Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Work and Eternity
Work and Eternity
Dec 11, 2025 6:03 AM

A distinctive of neo-Calvinism, that movement associated with a late-nineteenth century Dutch revival of Reformational Christianity in the Netherlands, is its focus in emphasis if not also in substance not only on individuals but also on institutions. As Richard Mouw puts it, “At the heart of the neo-Calvinist perspective on cultural multiformity is an insistence that the redemption plished by Christ is not only about the salvation of individuals—it is the reclaiming of the whole creation.”

This holistic perspective has led to a variety of speculations and opinions about the (dis)continuity between the redemptive-historical transitions from creation, fall, redemption, and consummation. In last week’s Acton Commentary, a section out of Abraham Kuyper’sCommon Gracecaptures one of Kuyper’s key insights that the “fruit mon grace” has significance not only for this world but for the next as well.

How so? For Kuyper, the most appropriateanalogies are organic. Against a direct material continuity between this world and the next, Kuyper writes,

No, if anything transfers from the one to the other situation, this can be nothing else than the hidden life germ, the foundational significance of things; and on the new earth something akin will need to emerge from that germ, but something of a higher order and with richer glory. We know what happens with dahlias, tulips, fern bulbs, and the like. First they had spread out, sprouted stems, and produced blossoms; but then came the cold of winter, and the farmer cut them off one by one at the root, removed the bulbs from the ground, and stored them. Once the longer days of springtime arrived, the same farmer brings those bulbs out again and entrusts them once more to the ground, bulb after bulb, and soon a plant appears that was even more beautiful than the one last year. Here, then, we see the return of the same life, a richer life than the previous one; for as the fruit of earlier life, the fern plant grows up more powerful and thick. We see the same thing with young fruit trees. Every winter the tree is stripped of its leaves and flowers, so that nothing but bare wood remains; but every spring the wood grows luxuriantly once again, and the onset of its fruit is more plentiful than last year.

Here Kuyper connects with the Pauline imagery surrounding resurrection, the leading example of the transition from this world to the next. As the apostle writes, “Christ has been raised from the dead, the firstfruits of those who have fallen asleep” (1 Co 15:20 ESV). Likewise Paul teaches, “So is it with the resurrection of the dead. What is sown is perishable; what is raised is imperishable” (1 Co 15:42 ESV).

This sensibility is, I think, what leads Dietrich Bonhoeffer to describe this present world as “the seedbed of eternity.” In that context Bonhoeffer also indicates the significance that such an understanding has for our activity in this world, especially our work. This world is invested with meaning, not as ultimate but ratheras penultimate. This means that this worldis neither worthless or of utmost meaning. It has, rightly understood, a real and meaningful significance. “The Christian’s field of activity is the world,” says Bonhoeffer, a world in which “Christians are to e engaged, are to work and be active, here that they are to do the will of God; and for that reason, Christians are not resigned pessimists, but are those who while admittedly not expecting much from the world are for that very reason already joyous and cheerful in the world.” The world has meaning, but is not itself the fullness of all things.

Elsewhere Lester DeKoster and Gerard Berghoef ruminate on the connection between work and eternity and emphasize the spiritual element of reality, akin to what Kuyper calls “the hidden life germ.” As DeKoster and Berghoef put it, “Work matures the worker because it requires ethical decision.” That is,

Merely to rise to one’s daily tasks requires an act of will, a decision to serve munity, however reluctantly, however unaware the worker may be that such is the case. Such willed acts of service not only make and sustain the fabric of civilization and culture, but also develop the soul. And, while the object of work is destined to perish, the soul formed by daily decision to do work carries over into eternity.

There’s lots more that could and should be said, of course, but I think this gets the basics right. Our work matters to God because our world matters to God. It isn’t everything it will be, but it has significance even if our temporal existence is not to be confused with our eternal destiny. Thus Christiansought to live and work, grieve and love not “as others do who have no hope” but rather as those who “wait for the Lord” (1 Thess 4:13; Ps 130:5 ESV).

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
The Mission of Business
Over the past decade the model of Business as Mission (BAM) has grown into a globally influential movement. As Christianity Today wrote in 2007, the phenomenon has many labels: “kingdom business,” panies,” “for-profit missions,” “marketplace missions,” and “Great panies,” to name a few. But as Swedish business consultant Mats Tunehag notes, Business as Mission is not a new discovery—it is a rediscovery of Biblical truths and practices. Many Evangelicals often put an emphasis on the Great Commission, but sometimes make...
Video: Michael Matheson Miller on PovertyCure
Michael Matheson Miller, Acton’s Director of Media, recently made an appearance on NPO Showcase, munity access show here in the Grand Rapids area, to discuss the PovertyCure initiative. The full 15 minute interview is available for viewing below: ...
What Methodism Teaches us about Poverty
We all know the promises government has made over the years about how certain programs and initiatives would eradicate poverty. But perhaps nothing rivals the Methodist movement in terms of effectively stamping out poverty in England. Charles Edward White and Bobby Butler’s essay “John Wesley’s Church Planting Movement: Discipleship that Transformed a Nation and Changed the World” is a splendid overview of Methodism’s impact on English society, especially as it relates to the middle class explosion. People of faith understand...
An Indian Perspective on Business as Mission
As I mentioned in my previous post, the Business as Mission (BAM) model has e a global phenomenon. As more Christians embrace BAM it is not only changing the lives of individual Christians but is helping to change, as Daniel Devadatta explains, the culture of business in India: When Christian business persons begin to sense their calling, when they embrace this and begin to envision their enterprise from this perspective, they will begin to see the significant role they play...
The Hunger Games: When power corrupts
Eric Teetsel, who runs the Values & Capitalism project over at AEI, invited me (among others) to pen some alternative endings to the Hunger Games trilogy. Eric is concerned that at the ending of the series, “Collins’s characters deteriorate into self-interested, cynical, vengeful creatures. The parallels of their behavior post-victory with the actions of their former dictators are made clear. Katniss even votes in support of another Hunger Games, this time featuring the children of the elites who have been...
There’s No Size or Space in Subsidiarity
When thinking and talking about principle of subsidiarity I’ve tended to resort to using metaphors of size and space (i.e.,nothing should be done by a higher orlargerorganization which can be done as well by a smalleror lower organization). But philosopher Brandon Watson explains why that is not really what subsidiarity is all about: The subsidiarity principle is often paired with the principle of solidarity, and there is a real connection between the two. Solidarity is the active sense of responsibility...
John Witherspoon and the Early American Understanding of Religious Liberty
With the concept of religious liberty being treated as an antiquated and obsolete notion, it’s refreshing to be reminded of the great, but oft-forgotten, Founding Father John Witherspoon. As John Willson writes, Witherspoon—who was asigner of the Declaration, member of Congress, and President of Princeton—had a profound understanding of how the government should relate to religion: Witherspoon had not the slightest doubt that there was truth, and that it can be apprehended in the gospel of Jesus Christ as expressed...
Business as Mission 2.0
Rudy Carrasaco, US Regional Director for Partners World Wide speaks today at the Acton Lecture Series about Business as Mission 2.0. Take a look at this short video of Rudy on Business as Mission and Transforming Communities that we did for PovertyCure. Rudy will be featured in the ing PovertyCure curriculum. Rudy will discuss the guiding principles of Business as Mission (BAM) which affirm human dignity and provide a foundation for businesses that seek to honor God. 2012 marks the...
How Using Party Balloons Today Could Affect Healthcare Costs Tomorrow
Because you had party balloons at your 7-year-old’s birthday party, you many not be able to get a MRI scan by the time your 70. At least that is the conclusion of some scientists who say the world supply of helium, which is essential in research and medicine, is being squandered because we are using the gas for party balloons: “It costs £30,000 ($47,568) a day to operate our neutron beams, but for three days we had no helium to...
Commentary: Human Nature: The Question behind the Culture Wars
Why do people so readily assume the worst about the religious motives of their fellow citizens? Why do we let partisanship take precedence over implementing policy solutions? In his new book, The Righteous Mind: Why Good People Are Divided by Politics and Religion, social psychologist Jonathan Haidt explores the origins of our divisions and attempts to show the way forward to mutual understanding. In his review of Haidt’s book, Anthony Bradley writes in this week’s Acton Commentary (published Mar. 21)...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved