I’m reposting my friend’s journal entry for Labor Day.
…I was just reading an article yesterday about a currently popular theologian, and at the end of the article his wife described him as a “workaholic.” I think that’s supposed to be a negative term (what if she had called him an alcoholic, Heather wondered). But if workaholism is a fault, it’s hardly frowned upon in our society. It’s much more admired. The hardest workers earn more, get promoted, and are widely admired for their ambition and productivity. They usually end up being the bosses (that’s how it’s been most places I’ve worked). People give them more work and more responsibility because they are willing to take it—so we end up with the workaholics setting the work schedule and defining the goals. Which is great for a society that wants to get things done.
But Jesus wasn’t like that. And I think we should be especially careful not to follow workaholics as our examples and leaders. The reasons that drive people to work to exhaustion are almost always physical need (and the fear of lack) and personal ambition. Neither of these are good motivations from a spiritual point of view. Jesus taught us not to worry about our physical needs but to trust our Father to provide, and to give up our own ambition, abandoning our own will and embracing the will of God. Jesus preached, not hard work, but total dependence on God. Our lives need not rest in our own calloused hands.
While society endlessly praises the hard workers, Jesus withdraws to the wilderness to pray. Or carelessly leaves behind a wildly popular and productive healing ministry to more clearly preach the “good news,” a message that society’s top hard workers would kill him for: “Come to me, all who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.”