Labor Day in the United States is a legal holiday, which falls on the first Monday in September and is dedicated to the working class.
Human beings have always had to work. Even Adam and Eve had responsibilities in the Garden of Eden. For most of humanity, work has been essential for survival. Most of us have to work. But work is important in our lives, even beyond the financial necessity.
Work is essential to our self-esteem. That is why many of us who are sympathetic to the problems of the poor are at least hopeful about experiments with so-called “workfare” programs as an alternative to welfare. Work is important to our sense of personal dignity.
Work is not only essential to our physical survival, but it is also essential to our mental and emotional wellbeing. God created us in His own image. God is a creating, sustaining and working God. Jesus said in John 5:17, “My Father is working still and I am working.”
Seeing a purpose higher than a paycheck can improve our attitude toward work.
In a sense, work allows us to be partners with God in the provision of the world’s needs. A visitor in a coal mine stopped to talk to one of the miners. He told the miner how sorry he was for him, as he spent his time monotonously picking coal down in the dark tunnels. The miner picked up a piece of coal and said, “I don’t think you quite understand. This is not just a lump of coal. This is light, heat and power. Perhaps it will light a city street, warm a home or run a train. I am not just a miner for the company. I am helping people.” Seeing a purpose higher than a paycheck can improve our attitude toward work. In our work as well as in everything else we do, we should strive for excellence, for if our work is not only for ourselves but also for God, we should strive to give our best.
Finally, there is no superiority in sacred work in comparison to secular work. In plain language, a clergyman’s job is no more pleasing to God than is a layman’s. They simply have different tasks. We are all laborers in God’s vineyard. Each of us seeks that Divine “well-done,” not because we have to earn God’s favor, but because He has honored us highly by giving us a part in His Kingdom. Each of us who has been so blessed desires in our own way to give something back.
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