Month 8 - Work as Worship | Week 1: The Sacred 9-to-5
Month 8 - Work as Worship | Week 1: The Sacred 9-to-5
Anchor Scripture
“Whatever you do, work heartily, as for the Lord and not for men.”- Colossians 3:23 ESV [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Colossians%203%3A23&version=ESV]
Humanity was created as worshipping stewards, not merely worshippers who happen to work.
This week we’ll explore:
God’s original design for work.
Why stewardship is one of humanity’s first callings.
How Jesus viewed ordinary work.
A biblical 4-step framework for evaluating your career and responsibilities.
Practical ways to honor Christ through your daily work.
The Sacred 9-to-5
For many people newly walking as disciples, work and faith can occupy separate categories.
Activities such as church attendance, prayer, Bible study, and evangelism are easily recognized as spiritual pursuits. Work, however, often feels different. Meetings, budgets, construction projects, classrooms, customer calls, sales targets, spreadsheets, performance reviews, emails, and project plans can seem disconnected from what we typically think of as ministry. Especially if we are still surrounded by the secular world in our day-to-day lives, in contrast to our Christian community. It can be quite a jarring mental hurdle to get over if we don’t face it head-on.
I empathise with those who have to spend the majority of their waking hours in environments where God is rarely considered, despite our sincere desire to follow Him. Without realizing it, we can begin to view our jobs as something to endure so that we can eventually return to the things that truly matter spiritually.
Scripture presents a clarifying vision for us.
God never intended work to be separate from worship. In fact, one of the first truths we discover about humanity from scripture is that we were created with meaningful responsibility. Work was never designed to compete with our spiritual lives. Rather, it is one of the primary arenas in which our spiritual lives are expressed.
When viewed through a biblical lens, work becomes more than a means of earning a living. It becomes an opportunity to glorify God, serve others, and faithfully steward the gifts and responsibilities He has entrusted to us.
Humanity’s First Calling
You may be reading this, having never considered these concepts before, or just getting a refresh on it, and perhaps you are assuming that work in and of itself began as a consequence of sin. After all, work can be difficult, frustrating, and exhausting. Below, we have some scriptural clarity on this.
Work existed before the Fall.
Long before sin entered the world, God was working. The opening chapters of Genesis reveal a Creator who builds, orders, designs, forms, and brings life out of chaos.
Then God creates humanity in His image. What happens next is significant.
Adam wasn’t created and then left to discover his purpose. He was created with a purpose already attached to his identity. Before there was sin, suffering, or death, there was responsibility and accountability.
Genesis 1:28 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Genesis%201%3A28&version=ESV] records God’s first commission to humanity:
“Be fruitful and multiply and fill the earth and subdue it, and have dominion...”
Humanity was entrusted with a Holy mission. God’s intention was not for Adam to simply exist passively within creation; it was to cultivate it, steward it, and extend God’s order throughout it.
Genesis 2 provides even greater detail:
“The LORD God took the man and put him in the garden of Eden to work it and keep it.”- Genesis 2:15 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Genesis%202%3A15&version=ESV]
The language used here is richer with meaning than we first might think. Adam was called to cultivate what God had entrusted to him, to guard it, steward it, and develop its potential. Later, he would name the animals, exercising discernment, responsibility, and leadership.
The very first human being was given meaningful work before sin ever entered the world.
This truth should fundamentally change how we view our own position on the earth, within the Kingdom, and what God expects of our work.
Work isn’t just a way to pay bills. It’s not a distraction from spiritual life, nor is it something God tolerates until we can return to the “real ministry” activity. Meaningful work was part of God’s original design for humanity, and the meaningful element in our modern lives isn’t just the role or job title; it is what our Father would have us do within the garden he has given us to tend.
Sin corrupted work, but it didn’t create it.
The frustrations we experience in our jobs reflect the effects of the Fall. The existence of work itself reflects the wisdom and intention of God.
Jesus and Ordinary Work
This new perspective on work becomes even more powerful when we consider the life and example of Jesus on the topic.
The Gospels record approximately three years of public ministry. Before that were roughly thirty years of ordinary life. For most of His earthly existence, Jesus wasn’t preaching to crowds, performing miracles, or traveling throughout Israel. He was working, learning, building, serving, and faithfully fulfilling everyday responsibilities.
God could have chosen for His Son to spend His entire earthly life in public ministry. Instead, He ordained that most of Jesus’ life would unfold in the context of ordinary work and everyday patterns of life.
That fact alone should reshape how we think about the value of our mundane vocations. Jesus is commonly known to have been a Carpenter; some make the case he was a stone mason. From my research, he could have been both. The original Greek word used in the Gospels is “tekton”, which translates broadly to “builder,” “craftsman,” or “artisan”, and a lot of the craft in the region at the time utilized stone.
