“The great
enemy of the truth is very often not the lie, deliberate, contrived and
dishonest, but the myth, persistent, persuasive and unrealistic.” John F. Kennedy
Did
you know that if you swallow a piece of chewing gum, it remains in your body
for seven years? Did you know that if you leave a tooth in a glass of Coke overnight
by the next morning the tooth will be completely dissolved? Did you know that if
enough people fill out “Jedi” as their religion on their census forms the
government will have to make it an official religion? Did you know that
Poinsettias are poisonous?
None of those are true. They’re all myths. Did you know that, (and
you’re going to hear this a lot during the upcoming election year), that “jobs are the best social program out there…that
there is no social program as effective as a job.” One of my heroes, the
late Ronald Reagan, appears to be the first one to say that “I believe the best social program is a job.”
But President Reagan was wrong. Like most myths, this one has been repeated
so often that it’s accepted as fact. Since it’s the Labor Day weekend, let’s
consider a biblical worldview of the place of a job in our life.
Statistics show that most voters, even the majority of Christians, vote
based on economic values more than any other one issue. In other words, the
vast majority of those who are part of the Kingdom of God vote based on kingdom
of man values. It may take different avenues. For some it’s job security or the
creation of jobs. For others, it’s lowered taxes, a growing economy or the stock
market. The bottom line is it is economic and the majority of the time that’s
translated into money and – my job.
Please understand, it’s good to have a job. If you read last week’s
Pastor’s Pen or are familiar with 2 Thessalonians 3:6-12, you know the Bible
teaches that part of our God-given responsibility from Creation is work. It’s a
continual theme of Scripture – God’s plan for human beings is to find
fulfillment in work and responsibility, not just leisure and the weekend
(that’s another myth we’ll work through at another time).
Yet, politicians are indiscriminate, after all if “the best social program is a job,” it doesn’t matter what the job
is – as long as it’s a job. That’s not what Scripture teaches. It’s discriminatory
on what is “good work.” Scripture is permeated with ethical principles on what
jobs are appropriate, as well as how employers and employees are to treat each
other.
Not
every job is a moral job. Personally, I’m disgusted at how many
“conservative” officials have no issue with increasing gambling. They’re
dilatory in their God-given responsibility to their constituents. It’s the
responsibility of government to protect its citizens, particularly the
disenfranchised who have difficulty protecting themselves. Every study shows
that gambling is bad for society, that it takes advantage of the poor, elderly and
uneducated. Nearly every school child knows that the nickname for Las Vegas is
“Sin City.” Why? Because gambling
rarely creeps in alone. The gambling disease is a carrier of adult bookstores, strip
clubs, illicit drugs and prostitution. Often the Mob gets its fingers in a community
via gambling. Even politicians realize the limitations of this naïve premise, “the best social program is a job” in
that so far they’ve not legalized prostitution, lowered the drinking age, or
legalized the sale of illicit drugs.
Not
every job is a good for your family. It’s increasingly rare to find those
who are highly successful in their career in their original marriage. Often, if
they’re still married to the same person later in life, the marriage is little
more than a shell. It may be a matter of social convention or perhaps they kept
it together for their children. Sadly, a thriving, healthy marriage is not the
norm for highly successful individuals. In Scripture, we find those who were
successful in their careers yet were often failures in their marriage. King
David and his son, Solomon, are tragic examples.
There are several factors that contribute to this. First, a healthy
marriage demands time and cultivation. It’s hard to burn the midnight oil at
work and have time for candlelit romantic dinners at home. Then, if you’re
successful at work, you usually come home so weary your spouse often gets
leftovers. Sometimes a successful person becomes addicted to success. It’s like
they have a mistress and their spouse can’t compete. Plus, if you’re successful
at work, your need for emotional and social support is usually filled there.
Add to that, if you work a lot, when you finally come home, rather than being warmly
welcomed, your spouse may grouse that you’re always working which motivates you
to want to be away and work more.
Sometimes
to climb the corporate ladder, you must make frequent moves and your children
are uprooted again and again. Not only do they resent leaving their friends,
Dad is often unavailable because he has to put in inordinate amounts of time
and attention on the new position. Success and
child-raising rarely mix. And parents who are obsessed with their work, wealth
or social standing usually devalue the task of bringing up children.
Recently, the former CEO of Pimco, Mohamed
El-Erian, explained why he’d resigned from his $100 million a year job. His
10-year-old daughter gave him a written list of 22 milestones he’d missed
because of work – including the first day of school, a parent-teacher meeting
and a Halloween parade. Even though he had legitimate excuses for every
absence, he realized that none of the pressing meetings, travelling and so
forth really mattered in the long run.
Not
every job is good for you spiritually. American
evangelicals have deeply identified themselves with the culture’s unflinching
belief that success is the point of human existence. It’s the defining value of
American life. Please understand, idolatry is not a small, stone Buddha. Too
many of us worship our work, which is why we have so little time for worshipping
God. We spend little or no time with Him. Prayer is reserved for moments of
desperation. We look for a worship experience that keeps a close eye on the
clock because we “have so many things to do.” As G.K.
Beale, wisely said, “We resemble what we
revere, either for ruin or restoration.” Meaning, whatever we worship, we’ll
seek to become like that object. It will either save or ruin our lives. Our
walk with God in sanctification is meant to be a steady, faithful climb. That
takes time, lots of it. You can’t be a human doing and a Christ-follower.
Is a
job, is work important? Yes. But the best social program isn’t a job. It’s a
relationship. It’s the Gospel. It’s knowing Jesus Christ and living for Him. Amazingly,
when our relationship with God is as it should, so is everything else. So don’t
believe the myth, believe God’s eternal truth!
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