Friday, March 22, 2024

The Blessing of Labor

 "If I am to live in the flesh, that means fruitful labor for me."

‭‭Philippians‬ ‭1‬:‭22‬ ‭ESV‬‬


Labor is something that’s become a dirty word for most of us in modern society. We view work, in any form, as drudgery. We view responsibility as something beneath us. And we want nothing more than to free ourselves from it. We want nothing more than to eliminate it from our lives.


We seek to do so as we gain wealth. As we gain the ability to let go of certain responsibilities, hiring others to do them for us, we take advantage of it. We may hire someone to mow the lawn. We may hire someone to clean our home. We may hire someone to shovel the snow. Or we may hire someone to watch our children.


We also hope and plan to do so, as we grow older and retire. We set money aside throughout our career, investing it, hoping that it sufficiently grows. And when we have enough, however we define that, we plan to stop working.


Our ambition is to have no responsibility whatsoever. Our goal is having the ability to do whatever we want whenever we want. We dream of a life where we are governed not by alarm clocks or schedules, but simply our own desires.


Labor, however, is a good thing. It’s a blessing. And, as we see in the passage above, it is fruitful.


In making this statement, Paul is talking about life and death. And, in doing so, he notes that departing to be with Christ is better by far, when compared to life in this world. But life, he says, means fruitful labor for him.


Life meant that he was able to serve the Lord. It meant that he was able to serve his neighbor. And Paul sought to do so, first and foremost, through the ministry of the gospel.


This, he noted, was necessary for them, his readers. They needed the labor, they needed the ministry, he had to offer. And, for that reason, he was convinced it was not yet his time to die.


Our labor may take a different form from that of Paul. Yet, the same truth remains. Life means fruitful labor for us.


For as long as the Lord provides us with life in this world, we are able to serve him. For as long as he provides us with life in this world, we are able to serve our neighbor. We are enabled by God, in this way, to be a blessing.


And this is something that should never be despised. It’s something from which we should never flee. It’s something of which we should never aspire to rid ourselves.


There will come a day, of course, when we may no longer be able to work as we once did. We may no longer be able to have a career. But even then, in some capacity, we are able to serve and to be a blessing.


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