Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
For nature and neighbor: A Christian vision of work and the economy
For nature and neighbor: A Christian vision of work and the economy
Feb 11, 2026 7:00 PM

We are routinely told that work is just a tool for our survival – that if purpose is to be found, it’s in personal provision and personal success. Thankfully, the Christian vision is far richer than this.

Read More…

Abounding in freedom and plenty, Americans continue to grapple peting forms of workism and careerism, struggling to find meaning and identity in an increasingly secular age.

In response, many Christians have rightly taken a renewed interest in vocation and calling, reflecting on God’s original design for economic life. Our work hasplenty of meaning, but without the right moral foundation and transcendent focus, our individual quests for purpose can quickly devolve into a baseidolatry of the self.

So what does a Christian approach to work and economics actually look like?

In a recent interview with WORLD Magazine, David Bahnsen, the founder and managing partner of The Bahnsen Group, offers a refreshingly concise and incisive response.

On a Christian theology of work:

“What is unique to the Christian worldview when we think about work is that it was instituted in creation, so there is a theology of work that is not necessarily shared in the rest of the world. The bulk of the world sees work as a necessary evil. They see work as something one has to do in order to make a living, and therefore, the contest so to speak ends up being finding the work you’re going to enjoy the most and finding the work that is going to pay you the most.

“But it always is disconnected from that fundamental foundation that, in fact, we were created to work, and that our God, being a worker and making us in his image, asked us to be a co-creator with him. He gave us a dignity that mirrors the image that he has, and us as co-image-bearers are now responsible to steward the earth, to have dominion over the Earth, and that, in fact, work was created to be a great blessing in our lives and is existential to our mission here on Earth.”

On a Christian view of economics:

“What is uniquely Christian is a view of economics that sees it as the playing out of human action – the way in which humans, who were made by God with dignity in pursuit of human flourishing, are allocating scarce resources, how we are freely interacting with each other, cultivating the creation that God gave us.

“I just said four or five things there that when stripped from a Christian understanding mean something very different. So we should not be surprised when, at varying degrees of collectivism, of intervention, of mand-and-control view of the economy – whether it’s full-blown totalitarian Marxism in one extreme, or socialism, or even a Keyensian understanding – all of these different views of economics fundamentally lack that ponent that economics is humans acting in God’s creation. It is a very specific yet crucial aspect of how we view economics.”

From the very beginning, we were made to cultivate creation — to serve and cooperate with nature and neighbor. Wherever we are, and whatever we put our hands to, we proceed from a stewardship mandate that honors and dignifies the most mundane features of economic life. If this is where we begin our pursuit of meaning, flourishing is sure to follow.

Unfortunately, as Bahnsen observes, Christians often neglect this reality, opting instead for a shrugging embrace of the mon cultural assumptions.

In America, for example, we are routinely told that work is just a tool for our survival — that if purpose is to be found, it’s in personal provision, personal success, “doing what we love and loving what we do,” “living the dream,” or “pursuing our passion.” Work is about a means to a retirement or vacation time. It’s about a path to greater consumption: to getting stuff, loving stuff, and keeping stuff. It’s about self-protection and (if you’re lucky) self indulgence.

Christians often adopt or co-opt this same perspective, viewing work as just another tool for getting what we want. It’s for putting bread on our tables and achieving our priorities, whether it be funding evangelism or converting people in the workplace. Likewise, we, too, often see “vocation” and “calling” as mechanisms for justifying our preferred paths to “self-actualization.” Far too often, we work as the world works, adding the spiritual frosting of “God told me so.”

Thankfully, as Bahnsen demonstrates, the Christian vision is far richer than this.

When we begin our story in the garden, we see that work is about far more than satisfying our own wants and needs. It’s a mode of creation bent toward blessing others.

As theologian Lester DeKoster puts it, work is, first and foremost,service to others, and thus to God— or service to God, and thus to others. From the Wall Street banker to the garbage man to the schoolteacher to the doctor to the microchip engineer to the software developer to the father and mother, all of our work is about service to others.

When this es our paradigm, calling is no longer about “following our passion” or charting a path for self-actualization, though that may be a byproduct. It’s about obedience to God. Work and career are no longer about personal provision, though that will be a likely result. They are about providing forothers. Economic action is no longer about protecting our turf or sitting still in a fortably biding our time until retirement. It’s about creativity and inclusion, collaboration petitive development.

“Work restores the broken family of humankind,” DeKoster writes. “Through work that serves others, we also serve God, and he in exchange weaves the work of others into a culture that makes our work easier and more rewarding.”

From here, and only from here, can we properly grapple with and fully steward the freedom and prosperity that now surrounds us.

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
For God and For Profit: Do Money-Makers Have Religious Liberty?
“Is there a religious way to pump gas, sell groceries, or advertise for a craft store?” In a new paper, “God and the Profits: Is There Religious Liberty for Money-Makers?,” Mark Rienzi asks the question.(HT) Rienzi, an assistant professor at the Columbus School of Law at The Catholic University of America, writes in direct response to the federal government’s HHS contraception mandate, focusing on the religious liberty challenges faced by panies. As Rienzi argues, imposing such penalties requires “singling out...
Is Homeschooling a Universal Human Right?
Last month I wrote about the Romeike family, a German family of homeschoolers that was given the choice to abandon their religious convictions or lose custody of their children. Although the family is seeking asylum in the U.S., President Obama’s Justice Department has argued that the family should be denied refugee status based on their contention that governments may legitimately use its authority to force parents to send their kids to government-sanctioned schools. Nick Gillespie of Reason.tv talked to Mike...
At the Vatican Conclave: The Lull before the Storm
ROME — For all the ‘Vaticanisti’ (journalists specializing in the Vatican) sitting around Rome and interviewing one another for the last several weeks, the wholesale consumption of high blood pressure medication took a precipitous drop on the announcement Friday afternoon that the Conclave to elect the new pope would occur on Tuesday, March 12, one day later than I had predicted several weeks ago. Now is the lull before the storm. A Mass praying for the election of the pope...
Vatican Smoke Signals
Here’s a curious tidbit regarding the fumata, the white or black smoke that will rise from the Sistine Chapel’’s chimney signaling whether a pope has been elected or not. “It is sometimes hard to distinguish the actual color of the smoke, such as in 2005”. Back then, I knew for sure there was a successful vote for pope when I saw the fumata in the middle of the afternoon session, even though it was difficult to tell if it was...
Who Will Be Pope #266?
Michael Severance, operations manager of Acton’s Rome office, is asking the question on everyone’s mind, “Who will be pope #266?” In The Catholic World Report, Severance makes note of the “amateur assessments” first: By now we have heard every hypothesis from scores of budget-pinching and rookie mass media stumbling on Piazza San Pietro’s uneven cobblestones. They multitask as correspondent-producer-fixers and are armed with the latest generation of smartphones, tablets, and other species of espresso-stained electronic gadgets that replace expensive backroom...
As You Sow Shuts Up Climate-Change Debate
It es to light over matters of disagreement that one side attempts to shut down the debate by emulating Ring Lardner’s father in The Young Immigrants: “’Shut up,’ he explained.” Of course, this isn’t at all a real explanation, but it sure does slam the door on any further discussion. This disingenuous tactic is witnessed again and again in the climate-change debate. Most notably it appears in the tactics of those who believe the science is settled, a scientific consensus...
Guns and Ammo as a Taxable ‘Sin’
Need to justify a new sin tax or raise an existing one?Adam J. Hoffer,William F. Shughart II, andMichael D. Thomasrecently explained in U.S. News and World Report how it’s done: Claim that consuming some good or engaging in some activity contributes to ill health or harms the environment. Argue that “experts” know what choices consumers should make better than the consumers themselves know. Finally, don’t forget to select items for taxation that only a minority of the population buys, but...
Audio: Kishore Jayabalan and Al Kresta Discuss Papal Candidates
Late last week, director of the Acton Institute’s Rome office spoke on Ave Maria’s Al Kresta in the Afternoon. Since the conclave to elect a new pope is set to start on Tues. March 12, Jayabalan and Al Kresta discuss the potential candidates for pope and the mood in Rome. Jayabalan lists some of the qualifications the new pope should possess then suggests Cardinals from around the world who possess the best experience and skills. Some of the Cardinals that...
A Guide to the Conclave
The conclave to elect the new pope is scheduled to begin tomorrow afternoon after the public Missa pro Eligendo Pontifice (Mass for the Election of the Roman Pontiff) which is scheduled at 10am Rome time. It was at this mass in 2005 after the death of John Paul II that the then Cardinal Ratizinger famously spoke of the “dictatorship of relativism.” At 4:30 pm Rome time, the cardinals wearing full choir dress will enter the Sistine Chapel singing the hymn...
Chuck Colson, Compassion, and Criminals
As Joe noted last week, over at Think Christian, H. David Schuringa highlights the primacy of the church’s ministry to prisoners and their families. He points to efforts both great and small: Over the last 20 years, prison ministry has finally gotten back on the church’s agenda. There are not only large, national ministries like Bill Glass Champions for Life, Kairos, Prison Fellowship and Crossroad Bible Institute, all dedicated to preparing inmates for reentry, but also thousands of smaller groups...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved