The church as partner in the social responsibility in South Africa: A Vaal Triangle case study
Abstract
The church, as one of the transforming agents in societies, has been investigated in
the area of social responsibility (SR) as a suitable partner with other stakeholders: the
government and businesses. Social responsibility, which is as old as mankind, and not
a modern concept, has gone through numerous changes that can be attributed
religious, historical, geo-political, socioeconomic, cultural, and environmental factors,
resulting in the terms corporate social responsibility (CSR), social justice, and other
contemporary terms. All these factors are forces that require partnerships with all
stakeholders that are involved in the SR domain. Specifically, the study investigated
the church as a valuable partner for business and government, utilising the Vaal
Triangle Region (VTR) as a case study, given its socioeconomic challenges. This
study revealed that companies, government, and churches cannot solve the complex
social challenges on their own; they need to collaborate if they wish to achieve optimal
CSR results and make a real and sustainable difference to communities.
Churches, by their nature and mandate, are both social and spiritual institutions. They
exercise both governance and business practices by taking on the identity of
government (governance) and business (providing practical CSR solutions). In that
respect, churches offer some services to communities, similar to those offered by
government and businesses. CSR by both government and business converge at
numerous levels with church corporate social responsibility (CCSR). The spiritual
component of CSR makes the church an important potential partner with the two
stakeholders in that the CCSR, which has both spiritual and social capital, has proven
to mitigate various social ills, and God is seen as the author of SR. The study sought
to find the common ground between the three entities, to enable the formation of
meaningful partnerships. The tri-partnership can be the key to addressing the complex
social ills in communities since none of these entities can achieve the solutions on
their own. History records identify that fair CSR thrived where there were fruitful
partnerships.
The empirical study underscored that, social injustices, manifesting in complex social
ills, need a multi-pronged approach, with all entities combining their resources in a
complementary approach. Government and businesses have found each other on a
common platform already, but tis has not happened with most churches. Yet the three
entities are shown in this study to be co-stewards in social responsibility, called by
God to serve communities. A complementary tri-partnership would mean that the three
entities need to speak a common language as a principle of communication, wherein
the religious terms are translated into corporate and political language. This can form
the bedrock of a uniform language for tri-partnerships to be effective. Tri-partnerships
have proven to be job creators thus adding social value to communities. Availability of
land to churches has proven to enhance social responsibility as churches that had
more land performed with excellence. However, churches will first have to unify and
find a common theology of spiritual and practical social actions to enable them to grow
and thereby remain important partners in CSR.
Collections
- Theology [793]
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