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Faithful Work

In the Daily Grind with God and for Others

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
One-third of our waking lives is spent at work. Work is where we make culture and come into contact with our world. Work is central to God's mission to redeem souls, systems, and structures. And God works through our work to bring hope to the brokenness and fallenness of our surrounding culture. The gospel of Jesus Christ is good news for the world, and that includes the transformation of our ordinary work into a sacred calling. Ross Chapman and Ryan Tafilowski show how work is a way to love God, serve our neighbors, and demonstrate the gospel. With a broader understanding of God's work in the world, we are able to engage our daily work as part of how God makes all things new. This guide invites you to reflect on the meaning and purpose of your life's work and to transform your work into service to those around you.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      November 6, 2023
      “The daily work of Christians is the church’s greatest opportunity to complement God’s work. Yet for centuries, that opportunity has been largely ignored,” according to this serviceable guide from Chapman, CEO of the Denver Institute for Faith and Work, and Tafilowski (Vice and Virtue), assistant professor of theology at the Denver Seminary. Beginning with God’s creation of the world in Genesis, scripture champions the inherent value of labor, yet “our everyday experience of work” has been damaged by abuses of power, injustice, and systems that artificially separate “winners” from “losers,” the authors contend. Strategies readers can utilize to “redeem work” include harnessing their individual, God-given skills in their careers; seeking “what is best for neighbors—coworkers, clients, bosses, vendors, and customers”; and “celebrating the good and reform the broken.” In so doing, Chapman and Tafilowski write, believers become “colaborers with God in his great plan to reconcile the world to himself in Christ,” turning their “ordinary days at work an act of worship.” While readers won’t find revolutionary insight, they’ll welcome the authors’ efforts to dignify all manner of labor (entrepreneur, plumber, and stay-at-home parent are presented as equally valid callings) and staunch assertion that faith is just as alive in the daily grind as it is in ministry work, because “our work... represents God in the world.” This succeeds in bridging the gap between the workplace and the altar.

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  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

Languages

  • English

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