuing challenging hobbies. If the reasons cited here aren't enough to stifle worldly ambition, another deterrent is that there are very few good role models of successful Christian men. Most of the successful men in high places are not examples of Christian virtue.

I do agree that a man should try to punch through this kind of thinking to pursue his dreams and do something positive for the world. However, with all the headwinds, it is understandable if he doesn't.

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