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FAITH AND WORK: Connecting Sunday to Monday

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FAITH AND WORK BOOK REVIEW:

Work Matters: Connecting Sunday Worship to Monday Work by Tom Nelson. Crossway. 226 pages. 2011
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Tom Nelson is the senior pastor of Christ Community Church in Kansas City. He is also the President of Made to Flourish, a respected network of pastors integrating faith and work. This is one of the most helpful books that I have read on the subject of integrating our faith and work. The first section of the book looks at our work through a biblical lens. The second section focuses on how God shapes our lives in and through our work.
The author tells us that he realized that he had failed to grasp that a primary stewardship of his pastoral work was to assist and equip those in his church to better connect the professions of their Sunday faith with the practices of their Monday work. Although many see work as a necessary evil, and a result of the fall, the author tells us that being made in God’s image, we have been designed to work, to be fellow workers with God. To be an image-bearer is to be a worker, and in our work, we are to show off God’s excellence, creativity, and glory to the world. We work because we bear the image of One who works. Because God himself is a worker, and because we are his image-bearers, we were designed to reflect who God is in, though, and by our work.
In Genesis 1 and 2 we are presented with a delightful picture of work as God originally designed it to be. The Bible clearly tells us that while work is not a result of the fall, work itself was profoundly impacted. In a myriad of ways, we are painfully reminded each and every day that we live and work in a fallen and corrupted world, as daily we are confronted by a sobering reality that our work, the workers we work with, and the workplaces in which we work are not as God originally designed them.
Sadly, many Christians live their entire lives in the workplace under the distortion that their work is not as important and God honoring as the work of a pastor or missionary.  But the author tells us that in reality, there is no more sacred space than the workplace where God has called you to serve him as you serve the common good.
There are distortions in how we approach our work. Rather than worship God through our work, we can easily and subtly begin to worship our work. Work can become an idol in our lives. One of the ways we make work an idol is workaholism. On the other hand, instead of making work an idol, we can erroneously view our work as not a big deal, and thus become idle in our work. When work is distorted, we easily make leisure an idol and become a slothful person. In addition, the common notion of a long, leisurely, and self-indulgent retirement (playing golf every day and travelling all the time), is not something Scripture endorses, and in many ways, it reflects the distortion of slothfulness.
The author tells us how important our work actually is. We must not compartmentalize our work and our worship, but rather we must learn to see our work as an act of worship. One of the ways that we are salt and light and act as redemptive agents in this broken world is to live out a faithful presence in the workplace. One of the primary ways we tangibly love our neighbors is to do excellent, God-honoring work in our various vocations. The author tells us that if we will begin to see our workplace as our primary place of discipleship, it will be truly life changing. We will do good work. We will grow spiritually, and we will have a significant influence in the world.
He discusses the concept of vocation, indicating that the word simply means “calling.” Properly understood, Christian vocation is centered in a sovereign God who calls us to embrace the gospel of Jesus Christ and to follow him in the power of the Holy Spirit as his disciples. In and through our vocations we have the opportunity to extend common grace to others, and in doing so we foster the common good. He tells us that our vocational calling is not only a gift from God but also equips and supernaturally gifts us for work.
He addresses challenges in our work, indicating that one of the greatest challenges we face every day in our workplaces is living a life of personal integrity. He tells us that our personal integrity is the most important asset we bring to our workplace. If our personal integrity is compromised at work, our life is inevitably comprised. The pressure to compromise our core beliefs and ethical values as Christians is a regular temptation in many workplaces today.
This is a very helpful book, and would serve as an excellent introduction for those who are interested in the value of our work and how to integrate our work with our faith.
Below are ten of my favorite quotes from the book:


Faith and Work Book Club – Won’t you read along with us?
Work and Worship: Reconnecting Our Labor and Liturgy by Matthew Kaemingk and Cory B. Willson
Drawing on years of research, ministry, and leadership experience, in this new book Matthew Kaemingk and Cory B. Willson explain why Sunday morning worship and Monday morning work desperately need to inform and impact one another. Together they engage in a rich biblical, theological, and historical exploration of the deep and life-giving connections between labor and liturgy. In so doing, Kaemingk and Willson offer new ways in which Christian communities can live seamless lives of work and worship.
Here are a few takeaways from Chapter 4: The Old Testament: The Integrity of Work and Worship:

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