FaithInTheWorkplace.com TheHighCalling.org

Helping you integrate your faith in the workplace
Main  |  About Us
Site Search

Leadership & Excellence

Our Higher Calling

Relationships

Attitude & Perspective

Character & Perseverance

Interviews


Free E-Newsletter
Sign up for the Faith
in the Workplace Newsletter:








HOLIDAYS & EVENTS
Fourth of July (U.S.A.)
Graduation
Related Channels
Christianity Today
Jobs & Career
Today's Christian
Workplace Bible Studies

Home > Faith in the Workplace > Our High Calling

Creative Coworkers with the Almighty
By Gordon Atkinson

It's not hard to find creative energy at work in our world. If you want a real challenge, try to find a part of creation that is static and dead. Try to find something that is not in flux and actively working with God to create reality. Everywhere you look you will find creation in all of its forms, both living and nonliving, working to create the world in cooperation with God.

Every tree grows with compounding, fractal surprises. Branches split and bend toward the light. After a few divisions and turnings, the various possibilities of form are so numerous our minds cannot count them all.

Your DNA, spun from God's building blocks and your parents' choices, has knit the flesh of your body into something that has never existed in the cosmos. Your life choices and experience work further with these raw materials until one day, there you sit in all your frail glory.

Rivers fed by snowflakes—themselves unique works of art as we are told—rush down mountains, carving a unique path to the sea. Every river seeks the ocean, but each will arrive having cut its own way through the land. And along the banks of these rivers, every bobbing flower is both a spectator and a one-of-a-kind masterpiece.

There are no copies in creation, no cheap imitations. And this is not because God micromanages the world, but because God apparently loves freedom. God loves watching things grow. Is it any wonder that God enjoys cooperating with you and me to do His moral and spiritual work? Our choices, good and bad, constantly spin the Kingdom of Heaven in new and unforeseen directions. We are creative coworkers with the Almighty.

A young man decides to go to dental school instead of joining a family business. His Christianity leads him to be a loving presence of Christ with his patients, many of whom have been afraid of dentists in the past. And sometimes he ministers to poor people in a free clinic on the border of Mexico. Clearly his dentistry has become a ministry. Does this mean that God could not have used him as a businessman? Of course not. We need loving and spiritual people in every line of work—lawyers, truck drivers, schoolteachers—even preachers.

This is the work of God. This is God's preferred method. We have freedom to do good work and create new things with the anchored and unchanging building blocks of reality–dividing, branching, changing, choosing one path and not another. The method is remarkable in its trust of you and me; frightening when we consider the terrible ramifications of our freedom; stunning if we imagine all the worlds that might have been and how playfully God allows them not to be.

What is our place in the ongoing work of creation and redemption? The author of Psalm 8 wonders this as well:

When I look at the heavens,
the work of your fingers,
the moon and the stars that you have established;
what are human beings that you are mindful of them,
mortals that you care for them?
(Ps. 8:3-4, NRSV)

The psalmist wonders what human beings are that God would be mindful of us. I don't know what we are. I don't know what we bring to the table of creation. It seems that we gum up the works as often as we contribute something meaningful. But God is thankfully, beautifully, gracefully mindful of us. We are in God's mind. We are born of his creativity and that creativity, lives in all the cells of our bodies. Our lives matter. We make a difference in the world.

How we live is important, so in humility, live well. What we choose helps to change the world, so listen prayerfully and choose well. God makes use of our lives and our creative choices. God is mindful of us. Remember this, and it shall be well with your soul. It shall be well within you.

Read more of Gordon Atkinson at RealLivePreacher.com.

By Gordon Atkinson. © 2001 - 2008 H. E. Butt Foundation. All rights reserved. Reprinted with permission from Laity Lodge and TheHighCalling.org.

Faith in the Workplace
Leadership & Excellence  |  Our Higher Calling  |  Attitude & Perspective
Relationships  |  Character & Perseverance  |  Interviews  |   Contact Us


FREE Newsletter
Sign up for the FaithInTheWorkplace.com Newsletter









SUBSCRIBE!

News and Commentary from a Biblical Perspective

Subscribe to Christianity Today
Save 58%










ChristianityToday.com
Home CT Mag Church/Ministry Bible/Life Communities Entertainment Schools/Jobs Shopping Free! Help
Books & Culture
Christianity Today
ChristianityTodayLibrary.com
Church Finance Today
Church Law & Tax Report
Church Secretary Today
Ignite Your Faith
Leadership Journal
Men of Integrity
Today's Christian
Today's Christian Woman
Your Church
BuildingChurchLeaders.com
ChristianBibleStudies.com
Christian College Guide
Christian History Back Issues
Christian Music Today
Christianity Today Movies
Church Products & Services
Church Safety
ChurchSiteCreator.com
PreachingToday.com
PreachingTodaySermons.com
Seminary/Grad School Guide
Christianity Today International
www.ChristianityToday.com
Copyright © 2008 Christianity Today International
Privacy Policy | Contact Us | Advertise with Us | Job Openings