Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Wounding Work: Creative Service as Cross Bearing
Wounding Work: Creative Service as Cross Bearing
Mar 31, 2025 10:19 AM

In recent years, we’ve seen a renewed focus on the deeper value, meaning, and significance of our daily work, particularly across the realm of evangelicalism. Yet as easy as it may be for some to alter old attitudes and begin appreciating the gift of creative service, it can be extremely difficult for others —and often for good reason.

Indeed, until the last few centuries, the bulk of humanity was confined to activities that, while often fruitful, meaningful, and God-glorifying in their basic aim and end, did not leverage individual “giftings” in ways we would deem “fulfilling” or “dignifying” today.

Our economic situation has surely improved in the years since, with vocational opportunities and overall prosperity continuing to expand and improve in profound and unexpected ways. But many still find themselves in positions or careers that are difficult to endure, from the anxieties of a Wall Street executive to those of an underpaid farm hand.

Each of us is going to encounter our own unique challenges, driven by and toward our own particular calling. Although we ought to try our best to improve the alignment of such service in a fallen world, the persistent need for hard and rough work is bound to remain as long as it remains a fallen world.

Thus, in our elevating of the meaning, dignity, and transcendent purpose of all work, those laboring in situations of unavoidable pain, difficulty, and frustration deserve careful attention, encouragement, and support.

In Work: The Meaning of Your Life, Lester DeKoster offers such encouragement, which can serve as a reminder to us all, recognizing that although all work has meaning, for many it is a “daily wounding experience.” As Studs Terkel once wrote: “To survive the day is triumph enough for the walking wounded among us.”

“Work can wound,” DeKoster continues, and when it does, it may or may not be for just a short season. We are each called to a particular form and extent of service, and while we seem to understand the increased demands placed upon missionaries and martyrs, we should recognize that those in the workplace —whether in field, factory, or office tower—are often called to similar lengths of toil and sacrifice.

As DeKoster explains, when Jesus says to “take up your cross” and “lose your life to find it,” the work of our hands is not exempt:

As the Lord God surveys his world, what a host of rugged heroes and heroines of labor he must behold! Those who rise with the sun, lifelong, to jobs that demand endless self-sacrifice, and get in return but little reward in pay and still less in recognition. Those who see no sunshine all the day long, in the caverns of the earth or the noisome dungeons of heavy industry. And those—no less heroic—who find their substantial salary and bonuses but small pense for the burdens, and the envy, their “success” involves. Those who must day by day drive weary bodies and spent minds to one more effort. Those who wrestle with bureaucracy to keep businesses solvent long after patience and pleasure are dead. Some who exercise initiative without appreciation, but persevere well beyond the need for personal monetary reward. Mothers whose lives are poured into their families; fathers whose bodies are sacrificed that their wives and children might live. God sees migrant families struggling hopelessly from dawn to dusk; peasants who grub like slaves without hope; service employees called any time for emergencies, surrendering their family holidays or busy through the dark of night.

“Lose your life …,” is Jesus asking us? He is talking about the martyrdoms of labor too.

Job heroism has no class distinctions, only differing forms. There are frontiers all over our workaday world requiring courage and perseverance as intrepid as ever conquered any geographical frontiers. Frontiers met and bested every day, in the kitchen, in the bs of industry, in the glare of the front office, in the high level visibility of the rich and the powerful.

Work can be cross bearing, self-denying, and life-sacrificing; because work is following the Lord in ways of service, be that in ways hidden to all but God alone or at an envied occupation demanding sacrifices only the doer can know.

Amidst our newfound prosperity, fort, and leisure, let us remember that the fundamental call of the Gospel is service to others, and thus to God. “Christianity is not a detour around life’s problems,” DeKoster writes,” it leads us along the narrow way of shouldering our cross and ing ‘sheep’ in the process.”

That applies to missions, ministry, family, and education, and it surely applies to the world of work.

[product sku=”1440″]

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
Haiti and Solidarity
Published today on National Review Online: When I first heard the news from Haiti and watched the horrible stories on television, I had the same impulse I imagine millions around the world experienced: I found myself thinking of catching the next plane to Port-au-Prince to help in whatever way I could. What was the basis of this impulse? It is our moral intuition, sometimes called the principle of solidarity. This is the recognition of ourselves in the other. We feel...
Haitian Suffering and American Compassion
The devastation in Haiti is heartbreaking. For most of us, it is far too easy to be distracted from the tremendous need right now in Haiti because of our own daily circumstances. In many ways I reacted similarly to Jordan Ballor when he confessed he initially thought reports of the earthquake had to be exaggerated. I say that because I was living in Cairo, Egypt when they had a 5.8 earthquake in 1992. The earthquake caused destruction to some buildings...
Family Economics
It should be obvious that developments within a social institution as fundamental as marriage will have an economic impact. Sorting out cause and effect in such cases is no easy matter, however; the temptation is to draw easy and simplistic connections. A suitably sophisticated es from Fr. John Flynn at Zenit. Flynn reports on a study by the National Marriage Project. Lots of interesting tidbits here, not all of them exclusively related to family issues. Among them: 75% of job...
Desperate Times: Haiti Six Days Later
The Big Picture: Haiti Six Days Later. ...
How to Help Haiti
I have to admit that my first few reactions to the news of an earthquake in the Caribbean weren’t especially charitable. I thought first that the scale of the reports had to be exaggerated, that things couldn’t be as bad as the media was breathlessly reporting. Then I wondered how long it would take for the environmental movement to make use of the disaster to advance their agenda. Neither of these reactions are particularly noble on my part, obviously. Blame...
Celebrate Martin Luther King Day With The Birth of Freedom Film
The Birth of Freedom opens and closes with Martin Luther King, Jr.’s iconic “I Have a Dream” speech. King appealed to Americans to live out the true meaning of this nation’s creed that all men are created equal. The documentary sets that appeal within the broader context of the Christian West’s slow but ultimately triumphant march to freedom. Send it to a friend or loved one. Let freedom ring. ...
WFR Relief for Haiti
If you are looking for a Christian relief organization working in Haiti, let me mend WFR Relief, located in Louisiana. Led by Don Yelton, WFR has a solid track record for passion in times of disaster, having “provided humanitarian aid and disaster relief in 50 countries since 1981.” They distinguished themselves, for instance, in the wake of Hurricane Katrina. An article about Yelton and WFR is here. WFR’s donation page is here. ...
Rethinking Social Justice
Some years ago, I was engaged in a conversation at a municators convention with a liberal/progressive activist who was having trouble understanding how the market could actually be a force for good. Finally, he defaulted to the question that — to him at least — would settle the matter. “So,” he asked, “does the Acton Institute work for social justice?” My response, of course, was, “You bet we do.” The problem with this brief exchange was that we obviously didn’t...
Recommended: Belloc’s Puzzling Manifesto
Hilaire BellocOver the past five years, many conservatives and religiously-inclined people have been turning to the works of Hilaire Belloc and G.K. Chesterton as part of an effort to rethink the nature of economic life. Both these figures wrote about many other things than economics – and some would say that, for all their insights as Christian apologists, economics was never their strong point. Indeed many of their economic writings were heavily criticized when they were initially published in Britain...
Haiti: Two Days Later
The Big Picture blog has some remarkable images from the last 48 hours in Haiti (warning: there are disturbing images among the collections). In the wake of the disaster, many are looking back at Haiti’s history to see what has kept this nation in generations of economic despair. As the AP reports: Two years ago, President Rene Preval implored the world mit to long-term solutions for his nation, saying a “paradigm of charity” would not end cycles of poverty and...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved