Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
How flipping hamburgers glorifies God
How flipping hamburgers glorifies God
Dec 22, 2025 11:55 PM

When we think of the intersection of work and calling, many of us think immediately of our long-term career aspirations. Despite most of usbeginning our careers in some sort of menial labor, these are not the types of services or stations our culture deems significant or inspired.

Yet for the Christian, economic transformation begins where creator and producer meets neighbor, no matter the product or service. Our fundamental calling is to love our neighbor, and that begins the moment we get our hands dirty. God is glorified in all of our labor, and that includes the work of the fast-food cookor the late-night cleaning crew.

“Loving your neighbor is not just taking them soup when they’re sick,” says Pastor Tom Nelson, author of Gospel Shaped Work. “It’s making a good hamburger.”

As Nelson explains:

I not only love God, but I love my neighbor by making them a good hamburger and serving them. That is transformational at whatever level we do, but particularly in jobs that are menial.

One of the things I love to do when I’m traveling is I often go into a bathroom, and I make a habit of finding people who are cleaning bathrooms, like in an airport. And I just look them in the eye, and I’ll say “thank you for what you do.” Sometimes they’re really surprised, but I’ll look at them, and say, “your work really makes a difference.” And you would not believe the smile I often get on their face.Nobody ever tells them. They’re almost invisible.

And if they’re Christians, again, how important that would be: that they would see their work, even cleaning a bathroom, as something that loves their neighbor and worships God.

The nature of our work is much clearer and more certain than we think. Let’s not forget to remember the importance of all of our work, regardless of the public or cultural (non)recognition it enjoys.

As Lester DeKoster puts it: “Up-front types make news, but only workers create civilized life. The mosaic of culture, like all mosaics, derives its beauty from the contribution of each tiny bit.”

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
Playing Politics with Unemployed Veterans
In mentary this week, I reflect on the unemployment rate of many newly separated military veterans of our Armed Forces. The grim jobs outlook affects our reservists and National Guard forces too. As You Were, a book I reviewed on the PowerBlog in late 2009, touched on this topic quite a bit. My first job out of college was working on veterans issues for former Congressman Gene Taylor (D-Miss.) I was able to meet and get to bat veterans from...
Commentary: An Unconscionable Threat to Conscience
Dr. Donald P. Condit, the author of the Acton monograph A Prescription for Health Care Reform, responds to the Obama administration’s mandate that most employers and insurers must provide contraceptives, sterilization, and abortifacient drugs free of charge. For more on this issue, see Acton’s resource on “Christians and Health Care.” Sign up for the free, weekly Acton News & Commentary newsletter here. An Unconscionable Threat to Conscience By Donald P. Condit, M.D. In May 2009, President Obama delivered mencement address...
Obamacare vs the Catholic Bishops
I pleted a very short interview on Vatican Radio to discuss the current battle between the Obama administration and the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops. It didn’t permit me to say more than that the Obama administration is making a political mistake, so I’d like to say a bit more about the serious consequences that will likely result and how we ended up with this Church-State conundrum in the first place. As Dr. Donald Condit has already explained, the...
Caring For the Common Good: Why It’s Important To Integrate Faith, Work, and Economics
Today I’m at theCaring For the Common Good: Why It’s Important To Integrate Faith, Work, and Economics one-day symposium at Cedarville University. As I have opportunity, I will blog regarding the lectures and panel discussion. First to speak was Rudy Carrasco of Partners Worldwide on the topic of Caring For the Common Good. He spoke on three basic areas: do the poor have stewardship responsibilities, subsidiarity, and protest & invest. On the first, Rudy noted the poor have stewardship and...
Orthodox Bishops Assembly Silent on Moral Issues
Update, Feb. 2: the Assembly of Bishops issued a press release to “adamantly protest” the HHS mandate. On the Observer blog of the American Orthodox Institute, I look at the non-reaction of the Assembly of Canonical Orthodox Bishops of North and Central America to the recent Obama administration mandate that forces most employers and insurers to provide contraceptives, sterilization, and abortifacient drugs free of charge. More specifics here. The Assembly of Bishops, charged with the mon witness” for Orthodox Christians...
Audio: Dr. Donald Condit on the Trampling of Conscience Protections
Dr. Donald Condit is a regular contributor to Acton on matters relating to health care, most recently with mentary on the Obama administration’s mandate that most employers and insurers to provide contraceptives, sterilization, and abortifacient drugs free of charge. mentary was the starting point for an interview with Sheila Liaugminas on A Closer Look on Relevant Radio last Thursday. You can listen to the interview by using the audio player below: [audio: ...
Commentary: Despite Economic and Social Ills, Blacks Give Obama a Pass
In mentary this week, Acton Research Fellow Anthony Bradley looks at the phenomenon of a black president whose policies have “not led to significant progress for blacks.” Bradley is the author of the new book, Black and Tired: Essays on Race, Politics, Culture, and International Development. Sign up for the free, weekly Acton News & Commentary newsletter here. Despite Economic and Social Ills, Blacks Give Obama a Pass By Anthony Bradley With the approach of Black History Month we are...
The Dutch Resistance: Diet Eman at Aquinas College
At last summer’s Acton University conference, one of the evening key note lectures included Diet Eman, a Grand Rapids resident and one of the leaders of the World War II Dutch resistance. As a 20-year-old bank teller in the Netherlands in 1940, Diet dove into underground activities, doing anything she could to protect Jews from the deadly Nazi advance.She, along with a small minority of ordinary Dutch citizens, bravely put their lives on the line to preserve human life and...
Zelda and Theology: Gaming, Christianity and Philosophy
Earlier, I wrote a blog post about The Legend of Zelda and Theology by Jonathan L. Walls. At 173 pages, the book is a collection of 10 essays from various contributors. Its goal is twofold: to present Christianity to Zelda fans who might not know much about it and to give those familiar with Christianity insight into how Zelda relates to the religion. It explains intricacies of Zelda for those unfamiliar, and thankfully the descriptions are brief for those of...
Food Truck Follow-Up
Picking up on the theme of mentary and blog posts from a few weeks ago, I note (via Carpe Diem) that St. Paul, Minnesota will be ing “a new ing soon to the food truck scene in downtown St. Paul. Tot Boss will be the city’s first truck specializing in Tater Tots.” And to lend some more anecdotal evidence to the idea that mobile trucks can lay the groundwork for more permanent and developed enterprises down the road (so to...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved