Labor of Love

Every year, freshmen in an introductory English course are required to talk to someone in their chosen field of study. Because professors on campus are easy to access and readily available, I will invariably get a request from a student asking if they can interview me. These conversations are usually quite revealing because I get a sense of how much the students knows about their major based on the questions that they ask. The conversations are also interesting because it doesn’t take them long to discover that while my field of study is business management, my current job is focused on education. Therefore, they will usually ask what prompted the switch.

While I give them the factual account of how I ended up going from a profession I knew little about before college (management and marketing) to the one profession I was convinced I never wanted (education), I also tell them how the story is evidence of God’s grace in my life. I never wanted to be a teacher, yet God directed me to this path, and it turns out I have a proclivity for it. I used to get red in the face and butterflies in my stomach whenever I had to give a presentation; now standing up in front of people is part of my daily work experience. Long gone are the rosy cheeks and uneasy tummy, instead God has used my profession to provide numerous opportunities to help others and to tell them about Him. As I tell my students, not everyone gets to do a job that they love; I am grateful that God has given me the opportunity. 

However, regardless of whether we enjoy the tasks associated with our work or not, all labor that a Christian does should be done out of love. First and foremost, we should work out of love for our Savior who has provided us the means and the opportunity to do the work that is set before us. This is true regardless of whether we commute to an office each day or are a caretaker of our home; the love of Christ should compel us to diligently perform our tasks so that the excellence we bring to work displays to others the excellencies of Him who called us out of darkness and into His marvelous light (I Peter 2:9). 

Our work should also be motivated by love for others. Of course, the best way we can love others is by pointing them to Jesus. However, our vocation – whether it is keeping a company’s books, providing medical services, designing a building, caring for children, or any other honorable profession – provides an opportunity to serve others with patience and sacrifice. As He worked, Jesus was moved by compassion (Mt. 9:36), and so should we. We should see our jobs as an opportunity to be an ambassador for Christ; we should be an extension of His love to all those that He places in our path of service.

When I talk to my students, I tell them that my desire is that they will love their work; that they will find an occupation that allows them to use their talents and gifts in a way that brings them joy. But even more than that, my hope is that their labor will be motivated by love – first out of love for our Savior, and secondly out of love for those He created. Regardless of the title that has been given us or the responsibilities that we have been assigned, I wish the same for every other believer as well. 

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Relying on the Spirit of God at Work within Us

For the Christian, our fight against sin can be a wearisome one. There are times when we may grow discouraged by our ongoing indulgence of temptation and the frequency with which we allow unrighteousness to be displayed in our lives. The call to “be holy” as our Savior is holy (I Pet 1:15) can appear to be a goal that is impossible to reach. 

While it is true that we will never be perfectly holy this side of Heaven, looking towards our Savior is exactly what we should do as we strive in our sanctification. We may be tempted to think that the life of One who is fully divine cannot be a representative model for us. Yet in his book, The Man Christ Jesus, Bruce Ware reminds us that as One who was also fully human, Jesus lived His life in reliance on the Spirit of God at work within Him. This is the same manner in which His followers are called to live. Ware exhorts us thusly:  

This side of the empty tomb and Pentecost, we, too, may live lives marked by that same supernatural Spirit-wrought empowerment for obedience and faithfulness. The very resource of Holy Spirit empowerment granted to Jesus for his life of obedience and faithfulness to the Father is now granted to Jesus’s disciples as they carry forward the message of Christ, living lives of obedience to Christ, all in the power of the Spirit. [p. 38-39]

The Spirit that was at work in our Savior is at work in His followers today. What comfort and encouragement this is!

Ware continues: 

Although Jesus possessed fully his divine nature, and through his divine nature he had access to infinite divine wisdom and power, he accepted instead the role of living life in dependence upon what the Spirit would provide for him for the purpose of living life as one of us, as a man with all the limitations that such a life involves. Rather than drawing upon the infinite resource of his divine nature, he prayed for help and trusted both his Father and the Spirit to bring to him what he needed. He accepted our life as his own, and in this he showed amazing humility. Marvel at this humble Son, who, though fully God, accepted living life as a man, dependent upon the Spirit each day of his life. Marvel and then worship. [p. 44]

May we too live lives of dependence on the Spirit at work within us. May we faithfully ask Him for help and trust in our Father to give us what we need. May we indeed be amazed at the Son who left Heaven’s throne room to condescend and live among us. And may we worship the righteous Savior that He is.

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