It’s an interesting topic, but the medium is less important than the description of the role: “builder,” “craftsman,” and “artisan”. Why did Jesus choose this profession? Likely because it was the work of his earthly Father Joseph.
“Is not this the carpenter, the son of Mary...?” - Mark 6:3 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Mark%206%3A3&version=ESV]
“Is not this the carpenter’s son?” - Matthew 13:55 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Matthew%2013%3A55&version=ESV]
God is not absent from ordinary work. Jesus spent most of His earthly life there.
The life of Christ reminds us that faithfulness in ordinary responsibilities matters deeply to God. The years Jesus spent working were not wasted years. They were part of His Father’s plan.
Likewise, our daily responsibilities are not interruptions to God’s purposes. They are often the very places where His purposes are being worked out.
Spiritual Vs Regular Jobs
Throughout the Bible, God works through people in a wide variety of professions and roles.
Daniel served God in government.
Joseph served God through economic leadership.
Nehemiah served God in civil administration.
Lydia served God through business.
Luke served God as a physician.
Paul served God as a tentmaker.
Their occupations differed, but their calling was the same: to honor God wherever He had placed them.
Their workplaces became environments where God’s wisdom, integrity, and character were displayed. The issue was never whether their jobs were sacred. The issue was whether they belonged to God and were willing to serve Him faithfully.
When a believer enters the workplace, that workplace becomes a mission field, a stewardship, and an opportunity for worship.
This doesn’t mean every conversation has to become a sermon or every meeting a Bible study, or that worship music has to play as you enter every room like some WWE character. Rather, it means that our work itself can become an expression of obedience to Christ. Through excellence, integrity, service, humility, and faithfulness, we demonstrate the reality of God’s transforming work in our lives.
A Biblical Framework for Work
If work is part of God’s design, how do we ensure our professional lives remain aligned with Scripture?
The following four questions provide a practical framework for evaluating our work through a biblical lens.
What Has God Entrusted To Me?
Who Am I Ultimately Working For?
How Does My Work Serve Others?
Does My Work Reflect God’s Character?
1. What Has God Entrusted To Me?
Adam’s first responsibility was stewardship.
Everything belonged to God. Adam simply managed what had been entrusted to him.
The same principle applies to us today. Our careers, opportunities, skills, influence, resources, teams, and responsibilities are not ultimately our own. They have been entrusted to us by God.
The Christian professional should regularly ask:
“What has God placed under my care?”
And then:
“Am I stewarding it faithfully?”
A biblical view of work begins with stewardship rather than ownership. We recognize that every opportunity is a gift and every responsibility is a trust.
When we adopt this perspective, our attitude toward work changes. We become less focused on personal entitlement and more focused on faithful management. We begin to see our responsibilities not as burdens but as opportunities to honor God.
2. Who Am I Ultimately Working For?
We have bills to pay, and, understandably, the primary focus for our work may just be for a salary; our goals may be for a certain promotion, recognition, or approval from people within work or outside of it. And while these motivations are understandable, Scripture redirects our focus toward a higher purpose.
“Whatever you do, work heartily, as for the Lord and not for men.”- Colossians 3:23 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Colossians%203%3A23&version=ESV]
Managers matter.
Customers matter.
Employers matter.
But above all of them stands Christ.
The Christian does not ultimately work for a company, organization, or supervisor. The Christian works for the Lord.
This perspective transforms even the most ordinary tasks. Work that might otherwise feel insignificant becomes meaningful when offered as an act of worship. Excellence is no longer dependent on whether someone is watching. Integrity is no longer determined by whether we might get caught; the outcomes of how we live and work begin to have impacts on those around us as they experience the Kingdom through us.
When Christ becomes our ultimate audience, faithfulness becomes our primary goal.
3. How Does My Work Serve Others?
Jesus consistently connected greatness with service.
“Whoever would be great among you must be your servant.”- Mark 10:43 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Mark%2010%3A43&version=ESV]
Every legitimate profession exists because it serves people in some way.
Teachers serve students. Doctors serve patients. Builders serve communities. Business owners serve customers. Managers serve teams. Engineers solve problems. Parents raise and nurture children.
Work becomes more meaningful when we stop asking, “What can I get from this?” and begin asking, “Who can I serve through this?”
This shift in perspective reflects the heart of Christ. Rather than viewing work solely as a means of personal advancement, we begin to see it as an opportunity to contribute to the flourishing of others.
The Christian workplace mindset is fundamentally others-focused because it reflects the servant-hearted character of Jesus.
