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FAITH AND WORK BOOK REVIEW:

Our Secular Vocation: Rethinking the Church’s Calling to the Marketplace by J. Daryl Charles. B&H Academic. 336 pages. 2023
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Despite its somewhat confusing title (it comes from Dorothy Sayers’ classic essay “Why Work?”), this is an excellent book about the Christian’s vocation, and one that I would commend to you. The author tells us that the church is largely silent about work, vocation, or the marketplace to which 99 percent of those in the body of Christ are called.  The marketplace is the chief setting in which Christians impact society. It is there that, day in and day out and generation after generation, Christian influence will produce its greatest effect. But Charles tells us, tragically, most pastors and Christian leaders remain ill-equipped to offer counsel on matters of work. He wonders how anyone can take Christianity seriously, particularly in a post-Christian era, if the church has little vision for that domain in which all people—not just Christians—spend so much of their time?
The book represents an attempt at synthesizing the theological and the hermeneutical, the historical and the contemporary, the ethical and the pastoral, and is organized as follows:
Chapters 2 and 3 are of a theological nature. They examine the roots of our social and ecclesiastical predicament with a view to then probe its theological underpinnings.
Chapter 4 looks back in history to the early sixteenth century in an attempt to appreciate a significant breakthrough in terms of the church’s understanding of work, vocation, and the marketplace.
Chapters 5 and 6 go together insofar as they illuminate perspectives on work in the Wisdom literature of Ecclesiastes and establish a link between our work and our callings (our vocations).
Chapters 7 and 8 include reflections on the church’s presence in society, and questions of discernment and guidance with respect to vocation.
This thoroughly researched and well-written volume covers a number of subjects including rewards, retirement, education, poverty, calling, divine providence, doctrine of creation, the need for a serious theology of work, wisdom literature, Martin Luther, the book of Ecclesiastes, the false dichotomy of the sacred-versus-secular mindset, discernment, the priesthood of all believers, and the common good.
Below are some of my favorite quotes from the book:


Faith and Work Book Club – Won’t you read along with us?

We are reading Agents of Flourishing: Pursuing Shalom in Every Corner of Society by Amy Sherman. Sherman is also the author of Kingdom Calling: Vocational Stewardship for the Common Good, a book I first read in my “Calling, Vocation and Work” class at Covenant Seminary.
Every corner, every square inch of society can flourish as God intends, and Christians of any vocation can become agents of that flourishing. In this book, Sherman offers a multifaceted, biblically grounded framework for enacting God’s call to seek the shalom of our communities in six arenas of civilizational life (The Good, The True, The Beautiful, The Just, The Prosperous, and The Sustainable).
This week we look at Chapter 9: A Strategy for Cultivating the Just Advance Restorative Justice.

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