Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Work Is More Than a Means to Evangelism
Work Is More Than a Means to Evangelism
Apr 20, 2025 2:30 PM

As already discussed, Matthew Lee Anderson’s recent Christianity Today cover story on “radical Christianity” has been making waves. This week at The High Calling, Marcus Goodyear offers a healthy critique of one of Anderson’s key subjects, David Platt, aligning quite closely with Anderson’s analysis about the ultimatechallenges such movements face when es to long-term cultural cultivation.

Focusing on Platt’s latest book, Follow Me, Goodyear notes that, despite Platt’s admirable efforts to get Christians “off their seats,” he often “emphasizes the mission so much, it overshadows all other teachings of the Bible.”

Pointing to John Stott’s book, Christian Mission in the Modern World, Goodyear argues that we mustn’t neglect the rest:

[Platt’s] kind of thinking can lead us to forget that God is “the Creator who in the beginning gave man a ‘cultural mandate’ to subdue and rule the earth, who has instituted governing authorities as his ‘ministers’ to order society and maintain justice.”

According to Stott, Christians must take the original cultural mandate in Genesis as seriously as the mission. Our approach to missions must view social justice and vocational good as more than a means to evangelism. We are called to share our faith. There is no question about that. But we are also called to more than words. We are called to work in the world today just as we were before the Fall.

Indeed, there is an unfortunate tendency in evangelicalism to prioritize short-term evangelism over long-term cultural engagement, whether in business, the arts, or even the family. Yet in addition to the negative impacts such an approach is bound to have on both our cultural impact and our evangelism, it all begins with a fundamental distortion of how we view our daily work in and of itself.

As Goodyear argues,Platt’s approach to the mission “does not seem to allow for the intrinsic value of work”:

God placed Adam in the garden in order to work and steward it. When the job was too difficult, God created Eve to help. From the beginning of God’s story, work is more than a means to evangelism. The first thing we see God do is to create and work. The mandment we hear God give is for us to create and work. In this way, work is intrinsic to God’s nature, and it is intrinsic to ours.

Work is not merely a means to evangelism. If we elevate evangelism above work, we recreate the sacred secular divide. Some Christian activities e a higher calling than others. Apart from a healthy view of work and the cultural mandate, the mission es a message we deliver. We elevate the message of the gospel above and beyond the actions of the gospel…

…If we recognize God in our words but not in our work, we are only seeing part of God’s nature. If we evangelize others without a sense of the intrinsic value of work, we may be sharing an plete gospel.

Read the entire review here.

For more on restoring a proper view of Christian cultural engagement, seeWisdom & Wonder: Common Grace in Science and Art.

For more on restoring a proper view of work and meaning, see Work: The Meaning of Your Life.

To join the On Call in munity, like us on Facebook or follow us on Twitter.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Audio: Jordan Ballor on the Morality of Using Natural Resources
Jordan Ballor Acton Institute Research Fellow and Executive Editor of the Journal of Markets & Morality Jordan J. Ballor was a guest on Austin Hill in the Morningin late January on the Faith Radio Network to discuss the morality of resource extraction and use. Should Christians support efforts to drill for more oil and the use of new techniques to draw more of these resources from the Earth, or should they push for a new approach to energy creation and...
North Korea: We Don’t Need ‘Flashy Lights’
A NASA image released in February 2014 shows a night view of the Korean Peninsula. Apart from a spot of light in Pyongyang, North Korea is mostly cloaked in darkness, with China (top left) and South Korea (bottom right) on either side. -Reuters North Korea finally decided ment on the most famous image of the nation. Almost exactly one year ago, NASA released several photos of the earth at night, showing many brightly lit nations and a shockingly dark North...
Now Available: ‘A Treatise on Money’ by Luis de Molina
CLP Academic has now releasedA Treatise on Money, a newly translated selection from Luis de Molina’s larger work,On Justice and Right (De iustitia et iure). The release is part of the growing series from Acton:Sources in Early Modern Economics, Ethics, and Law. Molina (1535–1600) was one of the most eminent theologians of the Jesuit order in the sixteenth century. Known widely for developing a theory of human freedom of action (and in turn, a new religious doctrine now known as...
Mike Rowe on the minimum wage: There’s no such thing as a ‘bad job’
In the latest additiontoMike Rowe’s growing catalogof pointed Facebook responses, the former Dirty Jobs host tackles a question on the minimum wage, answering a man named “Darrell Paul,” who asks: The federal minimum wage is $7.25 and hour. A lot of people think it should be raised to $10.10. Seattle now pays $15 an hour, and the The Freedom Socialist Party is demanding a $20 living wage for every working person. What do you think about the minimum wage? How...
What Happened to the Bill of Rights?
When the Founding Fathers were drafting the U.S. Constitution, they didn’t initially consider adding a Bill of Rights to protect citizens because it was deemed unnecessary. It was only afterthe Constitution’s supporters realized such a bill was essential to getting approved by the states that they proposed enumerating such rights in twelve amendments. (Ten amendments were ratified; two others, dealing with the number of representatives and with pensation of senators and representatives, were not.) The Bill of Rights was included...
Audio: Jordan Ballor on Honesty in Science
On February 7th, Christopher Booker of Britain’s The Telegraphcaused a stir with his column entitled “The fiddling with temperature data is the biggest science scandal ever.” Booker remarked: When future generations look back on the global-warming scare of the past 30 years, nothing will shock them more than the extent to which the official temperature records – on which the entire panic ultimately rested – were systematically “adjusted” to show the Earth as having warmed much more than the actual...
A Price is Signal Wrapped in an Incentive to be Coordinated by God
When Christians think of the majesty of God’s handiwork we tend to think of the visible aspects of nature. We agree with King David that, “The heavens declare the glory of God; the skies proclaim the work of his hands” (Psalm 19:1). But there are intricate and beautiful aspects of God’s creative geniusthat we don’t often think about—or don’t think about as being created by God. Take, for instance, the price system. As economist Alex Tabarrok says in the video...
Book Review: ‘Created for Greatness: The Power of Magnanimity’ by Alexandre Havard
By the end of January, most of us have given up on our New Year’s resolutions. These are goals we enthusiastically set during the silent nights of self-reflection that Christmas affords us. We contemplate our Savior’s magnificent and humble life in contrast with our own feeble and self-seeking, sinful existence. We intensely desire personal renewal to e holier and nobler persons; yet, alas, we lack the will to actualize our true human potential. Many blame the failure mit on laziness...
Book Giveaway: Win All 4 Primers on Faith, Work, and Economics!
ThroughChristian’s Library Press, the Acton Institute has publishedfour tradition-specific primers on faith, work, and economics, including Baptist, Wesleyan,Pentecostal,andReformed perspectives. Each offers a distinct contribution to the subject, and when taken together provides a rich and coherent framework forChristian stewardship. The books are part of Acton’s growingOikonomia Series. This week, Acton and CLP will be giving away plete sets of the series (that’s 4 books totalfor each winner!), including Chad Brand’s Flourishing Faith,David Wright’s How God Makes the World a Better...
How Christianity Gave Us the Modern World
“Christianity undergirded the development of Western liberalism (in the old, good sense of the word),” says Rich Lowry. In fact, without Christianity there would probably not be anything like what we conceive as true liberty: The indispensable role of Christianity in the creation of individual rights and ultimately of secularism itself is the subject of the revelatory new intellectual historyInventing the Individual by Larry Siedentop. Here’s hoping that President Obama gives it a quick skim before he next takes the...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved