Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Stop Trying to Inject Your Work With Meaning (Hint: It’s Already There)
Stop Trying to Inject Your Work With Meaning (Hint: It’s Already There)
Jan 11, 2025 11:07 PM

In a recent piece forthe Wall Street Journal, Rachel Feintzeig sets her sights on the latest trends in corporate “mission statements,” focusing on avariety of employer campaigns to “inject meaning into the daily grind, connecting profit-driven endeavors to grand consequences for mankind.”

Companies have long cited lofty mission statements as proof they have concerns beyond the bottom line, and in the past decade tech firms like Google Inc. attracted some of the economy’s brightest workers by inviting recruits e and change the world by writing lines of code or managing projects.

Now, nearly every product or service from motorcycles to Big Macs seems capable of transforming humanity, at least according to some corporations. The words “mission,” “higher purpose,” “change the world” or “changing the world” were mentioned on earnings calls, in investor meetings and industry conferences 3,243 times in 2014, up from 2,318 five years ago, according to a Factiva search.

The piece points to some interesting data and anecdotes, but it’s also littered with false choices and unhelpful vocabulary, driven largely (in fairness) bythe attitudes ofits subjects. From reading it,one would think that“changing the world” occurs only in grand theatrical acts, orthat having concernsor impacting culture“beyond the bottom line”requiresakind of forced extra-altruism. Simultaneously,anyone who is bold enough to be content as a janitor or banker is framed as being “fine with being a cog rather than a cathedral builder.” Did it ever occur that such satisfaction may indicate an attitude that’s preciselythe opposite?

Many of panies are just trying to attract new employees and look pretty, to be sure, but whether sincere or fake or semi-artificial, such attempts surely have potential to dosome good. Wedo indeed need regular reminders on these things.

But through a holistic perspective of work as service to neighbor and thus to God, it’s actually rather difficult to believe that motorcycles and Big Macs aren’t “capable of transforming humanity,” regardless of what the marketing execs spin about pany culture” from week to week. Every thing we put our hands to, every act of service we indulge, every mundane trade and exchange we make is transforming the economic and social order, whether or not we likeit or not.

And it’s here where the piece and its various subjects press a bit too far in the wrong direction. It’s one thing to locate and identify the true meaning of work: to see it, understand it, grab hold of it, and orient one’s heart, mind, and hands accordingly. It’s quite another to try to inject this meaning from the outside in—an effort prone to the forces of materialism, and thus, ultimately futile.

As Lester DeKoster explains in his book, Work: The Meaning of Your Life:

All of our efforts to endow our lives with meaning are apt e up short and disappointing. Why? Because all our passion to fill the meaning-vacuum through multiplied activity in the home, the church, munity, or whatever stumbles over that big block of every week’s time we have to spend on the seeming meaninglessness of the job. The spare-time charities cannot tip the scales. Redoubling our efforts only obscures the goal.

We are sometimes advised to try giving meaning to our work (instead of finding it there) by thinking of the job in religious terms such as calling or vocation. What seems at first like a helpful perspective, however, deals with work as if from the outside. We find ourselves still trying to endow our own work with meaning. We are trying to find the content in the label, without real success. The meaning we seek has to be in work itself.

And so it is!

The beautiful paradox of the Christian life is that even when we find ourselves in “cog-like” work environments, God has oriented our hands toward both material provision and blessing as well as transcendent purpose and beauty — the stuff of “cathedrals” what-have-you. “Happily, a genuine cog is a round peg in a round hole, fitted precisely to being what, at that point, the mosaic of culture requires,” DeKoster writes elsewhere. “There alone resides our freedom to enjoy civilized life.”

As we continue to be bombarded by various forms of “meaning marketing” and the sloganeering of forward-thinking executives, let’s indulge what turns out to be true, but be careful to not inject our own version of “meaning” where the authentic purpose already exists.

God put it there for a reason.

