Toolbox for
Marketplace & Economics
Featured Tools

School of Business Leadership
Dennis Peacocke
GoStrategic
The school is a two-year correspondence course based on the biblical principles of economics and business practice, and on the inherent concept that deeper learning follows effective service to others. It provides a sharply defined perspective on how biblical truth impacts marketplace thinking and practice and produces transformation in participants’ lives and businesses.

Cultivate and Keep
Doug Tjaden
Regeneco
The final book in the series ties God’s economic principles to the act of Creation. It identifies a covenant that God put in place between God, Jesus, Creation, and humanity that would ensure we gave proper priority to “serving and protecting” the foundation of all economic activity in the world.

My Ways
Doug Tjaden
Regeneco
he sequel to I Came to Give provides a stark contrast between man’s economic systems and God’s. It then provides a framework for how people in local communities can begin to live according to God’s economic principles and ways. Is the modern 21st-century church ready to embrace God’s “radical” economic worldview?
All Tools
School of Business Leadership
Dennis Peacocke
The school is a two-year correspondence course based on the biblical principles of economics and business practice, and on the inherent concept that deeper learning follows effective service to others. It provides a sharply defined perspective on how biblical truth impacts marketplace thinking and practice and produces transformation in participants’ lives and businesses.
Cultivate and Keep
Doug Tjaden
The final book in the series ties God’s economic principles to the act of Creation. It identifies a covenant that God put in place between God, Jesus, Creation, and humanity that would ensure we gave proper priority to “serving and protecting” the foundation of all economic activity in the world.
My Ways
Doug Tjaden
he sequel to I Came to Give provides a stark contrast between man’s economic systems and God’s. It then provides a framework for how people in local communities can begin to live according to God’s economic principles and ways. Is the modern 21st-century church ready to embrace God’s “radical” economic worldview?






