If you read media reports, youâll discover most of them see work in a negative light.
Here are recent examples: Employee engagement is down. The perceived quality of products and services is falling. Both companies and consumers think customer service is difficult to deal with. And the American work ethic is significantly weaker than it was before COVID-19.
What all these articles are saying is that work is cursed. Our sinful state is one of total depravity, and though that doesnât change, the culture has changed. The contemporary worker has changed. So how does a Christian live in the world where the postpandemic work ethic reigns?
To answer this question and to work for the Lord in modern culture, we go to the unchangeable gospel of Jesus Christ.
1. Work in a manner worthy of the gospel of Christ.
On my way home, thereâs a billboard advertising a sporty convertible Mercedes and proclaiming, âExpect Excellence.â When I see that, I think, Yeah! I expect excellence from Mercedes. If Iâm going to make sacrifices and buy that car, Iâm going to expect excellence. Everyone understands that Mercedes will produce an excellent car.
If we can say that about a company created and run by humans, then we shouldnât be uncomfortable saying that God expects excellent work from us as Christians. Because weâve been purchased by Christâs blood, because we belong to him, we must live in a manner worthy of his gospel (Phil. 1:27).
We may object to this terminology because Scripture teaches us we arenât saved by our worth but by Godâs grace. God alone is worthy, and Christ came to save us from the guilt of sin that makes us unworthy.
In Philippians 1:27, the Greek axios means âbringing up the other beam of the scales, bringing into equilibrium, equivalent.â Sinclair Ferguson explains the apostle Paul is calling Christians to live a life that matches the gospel, thatâs balanced with the grace weâve received. Let your manner of life weigh the same as the gospel.
Jesus said, âIf anyone forces you to go one mile, go with him two milesâ (Matt. 5:41). Christian workers will not settle for the bare minimum at work; theyâll do their jobs excellently. Tim Keller said that a Christian pilot is excellent and exercises his faith at work by landing the plane so that it can take off again. A cook exercises his Christian faith by bringing the meat to the right temperature.
Christian workers will not settle for the bare minimum at work; theyâll do their jobs excellently.
In Colossians 3:22â23, Paul says to bondservants, âWhatever you do, work heartily, as for the Lord and not for men.â The author of Ecclesiastes says, âEnjoy your life. . . . Whatever your hand finds to do, do it with your mightâ (Eccl. 9:9â10).
It doesnât matter what work you doâif youâre a Christian, youâll seek to do all things in a worthy manner.
2. Teach the younger generation to work.
I often hear how hard it is to find trustworthy workers or good help. You can pursue work as God intended by teaching the younger generationâyour children, your grandchildren, your nephews and niecesâto work.
Proverbs 22:6 says, âTrain up a child in the way he should go; even when he is old he will not depart from it.â You train your child when you teach that child to work. Mary Beeke writes,
Recently, our daughter, who is married and the mother of three small children, read a blog on motherhood. A young mom questioned, âShould I unload the dishwasher while my daughter is awake? Or should I only play with her?â A prevailing attitude today is that the best parenting is to play, either educational play or fun play, with our children during all their waking hours. To require children to work at a young age would be cruel, the epitome of âchild laborâ!
Child labor it isnât, for the Lord assumes our children will work. Exodus 20:8â10 says, âRemember the Sabbath day, to keep it holy. Six days you shall labor, and do all your work, but the seventh day is a Sabbath to the LORD your God. On it you shall not do any work, you, or your son, or your daughterâ (emphasis added).
You can pursue work as God intended by teaching the younger generation to work.
In his book How Should I Live as a Single?, Joel Beeke encourages single men and women to get involved with their family and to help out with the nephews and nieces and extended family members. He says, âServe the family that God has given you.â
My children have more than they need; few things would bring me more joy than knowing that their grandparents, aunts, and uncles are helping me teach my children to work.
Work Worthy
Letâs model work for our family, for each other, and for the little ones as we labor in a manner worthy of the calling to which weâve been called.
We do this knowing that Jesus provided for us eternal life, our skills and abilities, and the breath in our lungs. Pursuing excellence at work, then, is simply a chance to say to God in a meaningful way, âThank you! Thank you for the salvation I have in Jesus Christ.â
News Source : https://www.thegospelcoalition.org/article/work-cursed-need-gospel/