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
Superheroes and subsidiarity
On the heels of a record-smashing opening weekend for Avengers: Endgame, it seems appropriate to broach the subject of superheroes and subsidiarity, and specifically an intriguing lesson about subsidiarity in the Marvel Cinematic Universe. (Sorry, this post will not be about the would-be superhero ‘Subsidiarity Man.’) In deference to those who weren’t among the people who contributed to the $1.2 billion opening, I’ll wait to post a bit more about Avengers: Endgame and specifically how it relates to the development...
David Bentley Hart’s sophomoric defense of socialism
“Whatever you think of the socialism discussion,” says economist Tyler Cowen, “should a Christian have and indeed display so much contempt for other human beings?” Cowen is referring, of course, to the latest sneering diatribe in the New York Times by theologian David Bentley Hart. Cowen isn’t himself a Christian, but even many non-believers are shocked by Hart’s tone. I suspect that’s merely because they are unfamiliar with his broader body of work. If you know Hart’s name it’s likely...
Video: Mustafa Akyol on the prospects for liberty in the Islamic world
The 2019 Acton Lecture Series continued on April 25th in the Mark Murray Auditorium at the Acton Building, where we ed Mustafa Akyol, Senior Fellow at the Cato Institute and a regular lecturer at Acton University to share his thoughts on the prospects for liberty in the Islamic world. Akyol discusses some of the serious social and political challenges that many Islamic nations face, and shares some ideas on how human rights and the idea of individual liberty might be...
Student debt and moral hazard: To forgive or not to forgive?
During primary elections in the United States, it’s hardly unusual for those seeking their party’s nomination to make outlandish promises that aren’t likely to be kept. Thus we saw Senator Elizabeth Warren recently outlined her plan to abolish student debt, and pay for it by levying a tax on the super-rich (however that is defined). The cost of all this? Senator Warren says about 1.25 trillion (US). She also wants to make tuition-free at public colleges and universities. All es...
What did Emmanuel Macron offer the yellow vest protesters?
After yellow vest protests raged in the streets of Paris for 23 consecutive weeks, French President Emmanuel Macron has responded with a package of tax cuts and decentralizing political reforms. Macron unveiled the proposals at the Elysée presidential palace in the first domestic press conference of since he took office. The gilet jaunesprotests were named for the fluorescent yellow vests French motorists must wear when stopped at roadside; The New Republic likened the vests to “the armor of light” mentioned...
Moral hazard at the root of our student debt crisis
Student debt in the United States is currently over $1.5 trillion. Samuel Gregg has recently criticized Sen. Elizabeth Warren’s (D-MA) plan for student debt forgiveness as an answer to this crisis for ignoring the dangers of moral hazard. This post is a follow-up on that one. In short, as Gregg notes, quoting his book For God and Profit, moral hazard is defined by circumstances, policies and institutions that encourage individuals and businesses to take on excessive risk, most notably with...
For pro-life poverty fighters, political objectives and policies are different things
If you’re a pro-life conservative Christian you’ll eventually hear someone on the left assert that you can’t be consistently pro-life if you don’t support government policies to reduce poverty. If we truly cared about life in and out of the womb, they say, you’d support government intervention not only to ban abortion but to make abortion unnecessary. They are right to call us to be consistent. But they are wrong to assume consistency requires supporting their preferred government interventions. As...
Unitarian leftist: Socialism is not ethically superior to capitalism
Socialism has made a resurgence in this generation, not least because of itsdeceptive moral appeal. Secular Millennials join liberal priests, pastors, and rabbis in saying that profitscorrupt, unequal es are immoral – and perhaps even Jesus would have been a socialist.Yet numerous people, secular and faithful, have weighed collectivism in the balance and found it wanting. One of the people who found socialism ethically inferior to capitalism came from an unlikely source: the Unitarian Church. His verdict? Socialism “is the...
The ‘success sequence’ is not so simple
There are some steps a person can take to have a good chance at finding happiness and avoiding poverty in life, notes Brent Orrell, but despite what some researchers say, the truth is a little plicated than a simple sequence. ...
Protectionism keeps making Americans poorer
“President Trump’s decision to impose tariffs on imported washing machines has had an odd effect,” notes Jim Tankersley in the New York Times. “It raised prices on washing machines, as expected, but also drove up the cost of clothes dryers, which rose by $92 last year. Tankersley is referring to a new report by a team of economists at the University of Chicago and the Federal Reserve Board that studied the effects of Trump’s 2018 tariffs on imported washing machines....
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved