The Purpose of Workplace Spirituality in Organizational Culture


 


Overview

The increasing interest of spiritual values in organizational context has been researched by many academics due to the positive results it has brought to the organizations (Sass, 2000). Shellenbarger (2000, as citied in Milimann et al., 2003) also asserts that spirituality has become a growing business trend in the 21st century.

Due to the growing importance of spirituality, this post aims to identify spirituality and the benefits it entitles.

Workplace spirituality defined

Workplace spirituality recognizes that people have an inner life that nourishes and is nourished by meaningful work in the context of community’ (Robbins and Judge, 2013, p.529).

Similarly, Asmos and Duchon (2000) exerts that spirituality is recognizing individuals in the organization as humans who has both mind and spirit and understanding that measures to develop spirituality is just as vital as developing the minds of them.

Kochukalam (2018) asserts that as illustrated in Figure 1, the foundation of workplace spirituality consists of an inner need (transcendence) for fulfillment together with a connection and purpose for work (to belong to a community, belonging at work).



Importance of Spirituality

The following benefits exists in a culture that promotes spirituality:


  •  Spirituality leads to high personal and psychological well-being (Fry and Slocum, 2008).

  • Similarly, (Garcia-zamar, 2003) asserts that spirituality creates a win-win solution for organizations and employees where performance is enhanced.

  •       Enables sustainable competitive advantage through high creativity and flexibility (Benefiel, 2003).


      However, Bell and Taylor (2003, p. 332) argues that spirituality is a mechanism implemented by organizations to control the employees as ‘workplace spirituality ensures that the search for meaning is harnessed to specific organizational purposes’.

      Value Framework of Spirituality 

      Table 1 depicts the value framework of workplace spirituality where organizational cultures that exhibits positive characteristics of Benevolence, Generativity, Humanism, Integrity, Justice, Mutuality, Receptivity, Respect, Responsibility and trust portrays a spiritual organization (Jurkiewicz and Gicalone, 2004).


Figure 1: Value Framework of workplace Spirituality

 

Positive

Values of Spirituality

 

Negative

Kindness towards others and an orientation to promote their happiness and prosperity of employees and other stakeholders within the work context.

Benevolence

Employee’s feelings have no relevance in the work environment, their happiness and prosperity are their own concern.

Long-term focus, showing a concern for the consequences of one’s actions into the future; respectful of future generations

 

Generativity

Concerned with immediate reward without regard for long-term consequences

 

Practices and policies that assert the essential dignity and worth of each employee; provides an opportunity for personal growth conjunction with organizational goals

Humanism

Lacking mercy or kindness; cruel; impersonal, cold; unconcerned with the needs of employees as human beings; lacking warmth or geniality

Uncompromising adherence to a code of conduct; sincerity, honesty, candor;

exercising unforced power

Integrity

Organizational members can act deceptive, expedient, artificial, shallow, politically manipulative and are inconsistent in following a code of conduct

Even-handed treatment and judgment of employees; impartial, fair, honest; unbiased assignment of rewards and punishments

Justice

Dishonest, faithless; wrongful or biased in judgment

All employees are interconnected and mutually dependent, each contributes to the final output by working in conjunction

Mutuality

Employees are separate and distinct free agents responsible for their own output irrespective of others’ efforts, time spent interacting with others is dictated by necessity

Open-minded, flexible thinking, orientation toward calculated risk-taking, rewards creativity

Receptivity

Enforces one right way to do things, discourages questioning and innovation; punishes behavior outside the norm.

Regard and treat employees with esteem and value; showing consideration and concern for others

Respect

Demonstrates disesteem and contempt for employees; uncivil, discourteous to others

Independently follows through on goal attainment irrespective of difficulty or obstacles; concerned with doing what’s right rather than the right thing

Responsibility

Shirks work and follows through only insofar as forced to do so; does not exert effort independent of external controls

Being able to confidently depend on the character and truth of the organization and its representatives

Trust

Character, truth, maintenance of obligations and promises is at the discretion of individual organizational members as predicated by their personal gain

(Source: Jurkiewicz and Gicalone, 2004, p.131)

 

xz  As people spend a prominent portion of time at the workplace, Video 1 describes seven tips on how one can practice spirituality at the workplace:


Video 1: Seven values to practice spirituality at work


(Source: Mind Spark, 2017)

      When considering the dimensions of spirituality mentioned above; spirituality is a combination of finding one’s own purpose, a sense of belonging and deeper values (Gibbons, 2000). Therefore, organizations must focus on creating an organizational culture that enhances spirituality of the employees. 


References

Ashmos, D. and Duchon, D. (2000). Spirituality at work: A conceptualization and Measure. Journal of Management Inquiry. 9(2). pp. 134-145. doi: 10.1177/105649260092008.

Bell, E. and Taylor, S. (2003). The Elevation of Work: Pastoral Power and the New Age Work Ethic. 10(2). Organization. pp. 329-349. doi: 10.1177/1350508403010002009.

Benefiel, M. (2003). Mapping the terrain of spirituality in organizations research. Journal of Organizational Change Management. 16(4). pp. 367-377. doi: 10.1108/09534810310484136.

Garcia-zamor, J. (2003). Workplace Spirituality and Organizational Performance. Public Administration Review. 63(3). pp. 355-363. doi: 10.1111/1540-6210.00295. 

Gibbons, P. (2019). Spirituality at work: Definitions, measures, assumptions, and validity claims. Work and Spirit: A Reader of New Spiritual Paradigms for Organizations. pp. 111-131.

Fry, L. and Slocum, J. (2008). Maximizing the Triple Bottom Line through Spiritual Leadership. Organizational Dynamics. 37(1). pp. 86-96. doi: 10.1016/j.orgdyn.2007.11.004.

Jurkiewicz, C. and Giacalone, R. (2004). A Values Framework for Measuring the Impact of Workplace Spirituality on Organizational Performance. Journal of Business Ethics. 49(1). pp. 129-142. doi: 10.1023/B:BUSI.0000015843.22195.b9.

Kochukalam, C. (2018). Workplace Spirituality – A Transcending Experience. Global Journal of Commerce & Management Perspective. 7(1). pp. 20-22. doi: 10.24105/gjcmp.7.1.1804.

 Millimann, J., Czaplewski, A. and Ferguson, J. (2003). Workplace spirituality and employee work attitudes: An exploratory empirical assessment. Journal of Organizational Change Management. 16(4). pp. 426-447.  doi: 10.1108/09534810310484172.

Mind Spark. (2017). Practice Spirituality in the Workplace - Mind Spark Videos. Available at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IsG5RbyQ110 (Accessed: 11th May 2021).

Robbins, S. and Judge, T. (2013). Organizational Behavior. 15th edn. United States: Pearson Education.

Sass, J. (2000). Characterizing Organization Spirituality: An Organizational Communication Culture Approach’, Communication Studies. 51(3). pp. 195–217. doi: 0.1080/10510970009388520.

 

 

 

 

 

  

 

 

 

 

 

 






6 Comments

  1. Agreed with you Arjun and adding that, it should be vital role to be played by the leaders to confortable organizational culture in an organization.
    An effective leader can motivate employees to behave in a certain way especially based on the accepted value systems. By rewarding the right behavior and inspiring through actions can take the organizational culture to a better position (Sarros, 2002).

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    1. Yes Eranda, in my previous post 'The impact of Leadership towards Organizational Culture' I elaborated further on how leadership can influence the organizational culture.
      Spirituality is much more than rewards, it's about creating a culture where employees can find their inner selves and where the culture encourages the spiritual growth of the employees (Giacalone and Jurkiewicz, 2010).

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  2. Agree with you. Over the last decade, workplace spirituality has become a buzzword in business and organization literature. Furthermore, many studies have affirmed its significance in satisfying individuals’ inner feelings and self actualization. As organizational culture represents the personality of any organization, it has a tremendous role in shaping current and future organizational orientation (Klein,A.S., Wallis,J. and Cooke,R.A., 2013).

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    1. Yes Wasantha, organizations also have understood the importance spirituality has on life, health, community and well-being, it is about finding the inner life while preserving the other aspects of life (Tacey, 2004).

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  3. Well said Arjun, As per a research done by Mousa & Alas (2016), the study has found that workplace spirituality dimensions (meaningful work, sense of community, and alignment with organizational values) are strongly affected by both adaptability and mission. Also, in agreement with the same study, the results of this research have proved a weak correlation between consistency and workplace spirituality dimensions. However, the results of this research have shown a moderate correlation between involvement and the two dimensions of workplace spirituality; namely, meaningful work and sense of community.

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    1. Yes Indeevari, however, Rathee and Rajain (2020, p.27) proved through empirical data and theoretical evidence that 'workplace spirituality has a significant impact of work attitudes like organizational performance, job involvement, job commitment, and job satisfaction as a whole'.

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