Skip to main content

Nearshoring: Mark 12:31 "‘You shall [unselfishly] love your neighbor as yourself.’"

courteously wix.com
Nearshoring means linguistically and from a business perspective the act of supporting through a prop, a neighbor.

We understand nearshoring to be intimate, open, mutual, honoring each other, valuing the other more than itself. Nearshoring should be life giving and synergetic.

These are the settings we bring at the table if you want to consider a nearshoring relationship with us.

At the end of each day each partner of the nearshoring should be able to say fulfilled: together we reached new shores, discovered more about myself (as individuum and as economic entity) and about the world outside, that wait to be served by me.

So welcome neighbor! I am living and working nearby. Why don’t take some time to know each other better? I might make you a favor and take over some of your burdens. And you get more time and other resources to dedicate yourself to your main goals.



Dictionary


Shoring = the act of supporting with or as if with a prop
Prop = something that props or sustains

Definition Wikipedia: Nearshoring is the outsourcing of business processes, especially information technology processes, to companies in a nearby country, often sharing a border with the target country. Both parties expect to benefit from one or more of the following dimensions of proximity: geographic, temporal (time zone), cultural, social, linguistic, economic, political, or historical linkages. The service work that is being sourced may be a business process or software development.


For Christians in Business, what we plead for is an application of the commandment of Mark 12:31 "‘You shall [unselfishly] love your neighbor as yourself.’ There is no other commandment greater than these."

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

"There was never any more inception then there is now"

"For here we do not have an enduring city, but we are looking for the city that is to come"

 In my walking with God I had the privilege and mandate to serve in several countries. Some Christians emphasized, that their native culture has preeminence in their life. I pleaded to put our citizenship in the Kingdom of God first, above the cultural values of the society we live in.  God's Kingdom and His principles, statutes and values should superseed anything in the culture we live in. The grid of Kingdom’ values is the litmus test for everything we are thinking and acting.  For here we do not have an enduring city, but we are looking for the city that is to come. Hebrew 13:34

Suffering is Sometimes Valueable Than Gold

 God do not take any short cut if achieving something in our character will need suffering. Jesus did not take any shortcut in going to the cross for all of us. How much less is our sacrifice of suffering, if through it, God will polish a facette of our character, making it more lightful. God does not love making us suffering, yet in His wisdom He uses it to get us purer than through other painless approaches. It is worth to suffer, if our character will become through it more alike to the one of Jesus. Suffering is sometimes valuable than Gold .  “The human spirit will not even begin to try to surrender self-will as long as all seems to be well with it. Now error and sin both have this property, that the deeper they are the less their victim suspects their existence; they are masked evil. Pain is unmasked, unmistakable evil; every man knows that something is wrong when he is being hurt.” ― C.S. Lewis, The Problem of Pain Prayer :  Lord help me to suffer well and not dete...