Skip to content
  extractive → convenient → strategic → redemptive  ·  full trust of all parties  ·  shared assets: human, financial, social capital  ·  God alone receives the glory  ·  empower a champion  ·  start small, build trust  ·  extractive → convenient → strategic → redemptive  ·  full trust of all parties  ·  shared assets: human, financial, social capital  ·  God alone receives the glory  ·  empower a champion  ·  start small, build trust   

Chapter 02 of 06

Frontier Commons

REDEMPTIVE
partnerships.

Not all partnerships are created equal. The continuum from extractive to redemptive reveals how deep alignment and shared assets can advance eternal goals far beyond what any single organization could achieve.

Based on Mike Mannina, "The Art of Redemptive Partnerships," CEF 2021

The continuum

Four levels of partnership.

01

Extractive

One party gains at the other's expense. Resources flow in one direction. The "partnership" exists in name only, masking an imbalance of power, information, or benefit. Common in donor-recipient dynamics where the funder dictates terms.

02

Convenient

Both parties benefit, but the relationship is shallow and transactional. Low risk, low trust, low commitment. Partners collaborate when it's easy and disengage when it's not. No shared assets, no shared vision beyond the immediate exchange.

03

Strategic

Partners align around shared goals with intentional resource allocation. There's real coordination, but the relationship is still bounded by organizational self-interest. Each party brings something to the table, but the assets remain firmly under individual control.

04

Redemptive

Full trust of all parties to share their assets within the partnership to advance long-term eternal goals, ultimately desiring that God alone receive the glory. Human capital, financial capital, social capital, and intellectual property are all on the table. This is the rarest and most transformative level.

The standard

"Redemptive partnerships require the full trust of all parties to share their assets within the partnership to advance long-term eternal goals, ultimately desiring that God alone receive the glory."

Mike Mannina, CEF 2021

The formula

Four ingredients of redemptive partnerships.

01

Aligned Stakeholders

Partners who share theological convictions, Kingdom vision, and a willingness to subordinate organizational identity to collective mission. Alignment isn't just strategic — it's spiritual.

02

Common Vision

A shared picture of the future that's specific enough to guide decisions and broad enough to accommodate diverse approaches. Not "we all love Jesus" but "here's the measurable outcome we're pursuing together."

03

Independent Value

Each partner brings distinct capabilities that the others lack. The partnership isn't about duplication — it's about complementarity. Every organization at the table must contribute something the others can't.

04

Collective Value

The whole exceeds the sum of its parts. The partnership produces outcomes that none of the partners could achieve independently. This is the ultimate test: if you could do it alone, you don't need the partnership.

The contrast

Extractive vs. redemptive characteristics.

Extractive Partnership

×

One party gains at the other's expense

×

Resources flow in a single direction

×

Power imbalance between partners

×

Organizational brand takes priority

×

Short-term, transactional mindset

×

Assets are hoarded, not shared

×

Glory accrues to individual orgs

Redemptive Partnership

All parties share mutual benefit

Assets flow freely between partners

Full trust and equal footing

Kingdom mission supersedes brand

Long-term, eternal-goals orientation

Human, financial, social capital & IP shared

God alone receives the glory

In practice

Real-world examples.

Translation

Bible Translation Project

Multiple organizations pooling linguistic expertise, field workers, and funding to accelerate Scripture access — a task no single organization could accomplish at scale.

Venture

Praxis

A venture studio and accelerator that brings together entrepreneurs, investors, and mentors around redemptive ventures — sharing networks, capital, and intellectual property to build Kingdom businesses.

Capital

Faith-Driven Investor / Entrepreneur

Connecting faith-driven capital with faith-driven ventures through shared networks, peer groups, and events — building an ecosystem where alignment accelerates impact.

Deep Dive

The South African Group

Mergon, Triga, and Ziwani represent a real-world case study of organizations moving through the partnership continuum. Starting from awareness and coordination, these South African Kingdom-oriented groups have been building toward genuine redemptive partnership.

Their journey illustrates a critical insight: the progression through the continuum is not automatic. It requires a dedicated champion, intentional trust-building, and a willingness to start small before scaling shared commitments. Most organizations stall at the strategic level because the leap to redemptive requires surrendering control.

Key Lesson

Trust must be built incrementally. You can't skip from extractive to redemptive. Each level of the continuum must be earned through demonstrated faithfulness and shared risk.

Practical Tip

Empower a champion — one person or small team whose sole job is to facilitate the partnership. Without dedicated ownership, even aligned organizations drift back to isolated work.

Starting Point

Start small. A modest pilot with two or three aligned partners generates the trust and proof-of-concept needed to attract broader participation.

"Extractive partnerships are where one party gains at the other's expense."

Mike Mannina, CEF 2021 — the baseline that most of the faith world must move beyond

Continue reading

← Previous

Collective Impact Overview

Chapter 01 — The Kania-Kramer framework

Next →

The Missing Piece

Chapter 03 — Fragmentation in the faith-work movement