4. Does My Work Reflect God’s Character?
As image-bearers of God, our work should increasingly reflect who He is, to the point where secular coworkers may even question why this person is different. That is a powerful form of evangelism, conversion through the evidence of another’s steadfastness, proximity, and relationship to Christ is powerful.
This means demonstrating integrity when compromise would be easier, excellence when mediocrity would suffice, humility when pride is rewarded, truth when deception appears profitable, faithfulness when shortcuts are available, and generosity when selfishness feels natural.
The workplace can offer the pressurized environments that reveal our discipleship more clearly than solely church attendance ever would. That is in itself a blessing.
How we lead, handle pressure, respond to criticism, treat difficult people, and conduct ourselves when no one is watching all reveal something about the condition of our hearts.
Our character is tested daily in the ordinary moments of work. These moments provide opportunities to reflect God’s nature to those around us.
When believers consistently display Christlike character in the workplace, they become powerful witnesses to the transforming power of the gospel.
Redefining Success
The world typically measures success through titles, influence, income, recognition, and wordly achievement.
Scripture points us toward something deeper: faithfulness.
"Well done, good and faithful servant. You have been faithful over a little; I will set you over much."- Matthew 25:21 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Matthew%2025%3A21%20&version=ESV]
One day, every believer will stand before Christ. The primary question will not be, “How impressive was your career?” Rather, it will be, “Were you faithful with what I entrusted to you?”.
Faithful leaders. Faithful employees. Faithful entrepreneurs. Faithful parents. Faithful servants.
The kingdom of God is built by ordinary people faithfully stewarding ordinary responsibilities for an extraordinary King.
This means that success is available to every believer regardless of position, salary, or status. Biblical success is not measured by fame, visibility, or worldly accomplishment. It is measured by faithfulness.
I’ll stop saying the word faithfulness now… you get the picture.
But, that truth is both humbling and liberating. We don’t need to achieve greatness in the eyes of the world to be successful in the eyes of God. We simply need to be faithful where He has placed us.
Practical Application This Week
Set aside 15 mins this week to reflect prayerfully on the following questions:
What has God entrusted to me?
Who am I ultimately working for?
How does my work serve others?
Does my work reflect God’s character?
Ask the Holy Spirit to reveal one area where your work life has become disconnected from your discipleship.
Then choose one practical action to take this week:
Begin each workday with prayer.
Perform one hidden act of excellence that no one else may notice.
Encourage a colleague who needs support.
Refuse a compromise of integrity, even if it comes at a cost.
View a difficult assignment as an opportunity to serve Christ.
Thank God for the responsibilities He has entrusted to you.
Small acts of faithfulness, practiced consistently over time, will transform the way we view our work and deepen our awareness of God’s presence in our daily responsibilities.
Next Week
Month 8 | Week 2: The Labor of Love
Anchor Scripture
“For God is not unjust so as to overlook your work and the love that you have shown for his name in serving the saints, as you still do.”- Hebrews 6:10 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Hebrews%206%3A10&version=ESV]
Most work isn’t glamorous in the worldly sense of the word.
Much of life is built through ordinary acts of faithfulness that few people notice, and even fewer celebrate.
But Scripture repeatedly teaches that some of the most meaningful work in God’s Kingdom is often the work that receives the least recognition.
Next week, we’ll explore what it means to actually labor out of love rather than ambition, recognition, or reward. We will get into the tactical day-to-day. We’ll examine why perseverance matters, and how believers can continue serving Christ joyfully even when their work feels difficult, repetitive, or unnoticed.
Together, we will discover why no act of faithful service is ever wasted in the Kingdom of God.
Closing Prayer
Father,
Thank You for creating us with purpose and responsibility.
Thank You that our work is not separate from our worship but is one of the ways we reflect Your image in the world.
Help us become faithful stewards of everything You have entrusted to us. Teach us to work with integrity, excellence, humility, and a heart of service.
May our workplaces become places where Your character is displayed and Your kingdom is reflected.
Remind us daily that we ultimately work for You.
In Jesus’ name,
Amen.
I’m glad you’re here.
Let’s run the race - Eyes Up, Chin Up!
Grace and peace,
Sam Johnston
Youtube Channel [https://www.youtube.com/@ChristFocusedNetwork] | Spotify [https://open.spotify.com/show/3zHbixG1akUBw9p6RJT4KY?si=b4dcb21644a348b5]| Instagram [http://instagram.com/christfocussed] | Free Christ Focused Business Course [https://sam-johnston-s-school1.teachable.com/p/building-a-business-with-a-christian-kingdom-mindset?]
This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit christfocused.substack.com [https://christfocused.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]