Whatever
you do, work at it with all your heart, as working for the Lord, not for men,
since you know that you will receive an inheritance from the Lord as a reward.
It is the Lord Christ you are serving (Col 3:23-25).
I ready this article recently and i love to share "I sat
across the table from the well known seminary professor and former missionary
as he asked me a very direct question: “So, Os, tell me about this faith at
work movement.” “Well, there’s really nothing complicated about it. I believe
every person’s work can be viewed as a ministry if done with a motive to
glorify God based upon Colossians 3:23,” I responded.
“How can
you say that if you’re not sharing the gospel in that job? You would have to be
actively sharing your faith for it to be construed as ministry,” he argued.
“No,
that’s not true. The work itself is ministry because the word for ministry and
service come from the same Greek root word, diakonia. When you are serving
others even through your secular work and do it with a motive to glorify God,
that’s why it is ministry. In fact, the Bible says you’ll receive an
inheritance when you do,” I said.
We
continued bantering back and forth on the issue. I continued, “God created even
secular work to meet human needs. Man began to divide work into spiritual and
non-spiritual terms which introduced a form of dualism in the third and fourth
centuries. But God never secularized our work. He desires our work to be viewed
as worship.”
We
concluded our meeting in disagreement. However, a few months later I met my
friend at a booksellers convention. “Hey, you were right Os! I’ve done my study
and work really is ministry because it is service. This man went on to write a
book on the subject and said this; “Think about this. If you are filling
someone’s teeth, you are ministering to your patient. If you are playing in a
symphony orchestra, you are ministering to the audience. If you are flying an
airplane, you are ministering to the passengers. If you wait on tables, you are
ministering to the customers. All of that clearly fits under biblical
diakonia.”
It was
the first time I’d ever won a theological argument with a theologian!
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