Theologies of work, Part II
In my last post I claimed that many pastors neglect, when teaching about the role of work in the Christian’s life, the content and product of work. We are enjoined against work that is illegal or unethical, of course, but the actual result of our labor is strangely absent. It is the Christian’s behavior in his work that is of much greater concern to the modern Protestant pastor. John Piper, who may well be — after Luther, Calvin, and the Almighty Himself — the most oft-cited writer among Reformed pastors, gives this advice to young people: “Devote yourself to [sanctification] with all your heart, and take whatever job you want.” As for those already in the workforce, he falls back on predestination to sanction occupational apathy: “You are where you are by divine assignment, even if you got there by fraud.”
A broad sampling of Protestant pastors on this topic will reveal that a great many concur with Piper either tacitly or explicitly (though the Arminians downplay the predestination angle, of course). Search “work” at Charles Stanley’s In Touch Ministries and you’ll find lessons that focus on the Christian’s attitude and diligence, not the content of his work. The same is true at Billy Graham’s ministry.
The predominant teaching by modern Protestant pastors regarding work is that the Christian is to do his work diligently unto the Lord, and respect his superiors, and be a shining light in the workplace. His primary goal is sanctification and evangelism, for which most any (legal) job will do. Work heartily unto the Lord, and be confident that you are where He has placed you for a reason. There is the occasional mention of matching a job to one’s talents, but this is rare, and not connected to the question of what one is producing, but again, to one’s diligence and competence.
These messages are especially welcomed, in my experience, by wives who are economically vulnerable to stupid decisions by their husbands. The last thing many wives want is for their husbands to start looking for “meaningful” work, because we’ve all seen men in mid-life crises make ridiculous job decisions in search of that elusive goal. The last thing a good many church budgets could stand, likewise, is for wide swaths of men to begin trading income for purpose. Thus not only do there appear to be good biblical reasons for occupational apathy, but a substantial portion of the church membership has an interest in deterring men from questioning their professions. And somebody has got to pay for all these fancy new church buildings we keep throwing up. I doubt many pastors deliberately shape their sermonizing on work in order to maximize their revenue, but they certainly don’t have much incentive to rock the boat in that domain — especially when it is easy to string together scriptures so that practical (as opposed to spiritual) purpose in work is diminished.
The aforementioned pastors are certainly on solid ground as far as they tread. I don’t think any Christian would dispute that God is sovereign, or that sanctification and evangelism are important, or that doing one’s work heartily unto the Lord is an important goal. But the question remains: does our knowledge of God, and of His creation, tell us anything further about what work should entail? Should we really tell young people to take whatever job they want, so long as it doesn’t interfere with the sanctification process? Next time I’ll offer thoughts from other theologians who suggest that what we do — not just how we do it — is of much greater significance than many modern pastors allow.
To read Tony’s “Theologies of work, Part I,” click here.




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back to top31 Comments to “Theologies of work, Part II”
I read posts like this one and wonder what sorts of churches you all attend. Certainly I’ve never belonged to a church where the pastor is more interested in constructing a building than in a parishioner finding the work God wants him/her to do.
I’d leave. And so should you.
Sometimes God directs us to jobs which make no sense to the logical portion of our brain, but which have eternal consequences far beyond our ability to see. One of my sons, for example, should take any job offered because he simply needs to work at this time in his life. I, on the other hand, work a job that makes no sense, but which I feel God has called me to do at the present time.
Sometimes we need the sheer discipline of going to work–to learn something deeper spiritually about our hearts. Sometimes work can be a great joy–when your abilities and interests coincide with the task at hand. Other days, it’s drudgery or, as my brother says, “that’s why they call it work.”
Secular writer Neville Shute wrote an interesting novel in the 1950’s called Round the Bend in which a mystic’s attitude toward working “as if God is watching,” launched a spiritual movement. I don’t agree with the religion expoused, by the idea of doing my best because I was working for God and not myself, has stayed with me for forty years–and sharpened my conscience about my work ethic.
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Michelle,
I wrote: “I doubt many pastors deliberately shape their sermonizing on work in order to maximize their revenue…”, so I’m not sure why you concluded that I said the opposite.
You wrote: “Sometimes God directs us to jobs which make no sense to the logical portion of our brain, but which have eternal consequences far beyond our ability to see.”
But then you give two examples that seem to defy this claim. Your son, from your explanation, needs work for personal development. You stay in your job because you “feel called.” Perhaps you are called, but I don’t see how that feeling translates into the claim that your work will have eternal consequences. You certainly hope that it will, as do I, but short of the tautological claim that everything we do has eternal consequences (as if all eternal consequences are equivalent), this is hardly a useful methodology for choosing one’s work. It is, as Piper tacitly advocates, a recipe for occupational apathy.
I don’t dispute that there can be a spiritual discipline to drudgery. But I do dispute the Gnostic endpoint to which this aphorism, blindly applied, leads us, which is the notion that any old work is just fine, because our whole raison d’etre is our personal sanctification.
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Good insights Michelle.
What we do for work is an important decision. I’ve never heard that questioned from a pulpit. How we do our work is also important. That should not be minimized by pastors either.
Tony’s post is thoughtful and I appreciate it. Nevertheless, I’ve never detected a significant dichotomy drawn between the the “what” and the “how” of work. They are simply two legitimate concerns that Christians should bring to the table when assessing God’s vacational will for our lives. Both concerns call for godly wisdom. Perhaps such dichotomies are drawn more by academics or critics who might need to spend more time in their pastor’s shoes than in their libraries.
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Joel,
I think the dichotomy does exist, in that so many pastors focus on the how to the exclusion of the what. The result is that many parishioners (as evidenced by the last two paragraphs in Michelle’s comment, as well as in several comments to my last post) conclude that the Christian’s only real obligation is to work diligently unto the Lord.
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There certainly is the idea of calling. I believe it is rather helpful if when a young man asks a woman to marry him, that he is also asking her to join him in his calling since she is biblically called to come along side and be his helpmeet.
It seems like you are addressing the issue of purposeful living. In the past, there where those who began missionary movements, started hospitals, formed Christian colleges, made scientific discoveries….in short took the dominion mandate seriously to the point they applied Christianity to all areas of life.
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Tony wrote; “And somebody has got to pay for all these fancy new church buildings we keep throwing up.”
That’s true. Christians should indeed pay for what they build. This is true of those fancy hospitals and schools that our communities keep throwing up too.
I am concerned, however, that our newer church buildings are becoming far too boring aesthetically–NOT nearly as attractive and pleasing to the community eye as houses of worship and spiritual equipping used to be.
In my opinion, we are getting rather cheap in the way we build church buildings, compared to previous generations. There is a visual impoverishment on the rise when it comes to church buildings I see going up these days. However, this has its positive side since churches these days are generally taking more responsibility to support ministry staff in greater numbers than they used to in previous generations.
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Joel (6):
At last we agree on something! I knew you’d come around. Or that I would come around. Whichever. A happy occasion regardless.
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One reason pastors never talk about work is that the modern American church is geared almost exclusively to serve stay-at-home moms.
The other reason is that the need to work is a consequence of sin. If the fall had never happened, we wouldn’t have to toil for our food. It wouldn’t fit today’s feel-good message if pastors reminded people that work is SUPPOSED to be toil.
That being said, one should try to find work that’s enjoyable or interesting if at all possible. God wired us to be miserable if we slog away at something tedious for 8 hours.
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I have seen churches and pastors focusing heavily on purpose-driven living and working. This puts the content of our work on the table every bit as much as it puts the attitude we bring to our work.
Tony asked, “Should we really tell young people to take whatever job they want, so long as it doesn’t interfere with the sanctification process?”
Maybe. It depends. There are times we might even need to advise them to take a job the don’t want. The better you know that young person, the better your pastoral advice will be. Many of them do just need to “get a job” and learn to hold it. Others are ready to be encouraged to build a purpose-driven mission around their vocation. But and any pastor who fails to preach that Christian’s have a God-given obligation to “work diligently unto the Lord”, is dropping the ball.
I thought Michelle comments made a lot of good sense, Tony. I did not think her examples defied her points. I especially liked her point about eternal consequences that we cannot presently see. Thus, Paul called us to “walk by faith, not by sight” (2 Cor. 5:7), which can also be understood as a call, as it were, to “work” by faith and not by sight. Still, we tend to get more sight as we grow, but there are times to just get our faith into focus and go forward. We can change gears, or jobs, as we grow and as we keep our eyes and minds open.
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#8, good points John M.
I would suggest also that one more reason some pastors seldem talk about work is that the culture they are trying to appeal to is largely focused on play and entertainment! Many view work as a necessary means to enable us to play more and more.
In this light, Tony’s points are worth hearing and should be well taken. Just being more thoughtful and serious about work itself is a healthy message and I thank Tony for the topic.
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#8 “The other reason is that the need to work is a consequence of sin.”
I strongly disagree. The reason work is so difficult, and often tedious or drudgery, is because of sin. But God gave Adam meaningful work in the garden before he sinned, naming the animals and cultivating the garden.
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DKJ @ 5, I think a young man should also ask what his potential mate’s calling is, are they compatible? The first and last calling of women is not just to be helpmeet and mother as great and as high as those are.
My “stupid” husband’s mid-life crises was brilliant! He fled middle managment in the paper manufacturing business–it had all the purposeful allure of Dunder Mifflin–and became an inner-city school teacher. That job utilizes his gifts and stretches his heart and mind daily. But it is not without its drudgery. All occupations have their work aspect.
We sat under the teaching of a pastor who totally believed in the sanctification of mindless drudgery as long as the pew-peons were bankrolling HIS ministry. Like Michelle suggested, we left.
Then we had to rethink our occupations. What was it, as cretures of the Creator, that we were sub-creating? WMB ran a good story of a guy who was changing the corporate world as a stock broker. Some of the most fruitful missionaries I know are not seminary graduates, but software engineers. When we–I hate to put it this way–are purpose driven, rather than paycheck driven, whole new worlds open up.
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I did have one pastor who taught on this, though we only got into in-depth discussion of it in a small Bible study group he led and which I was part of. His views on it probably came out occasionally in his sermons but I don’t remember any specific ones.
The church had a good teaching program on spiritual gifts. The emphasis was not on people staffing church programs, but on people using their God-given gifts to do what God was calling them to do, in church ministries and in the community and in paid vocations. They recognized that sometimes people do simply have to do whatever job is available or that needs to be done, regardless of their gifts and interests – but the pastor felt strongly that that kind of work should be seen as temporary, not long-term.
He also stressed the importance of having one’s gifts confirmed by others in the church. So a man in his 40s with a desire to try something new would not be encouraged unless those around him recognized God’s gifts and calling in that direction.
This is an issue my husband and I reflect on frequently, due to his current job situation. He is an ordained pastor in the PCUSA, but due to various circumstances he currently works as team lead in a warehouse, third shift. He is happy to be using his leadership skills (having worked up to that position), but misses preaching, especially after having the opportunity to do pulpit supply last Sunday.
He does share his faith with his co-workers and offers encouragement and advice to those in difficult life situations (e.g. abusive boyfriend or ex-husband). And I think someday if/when he pastors a church again he’ll be the better pastor for having joined the ranks of “blue-collar” workers for a while.
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The irony is that pastors/missionaries today are supposed to be “called” to their work. What about the rest of us?
I have heard of some within missions recruiting who consider the Bible to be sufficient calling, that one does not need to sense an “inner” calling.
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I’m a woman, and thus not called to support my family, just myself. So in some ways I may have more “luxury” in this area.
But I’ve worked quite a number of jobs in my time, and it seems to me that quite often we simply need to do what needs to be done because somebody has to do it. Now I’m working a job that uses my skills, interests, and personality, and potentially makes good money–a match that’s probably better than 95% of people ever reach.
But…my first job was McDonald’s, a horrid match. I finally took it, after applying everywhere else within walking distance of my home (most places two or three times), because I simply needed a job. My next job was working at a drugstore, and I loved it, but it didn’t bring in a lot of money. (My sister and I shared an apartment, so it brought in “enough,” but not surplus.)
In college, the job for which I was best suited (working in the bookstore) for some reason didn’t hire me my freshman year, and I waited so long on that job that all that was left was cleaning crew–a job for which I was very poorly suited, and I hated, but it paid the bills. The summer before my senior year, ironically, I accidentally took another cleaning job (accidentally because the job didn’t match its description)…and at that point I figured God gave me the job to humble me. I may not have liked cleaning, may not have been good at it, but I was NOT too good for it.
Other college jobs were better matches–editor of the yearbook and librarian. And now I’m an editor (freelance after 10 years in the office). But all of my jobs have had a purpose, and have helped other people even if I didn’t “like” them. I think helping other people is an underrated, important part of the purpose of work.
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I’m glad Joel Mark is following this, I’m obviously not understanding what Tony is saying!
I think we need to use the usual ways of discerning God’s will when we’re looking for a job: Pray; consider whether the job is in line with Scripture–as in it’s not drug dealing; ask for counsel from wise people who know us and our situation; and examine the circumstances–does this job meet our needs?
If it all looks like a go, do so and then wait to see what God does with your life. A lot of times the job is only the means to the end; we think we’re doing one thing while God is at work in a completely different arena. For 20 years my husband rode and repaired nuclear powered submarines. He was good at it and some days really liked the engineering challenges. But the satisfying “work” he did was in the relationships he developed and mentored with his co-workers.
(And of course keeping America safe for democracy so you all could read World magazine.)
That’s why, in a sense, our job doesn’t matter. God uses us wherever we are to be found. If a job makes you miserable, it probably isn’t a good fit for your interests, your talents or your calling. There is joy in serving the King–even in the most mundane of tasks. Edith Schaeffer writes about this sense of worth in one of her books–probably the one on homemaking.
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Where in the Scriptures does it teach that our jobs are supposed to be the source of fulfillment in our lives? The source of fulfillment in our lives as believers is Jesus Christ. The fulfillment comes from being in the will of God, and doing the will of God (which also includes working). Is not our work in fact God’s way of (1) meeting our basic financial needs, so that we then have something to give away, (2) shining the light on our character needs so that we can grow in Him, and (3) placing us strategically on the mission field where He wants us to be? The work is probably going to be hard for most of us, but our task is not necessarily to enjoy it, but rather to be faithful in doing it.
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Luther said that Sanctification is not the work of man but the work of the Holy Spirit. If you read the 95 These or the Heidelburg disputation. You will see that from the start of the Reformation the idea that I could spend money (to buy and indulgence) or live in exclusion as a monk to earn God’s favor is totally contrary to the Gospel. Luther said it is far better to do the things God tells us to do. Remember the Sabbath day, Honor your father and your mother, Be faithful to your spouse, Help and protect your neighbor. Or in the most general form Love the Lord your God with all your heart, soul, and mind, and love your neighbor as yourself. While we do not think of honoring our parents, loving our wife, and teaching our children the faith to be a job that is our job. Other things that we should support our job.
When I lived in Australia people we almost offended if when you met them you asked what they did for a job. Their “job” was not who they were. Certainly when we stand before the Lord on Judgment day He will not say, “You should have been a shepherd instead of a farmer. Sorry.”
Our biggest job is to believe in Jesus the Christ and not let the world and its false gods and false works get in the way of our salvation. Maybe next time someone ask what you do you can say, “I am a murder. Each day I drown my sinful nature.”
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Joel (#9) – I can only tell you that in a wide sampling of pastors speaking/writing about work, what one overwhelmingly finds is along the lines of the sampling I provided here, which has almost nothing to do with the actual product of the work. But I’ll get more into what I mean by that in the next post.
Michelle (#16) – Likewise, I think what I’m getting at, and therefore why I disagree with your prescription for job discernment, will become clearer in the next post.
Tychicus (#17) – I’m not suggesting that we evaluate jobs in terms of how they fulfill us; I’m arguing that the actual result (art vs. trash, healthy food vs. high-fructose corn syrup, genuine value created vs. paper-pushing) matters immensely to God, which means that the advice offered by Piper, et al, only covers half the story.
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My #17 wasn’t directly targeting your argument, but was directed rather to the comments as a whole. Your #19 is helpful in clarifying the issue, however, especially through your examples. It seems that you want to address the “higher purpose” of work that provides true meaning, dignity and redeemable (eternal) value. I look forward with great interest to part III…
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Tony, I like much of what you are saying about a theology of work, but I don’t understand why you have to express it through some beef you have with pasters based on generalizations about them that I just don’t see this issue on the same terms you do, nor do I see the dichotomy you seem to.
So, what is the “product” of the work of a teacher? I don’t mean in theory either. My wife is one, and she painfully wonders sometimes. At times, all one can do is trust that our efforts made a difference for the good–because the product we see is so flawed. Some teachers feel like the breakdown of family is such that all they can do is, at best, is slow down the rate of decline and chaos in the minds of their students. Should they quit? When the “product” is vague, the Christian can still have clarity through the attitude and vigilence they bring to bear, day by day! But that does not justify disregard for the content or “product.”
A construction worker can see his work when the day is done? Or can he? The importance of that work, however, may not be measured until a bridge collapses 20 years later and many lives are lost. A conscientious construction worker is precious in the sight of God!
What is the “product” of the work of a web-site manager? A policeman? A doctor? Honest mistakes can destroy the “product.” A writer? A lawyer? An IRS agent? A landscaper? A human Resource manager? A babysitter? A cook? A grocier? A bus driver? How about a position wherein you must fire people?
A work or worker would not be considered honest in any genuine sense if he or she disregarded the “product.” Still, there must be some humility in actually assessing the “product” of our work. We do our best, but it is often out of our hands. We can pray for God to bless it.
But pastors must be humble too in how they handle their theology of work in the pulpit. No honest work should be diminished. Jesus would say that the servant of all is the greatest. Thus, there can be great dignaty in “menial” work.
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What I think Tony may want more of from our pulpits, if I may parahrase, is a more mission-minded approach to our work. To simply focus on attitude and sanctification in work and leave off the mission-minded motives and foundations for work is short-sighted.
I agree. One of the main themes of my preaching incorporates that mission-minded emphasis. I just think there is more of that in our pulpits than Tony has apparently heard. But I hope I never minimize the attitdue and sanctification aspects either!
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Speaking of work…
“I want the people of America to be able to work less for the government and more for themselves. I want them to have the rewards of their own industry. This is the chief meaning of freedom. Until we can reestablish a condition under which the earnings of the people can be kept by the people, we are bound to suffer a very severe and distinct curtailment of our liberty.” ~ Calvin Coolidge (From the Prologue of “Things of the Spirit,” a biographical film on the personal and political life of Calvin Coolidge.)
When the worker does not get to control the rewards of their own industry, that’s called slavery.
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I recommend “Your Work Matters to God” by Doug Sherman and William Hendricks put out by Navpress but there are others.
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It has been said that contemporary Americans worship their work, work at their play, and play at their worship. How do we sort things out so that this confusion is undone? The Lutheran Dotrine of vocation is of great help here. Luther confessed that God has called us to faith in Christ Jesus and a life of love in service to the neighbor. Working through His “masks” of Word and Sacrament, the Lord calls us to faith. This is His service to us. The same Lord “hides” behind the masks of the neighbor to receive our loving service born of faith. (Add for Masks of God presentation by John Pless CTSFW.edu)
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I love the guy who said that he enjoys spending his leisure time trying out new ideas in his business
the enjoyment of work
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Joel (#21),
Hopefully some of our disagreement will be cleared up in my next post on this topic, because I think you are asking the right questions regarding the product of labor. I don’t think I’m generalizing unfairly, however — Piper, Graham, and Stanley are not odd in this area; there are scores of sermons and essays posted on the Internet by preachers with smaller congregations who say essentially the same thing.
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#22- If we’re all predestined anyhow, isn’t adding a mission-minded focus to our work the ultimate equivalent of digging ditches and filling them back in?
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“Search “work” at Charles Stanley’s In Touch Ministries and you’ll find lessons that focus on the Christian’s attitude and diligence, not the content of his work. The same is true at Billy Graham’s ministry.”
That is true because 1) it takes the priesthood of all believers to flesh out the truth of God’s word and 2)only a few themes are taught because the goal is to support the organization; we can’t have people thinking about too many other things
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Reg – Or maybe it’s true because there is an assumption that a Christian will seek out work that is productive & pleasing to God?
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“John Piper, who may well be — after Luther, Calvin, and the Almighty Himself — the most oft-cited writer among Reformed pastors, gives this advice to young people: “Devote yourself to [sanctification] with all your heart, and take whatever job you want.” As for those already in the workforce, he falls back on predestination to sanction occupational apathy: “You are where you are by divine assignment, even if you got there by fraud.””
But perhaps it is my spouse’s place, or true friend’s place to give this guidance/advice in my life, and not the place of a stranger!
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