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We recently read
a most interesting article entitled ”How To Be Happy Though
Working.” It is quite apparent to most of us that in order
to live we must work. This is in harmony with the teaching
of Paul, who said, ”For even when we were with you, this we
commanded you, that if any would not work, neither should
he eat.”
The thing that
is so easily forgotten is the fact that working is merely
a means to an end and not the end itself. We work because
we need to eat. Most firms today have devised sly ways of
wringing the last full ounce of time and energy from their
employees. The promise of promotion, the threat of dismissal,
and the challenge of competition are all employed in an effort
to secure the full devotion of each worker. Because of this
we need to always keep in mind our true values and place things
in their proper place.
Christ said that we cannot serve God and mammon. He was right,
and yet we have to work for a living and therein lies the
problem. Just how ambitious should the child of God be in
providing for the necessities of life. The article we read
while not concerned with the spiritual viewpoint, nevertheless
seemed to have the answer to this perplexing problem. It said,
”Many a man likes his job, not because it challenges him or
promises him success – very few jobs actually do – but simply
because it provides him a livelihood and doesn’t get too much
in his way. He looks for fulfillment in other places and is
pleased that his job leaves him time and energy to do so.”
This seems to
be an intelligent approach to the problem. If our jobs require
all of our time and energy, what do we have left to give to
the Lord? If our occupations demand so much of our attention
that we relegate God to a secondary position, where is our
treasure? Jesus told us that where our treasure is, there
will our heart be also. It’s no use talking about the pearl
of great price and how much the truth means to us if our thoughts
and actions are inconsistent with what we say.
Paul told us to ”provide things honest in the sight of all
men.” We should be scrupulously honest in giving a full day’s
work for a day’s pay. To do less than this is not right but
to do more than this is an indication that we are endeavoring
to lay .up our treasure where it can be exposed to the corruption
of moths and rust and where thieves break through and steal.
All too often a man wakes up to the fact that he has become
a tremendous success financially, but has failed to fulfill
his duty to his God, his wife and his children. He has not
only destroyed his health in achieving success but he discovers
that he has lost the things he thought he was working hard
to secure. He has so long neglected his God and his family
that he find himself all alone with nothing but his ulcer
and his bank account.
If only we would
heed the wise advice of Paul when he admonished us that ”having
food and raiment let us be therewith content.” If we will
only seek first the kingdom of God, and his righteousness,
God will give us those things that we have need of. We have
to work, yes, but let’s not lose our perspective. Let us be
happy, though working, in the realization that we are providing
things honest in the sight of all men but our ”delight is
in the law of the Lord: and in His law do we meditate day
and night.”
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