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Is Your Work Sacred or Secular?

Alex Brubaker

Managing Director, Brubaker Consulting

Each one should use whatever gift he has received to serve others, faithfully administering God’s grace in its various forms. 1 Peter 4:10

As the son of life-long missionaries, I have always felt the tension between the sacred and the secular. I felt this tension most when I was about to graduate from an Ivy League university with highest honors in finance and engineering, and I readied myself to enter the marketplace.

Here I was, a follower of Jesus, feeling conflicted about using a first-rate education in the business world. What’s redeeming about a job in the marketplace if the ultimate objective is only an increased stock price or a better profit margin? I asked myself. Would Jesus become a management consultant or investment banker?

Over the years, I have come to realize that I was operating under a paradigm that segmented all earthly activities into two distinct categories—the sacred and the secular—and that these categories did not overlap. In this paradigm, working in the marketplace most certainly belonged to the latter category.

It was this same kind of thinking that elevated working in the ministry over working in the marketplace in my own mind (and in the minds of many Christians). Indeed, some believers dissolve the tension between the sacred and the secular by simply becoming pastors or missionaries. I almost did just that. But there is another way to address this tension.

God gives each of us different gifts, passions and callings, and for some of us, these gifts are in the realm of business. If our calling is to advance God’s kingdom through business, then that is our highest calling.

Whatever our calling from God—whether in the marketplace or in the Church—our calling is noble and sacred, and the old paradigms fall away. In fact, the sacred and the secular overlap and coexist. Personally, I have found a greater integration of my work (the so-called “secular”) and faith (the “sacred”) with the realization that I can minister in the marketplace through my business. All aspects of my life, including my work in business, are ministry

I have also come to realize that doing business can be a spiritual activity that has redeeming and sacred value, thereby resolving that age-old tension within Christianity. “Business brings glory to God,” says author and entrepreneur Ken Eldred, “when it blesses man through the creation of needed products, the delivery of outstanding services, and the increase of society’s living standard.”

We need not feel conflicted when we seek to serve God through our work. The marketplace is as legitimate a venue as any other for serving others to the glory of God, and doing so makes our very work a sacred act.

Point to Ponder

All work that honors God and fulfills His calling is sacred, including serving others through business.

Questions to Consider

1.   What are the redeeming aspects of your work? What makes your work sacred?

2.   How can your business activity, or your job, be considered a spiritual activity? Do you truly believe that business can be a spiritual activity that has redeeming value?

3.   Do you ever feel the tension between work and your ministry or your calling from God? Could it be that these things are bound together?


From Devotional Ventures, © 2007 by Corey Cleek Published by Regal Books, http://www.regalbooks.com. Used by permission. All rights reserved.

 

 


 

Most Recent User Comments
tnordg
1/4/2008 1:03 AM
I have the privilege of working for a supplier of diagnostic medical equipment. I really enjoy my work as an engineer, however if not for the Bible Study group I attend at work, I can’t imagine how I would have lasted for nearly thirty years. I share leadership of this group with three other men who love Christ with all their heart and they live it out through their work. Like most, I have experienced some hard things in life. Without the encouragement, support, and prayers of believers at work, I believe I may have stumbled. Think about it—most of us spend more time at work than with our family—much less, our church. I appreciate the accountability that comes with working alongside those I know are following Christ. We take seriously our calling to “consider how we may spur one another on toward love and good deeds” (Heb 11:24). And at work we have the opportunity to share the Gospel with those would not otherwise hear if not sent a living “letter from Christ” (2Cor 3:2-3).
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