Summary: Whenever and wherever we are doing God’s work, we are on holy ground. Wherever we find ourselves, we can make it holy by being God’s representative in that place.

I know this isn’t Labor Day weekend. But it’s too important a topic to skip. It’s big in the news these days, what with unemployment still above 6%. We all know people who are looking for work - and have been for more than 6 months.

But hey - work isn’t all it’s cracked up to be, right? How many of you fantasize about winning the lottery? What would you do? Pay off all your debts, remodel the house - or buy a new one - give money to family and friends, maybe endow the church or some charitable project you really care about. But then what? I’d travel. There are SO many places in the world I want to see, so many places I haven’t been ... But then what?

Could you spend the rest of your life just playing? Perhaps you think you can now, but stop for just a minute. Yes, it’s nice now and then to lie by the pool with a new book and a tall glass of icy lemonade, but could you face it for weeks on end? What do you do on your days off? Do you have a hobby? Do you garden, or sew, or cook, or take photographs, or - what do you do?

Guess what. We were made to work. We simply can’t be happy unless we’re making or doing or thinking something that matters, something that makes a difference, something that says “I am making a contribution.”

What IS the purpose of life? The Westminster Shorter Catechism tells us that our primary purpose is “to glorify God and to enjoy him forever.” And that is true. But how do we do that? It is by fulfilling the functions for which we were created. And we were created with jobs to do. Genesis tells us that God made us to have dominion over all the rest of the created world. That means the need to work is imprinted on the most basic level of our DNA. And even the secular world acknowledges this basic truth.

Psychologist Abraham Maslow put together a list of human needs which has become a classic. In order of their importance, they are: 1. Physiological - we absolutely must have food and sleep. 2. Safety - to be protected from everything from the weather to other people. 3rd on the list are social needs: for affection, and belonging. # 4 gets a lot of attention in our society: esteem. We need to find value in our selves, and we need to know that other people also see us as valuable. That comes at least partly - but not entirely - from a sense of achievement, of competence. But at the very top of the list, the flag on the mountain, is “self actualization.” That means DOING THINGS. If we are fed, safe, connected, confident, and productive, we are complete.

Now you may look at your own job and say to yourself, did God really make me for this? There are a lot of jobs that seem to grind people down rather than build them up. Part of this is just the result of living in a fallen world. The third chapter of Genesis tells us that instead of being joyful and fulfilling, work is going to be hard, frustrating, sometimes dangerous. “Cursed is the ground because of you,” says God to Adam, “in toil you shall eat of it all the days of your life; thorns and thistles it shall bring forth for you.” [Gen 3:17-19] What are the thorns and thistles in your field of work?

Back in the Middle Ages, people believed that being a priest or a nun was more “spiritual” than other kinds of work. There’s a story about England’s King Henry III, who, growing tired of court life and the pressures of being the king, applied to a monastery to be accepted for a life of contemplation. The religious superior said to him, “Your Majesty, do you understand that the pledge here is one of obedience? That will be hard because you have been a king.” Henry replied, “I understand. The rest of my life I will be obedient to you, as Christ leads you.” The abbot then told him, “Go back to your throne and serve faithfully in the place where God has placed you.”

The Reformation made that idea explicit. John Calvin, the father of Presbyterianism, said that “We know that men were created for the express purpose of being employed in labor of various kinds, and that no sacrifice is more pleasing to God than when every man applies diligently to his own calling, and endeavors to live in such a manner as to contribute to the general advantage.” [Commentary on a Harmony of the Evangelists 2:143] Paul put it somewhat differently in Ephesians 2:10, but the meaning is the same: “For we are what he has made us, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand to be our way of life.” In anther letter he added

"Whatever task you must do, work as if your soul depends on it, as for the Lord and not for humans." [Col3:23]

Now, it could very well be that you are in the wrong line of work Maybe you really should be looking elsewhere. But on the other hand, many people are confined to boring or backbreaking or underpaid work - just because that’s the way the world is right now. God doesn’t design injustice, or make mistakes. But people do. Employers may treat their workers unfairly, workers may make bad decisions. But one of the great things about being in God’s family is that even mistakes - ours and others’ - can be turned to God’s glory and our good.

What does it take to turn a job into a vocation? How can we make our workplace a field where God’s work is actually being done?

According to the Puritans, “all professions are spiritual to the Christian, not because of the nature of the work but because of the presence of God." "When a Christian – the temple of the Holy Spirit – walks into an office at IBM, IBM becomes a spiritual place.” That’s from a book by Tim Downs, Finding Common Ground. (Chicago: Moody Press, 1999)

He also asks some very important questions. You might want to make a note of them.

· What does it mean to both be a Christian and hold this job?

· How would I do my job differently if I were not a Christian?

· What biblical principles most apply to my daily responsibilities?

· How should my faith affect the way I relate to my co workers, superiors, or employees?

There’s a story about an American businessman in Switzerland who spent some time watching a Swiss clockmaker carving the case of an ornate cuckoo clock. He was astounded at his slow rate of progress. The businessman finally said, “My good man, you’ll never make much money that way.” “Sir,” the clockmaker replied, “I’m not making money, I’m making cuckoo clocks.”

Ideally, of course, that’s how each one of us sees our work - the paycheck is necessary, but the work is what really matters. The doctor says, “I’m not making money, I’m healing people.” The engineer says, “I’m not making money, I’m building a bridge.” What are you doing? What are you making? Are you making money, or sales, or widgets, or friends, or disciples? One of the greatest gifts in life is to be paid for doing work you like doing, and believe is worth doing. But even if what you are being paid to do is neither of those things, God isn't out of the picture. If you pay attention, you will find that God can use you right there to make a difference in your world in the name of Jesus Christ.

Every field has thorns - but it’s amazing how little they matter of you are doing what God designed you to do. The seamstress doesn’t notice the pinpricks, the artist rather likes the smell of paint, the grease on the mechanic’s hands comes off at the day's end, the chef ignores the inevitable cuts and burns, and the surgeon hardly notices the blood splatters on her scrubs. It’s just part of the package.

That’s why Jesus didn’t even notice that he hadn’t eaten, that long-ago day in Samaria, when his disciples came back with lunch to find Jesus high on his encounter with the woman at the well, ”The disciples were urging him, 'Rabbi, eat something.' But he said to them, 'I have food to eat that you do not know about.' So the disciples said to one another, 'Surely no one has brought him something to eat?' Jesus said to them, 'My food is to do the will of him who sent me and to complete his work.'" [Jn 4:31-34]

Whenever and wherever we are doing God’s work, we are on holy ground. Wherever we find ourselves, we can make it holy by being God’s representative in that place.

The French philosopher Voltaire - famously anti-clerical, but I’m not sure if he was an atheist or an agnostic - said toward the end of his life that it was best not to get involved with the world but to stay at home and “tend one’s garden.” Well, he’s right, in a way - but our garden is ALL of God’s creation. Just as our neighbor is whoever God has placed beside us who is in need, our garden is wherever God has placed us to be his agent. As the old saying goes, “bloom where you’re planted.”

But blooming isn’t all. After the flower is supposed to come the fruit. God has spent a lot of time and effort on you, watering, fertilizing, pruning - you really don’t want to let all that go to waste.

What seeds are waiting to sprout in the field God has given you?