"Usually a person
should keep on with the work he was doing when God called him" - (I Cor. 7: 20
TLB).
We've all heard stories of men or women in the workplace that left their jobs
for the "ministry." Certainly God does call people into vocational ministry.
However, many times this move is more rooted in dissatisfaction with a career
combined with a spiritual renewal or first time commitment to the Lord. The idea
of a "higher call" can also appeal to our sense of a greater and nobler destiny.
We have incorrectly elevated the roll of the Christian worker that serves
within "the church" or a traditional "ministry" role to be more holy and
committed than the person who is serving in a secular environment. Yet the call
to the secular workplace is as important as any other calling. God has to have
His people in every sphere of life to meet the needs of His creation. Also, many
would never come to know Him because they would be separated from society.
I learned this lesson personally when I sought to go into "full-time" service
as a pastor in my late twenties, only to have God thrust me back into the
workplace unwillingly. This turned out to be the best thing He could have done
for me, because it was never His will for me to be a pastor. He knew I was more
suited for the workplace.
We are all in missions. Some are called to foreign lands. Some are called to
the jungles of the workplace. Wherever you are called, serve the Lord in that
place. Let Him demonstrate His power through your life so that others might
experience Him through you today. View your vocation as means to worship Him.
Paul said it right; "In most cases we're going to remain in the place where
He first called us."
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