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Discover how a Christian worldview shapes your view of work as a means to serve God and others. Learn how to find your unique purpose and combine passion with competence in your vocation journey.
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A Biblical Perspective on Work How a Christian Worldview Can Affect Your Thinking About Work
What are some adjectives you’d use to describe work, particularly vocational work? • Takeaways from today: • God created work, not as a way for us to find our significance, but as a way for us to serve Him and others. • Understanding your unique purpose also helps your work decisions.
Created by God & inherently good • Gen 2:3 – creation described as work (“God rested from His work”) • God created work for mankind before the Fall • Gen. 2:15 – placed in Garden to work it • Gen 3:17-19 – ground cursed; toil • Fall made it inevitable that work would sometimes be frustrating or seemingly meaningless/pointless
Created by God & inherently good • Eccl. 2:18-25, 3:12-15 – frustrating, but also a gift from God • All legitimate work equally valuable to God • Work has dignity because it’s something God does & because we do it as God’s representatives
Not to gain significance or identity • Gen. 11:2-4 – Tower of Babel – “that we can make a name for ourselves” • Jer. 9:23-24 – Don’t boast in our accomplishments, but only in the Lord • We derive true meaning & identify only by understanding who we are in Christ: • 2 Cor. 5:17-20 - new creature; ambassadors for Christ • 1 Peter 2:9 – royal priesthood
Not to gain significance or identity • Work not created to make you happy or to bring you personal fulfillment • You won’t have a meaningful life without work, but work can’t become the meaning or purpose of your life • We either get our name—our defining essence, security, worth, and uniqueness—from what God has done for us and in us (Rev. 2:17), or we make a name through what we can do for ourselves • Personal example
Key way we serve God and others • Mt. 22:36-40 – work one manifestation of obeying these commands; we demonstrate love in glorifying God and in serving others • Eph. 2:8-10 – created for good works • 1 Cor. 7:17 – lead the life, both inside and outside of the church, to which each of us has been called • Question to ask: how can I use my talents and abilities to best serve others via my vocation?
Key way we serve God and others • Part of serving others is our witness, both silent and audible, to Christ, including in how we do our work (more on that next week) • Work properly seen is relational, not task-focused • Personal story on grasping relationship importance
Table Exercise #1 • Discuss how you may have struggled with basing your identity on your job or role, or if you have not struggled with it, how have you avoided this struggle?
Purpose • Def: What God wants your life to add up to and why? • First and foremost, a journey of discovery and discernment • Needed to give us focus and direction to our lives; a filter for decisions • 3 types of purpose • Ultimate – largely a mystery to us, entirely in God’s hands • Universal – to glorify God as we grow in our faith and become involved in His program, especially through evangelism and discipleship • Unique – how you believe God wants you to fit into His universal purpose
Purpose • Components in discerning unique purpose • Look backwards to see how the ways God has worked in and through you should affect your next steps • How has God gifted you, and are you using those gifts? • What is the self your heart longs for? • What is God calling you to do, both in serving Him and in your vocation • Combining your competence (including how you’re “wired”) with your [unselfish] passion • Passion vs. Purpose (Crawford: “the passion of our life has to be for/on eternity, not on our own earthly lives or happiness.”) • Through work we come to understand our unique abilities and gifts
Table Exercise #2 • Do you have a unique purpose/life purpose statement? If so, what is it? If not, are you willing to discover yours?