"I have continued systematically to study the Book of Mormon and Bible to understand even more deeply what God expects of me and my family while on this earth"
About this Quote
There is nothing casual about the word "systematically" here. Clayton Christensen, the management thinker who taught executives to treat intuition like a hypothesis, smuggles that same discipline into his private life. The line reads like a spiritual lab notebook: study, iterate, go deeper. For a businessman famous for mapping disruption, scripture becomes another system to master, not in the cold MBA sense, but in the insistence that outcomes are shaped by deliberate habits rather than vibes.
The intent is both devotional and directive. He is signaling that faith, for him, is not inherited identity or occasional comfort; it is ongoing work with measurable stakes. "To understand even more deeply" frames belief as a learning curve, implying that certainty is less important than sustained engagement. That phrasing also inoculates against the modern cynic's assumption that religious conviction is static or anti-intellectual. Christensen is arguing, quietly, that serious people can treat sacred texts with the same rigor they bring to strategy.
The subtext lands hardest in "what God expects of me and my family". This is accountability language, not self-expression. In a culture that often pitches spirituality as personalized wellness, he uses the vocabulary of obligation: expectations, duties, roles. It reflects a Latter-day Saint emphasis on family stewardship and moral formation, but it also mirrors his professional worldview: life is a set of choices made under constraints, and the point is to align daily decisions with a higher objective function.
Context matters: Christensen spoke from a life marked by public success and private trials, including serious illness. The sentence reads like a decision to anchor legacy not in market impact, but in home and holiness.
The intent is both devotional and directive. He is signaling that faith, for him, is not inherited identity or occasional comfort; it is ongoing work with measurable stakes. "To understand even more deeply" frames belief as a learning curve, implying that certainty is less important than sustained engagement. That phrasing also inoculates against the modern cynic's assumption that religious conviction is static or anti-intellectual. Christensen is arguing, quietly, that serious people can treat sacred texts with the same rigor they bring to strategy.
The subtext lands hardest in "what God expects of me and my family". This is accountability language, not self-expression. In a culture that often pitches spirituality as personalized wellness, he uses the vocabulary of obligation: expectations, duties, roles. It reflects a Latter-day Saint emphasis on family stewardship and moral formation, but it also mirrors his professional worldview: life is a set of choices made under constraints, and the point is to align daily decisions with a higher objective function.
Context matters: Christensen spoke from a life marked by public success and private trials, including serious illness. The sentence reads like a decision to anchor legacy not in market impact, but in home and holiness.
Quote Details
| Topic | Faith |
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