Redemptive Design
Library

Welcome to the Seed Redemptive Design Library

In order to access this library, login or register for a free account.

To view the borrowing and fair use policy:

Borrowing Policy

Users are required to sign up as members of the Library before being granted access to the resource collection. The collection is accessible in the following formats:

Download – Many of the resources in the collection have been offered free for download by the authors as an open source contribution to the advancement of thinking and research in Redemptive Design.

Online – available for reading online while inside the library

Fair use copying – Library resources that are not marked for free download and use are subject to a fair use policy that is a condition of continuing membership of the library.

Fair Use Policy

The Copyright Act 1968 (Cth) allows people to use copyright material without the copyright owner’s permission in certain situations, including fair dealing for specific purposes. The purposes for which you may copy material from this online library are:

Fair dealing for research or study

You can use the material for the purpose of research or study, provided the use is deemed to be fair, that is, 10% or less of the number of pages or material in a single library item).

Fair dealing for criticism or review

You can use the material for the purpose of genuine criticism or review, provided that you acknowledge the author and title of the work.

Latest Blog Posts

Pathway Builders Part One

Over the last 6 months, a deeper clarity has emerged around the purpose of Seed. After a couple of years working through the detail of ‘how’ we do what we set out to do, we’ve had the pleasure of returning to reconsider in fresh ways ‘why’ Seed exists.
That ‘why’ – Seed’s purpose – is to create pathways for effective and faithful engagement by Christians in society. We might not talk about that in our public messages all the time, but that lies at the core of Seed’s existence.

Doing Business God’s Way by Dennis Peacocke

This book was the result of years of study, conversations, and seminars which I taught on the general content in the 1980s. What  has always seemed clear to me is that “spiritual truth” that does not result in measurable change in the here-and-now is either not yet clearly understood or irrelevant. For sure, economics and business are about here-and-now reality, and the issue therefore is to connect these endeavors and ground them to their spiritual foundations in the God who created them.