A Gospel Perspective on Work Post-PandemicEgzanp
One of the most lasting changes to our work post-pandemic will be where we work physically. Now more than ever, more of us are working from home or in a hybrid environment. And by and large, we are loving it. According to the job search giant Glassdoor, searches for remote work have been up an astonishing 460% in the past two years.
As someone who has worked from home for the past three years, I get the appeal. Remote work has some wonderful benefits. But it also carries a significant cost. Because as the Apostle Paul makes clear in today’s passage from 1 Thessalonians, our workplaces are one of, if not the primary place where we can “win the respect of outsiders” and share the gospel.
So how should we as Christ-followers be thinking differently about these shifts in where we work? Let me suggest three responses.
First, suppose you choose where you work. In that case, the gospel may compel you to sacrifice your freedom to work from home to be more intentional about building relationships with unbelievers in person (see 1 Corinthians 10:23-33).
Second, if you decide remote work is what’s best for you or your team, spend some time thinking about how to build relationships in a virtual environment. That could include scheduling casual virtual lunches with your co-workers, baking time into your Monday morning meetings to ask about everyone’s weekends, or encouraging small talk before your Zoom meetings by allowing participants to enter before the host arrives.
Finally, consider whether it’s time to expand your view of your personal mission field to include your co-workers and your physical neighbors. Maybe God’s calling you to be outside with your kids in the afternoons so you can “win respect” of other parents, or invite a neighbor who also works from home out to lunch, or host a block party for your neighbors on Friday night.
Where we’re working is changing. But our call to make disciples is not. Spend some time today thinking deeply about how your personal evangelism needs to shift with the shifting position of your workspace.
Konsènan Plan sa a
So much about our work has changed and will continue to change in the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic. How should Christ-followers be thinking differently about these changes? That’s the question I invite you to think through with me in this four-day plan.
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