Last year, we explored that while work is good, it is also broken (and so are we!). We experience this each day as we work at our jobs: the brokenness of the work environment, the frustration of things not going according to plan, and our sin. We are tempted to be anxious, impatient, greedy, angry, proud, or lazy. We are tempted to selfish ambition, gossip, and godlessness. We fight to consider our work as a worthy calling and a way of bearing God’s image, while our natural tendency may be to think of it as mundane.
God uses the daily tasks of our jobs to show us our need for him and to grow us into godliness. It takes constant perseverance and reliance on him, and it rarely feels like a glamourous way to live the Christian life. We often fail: we sin in our actions and in the attitude of our hearts, and our coworkers see it.
In the midst of this brokenness, we have the opportunity to deepen our trust in the gospel and share it with our colleagues.
Preaching the gospel to ourselves at work
Yes, we are more sinful than we’ll ever comprehend, and our working lives are no exception. Becoming aware of our sin in the workplace can lead to discouragement or feelings of inadequacy, making us reluctant to share our Christian faith with our coworkers, who will see our imperfect witness.
However, God has given us the righteousness of his Son! He has accepted us because of his Son’s perfect, completed work. We trust in Jesus for our right standing before God, and we trust in him, not our own strength, to continue to make us holy and obedient in the workplace.
As Christians, we have been given the ministry of reconciliation: the task of calling those around us to also place their faith in Christ. This calling is not based on our performance.
Sharing the gospel with others at work
What do we do when our coworkers see us fall short of who we are called to be as Christians? (And they will – especially if we are opening up and investing in meaningful relationships with them).
Rather than allowing our failures to discourage us from being open about our faith, we can use them as a springboard for sharing the gospel. Many non-believers have been only minimally exposed to Christianity, and see it primarily as a set of guidelines for moral, (self-) righteous living. Many have never heard about having a secure, intimate relationship with God by His grace, through faith in Christ and not based on works.
Recently, an atheist coworker saw me react badly in a frustrating situation, only to have to go back in and face it again. Discouraged by my anger and impatience, and unable to hide it, I told her “I think this is God’s way of trying to teach me something. Any illusion I had of myself being a good person is officially over right now. He’s keeping me humble.” She responded: “So, it’s not punishment, it’s a lesson.”
In Christ, we have freedom to acknowledge our shortcomings and failures to our coworkers, and then share the hope that we have in Christ: we know we are imperfect, and we see our wretched state and our need for a Saviour. Our relationship with God does not depend on our perfection. It depends on Christ’s completed work on our behalf.