Work and RestExemplo
Now Abel was a keeper of sheep, and Cain a worker of the ground. (Genesis 4:2)
In an op-ed for the New York Times, former hedge-fund trader, Sam Polk calls himself a “money addict.” He confesses, “During the market crash in 2008, I’d made a ton of money by shorting the derivatives of risky companies…I’d seen the crash coming, but instead of trying to help the people it would hurt the most — people who didn’t have a million dollars in the bank — I’d made money off it.” For Polk, the pursuit of wealth was a competition. He did not care who lost, so long as he won.
After our fall into sin, human beings were faced with a world of limited resources. The means of life—once abundant in paradise—now came only through painful toil. Work became a desperate competition for survival. In the story of Cain and Abel, we see work reduced to warfare. Like Abel, each of us has a vocation. Like Cain, each of us is tempted to see work as a way of securing the sustenance and the significance necessary to our survival. In our darkest moments, work becomes a battleground in which we pursue our ambitions regardless of the cost to others.
God spares Cain even as his brother's shed blood cries out from the ground. God spares us through the shed blood of our brother, Jesus Christ. And because Jesus died, we no longer have to compete to live. Jesus recovers the abundance of paradise for us and restores the peace of paradise to our work.
Prayer: Dear Jesus, I repent of turning work into a competition. And I receive your abundant life.
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Sobre este plano
The Bible is clear: both work and rest are gifts from God. But in a time when many of us feel overwhelmed and tired, work feels like anything but a gift, and rest can feel almost impossible! In this 10 day series, you will be encouraged in both your work and your rest, to find meaning and purpose in all parts of your life.
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