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This week’s theme is God is always at work around you.
What’s the hardest job, or task within a job, that you’ve ever had? Of course, “hardest” can mean different things in this context. Maybe your hardest job was physically easy but emotionally taxing. Maybe it was just messy. Maybe your hardest job is yet to come or was the one you loved the most. I have personally wrestled with some nasty spreadsheets and emails in my day.
I like the television show “Dirty Jobs” hosted by Mike Rowe. You’ve probably seen it or are at least familiar with it. The premise is simple. Rowe visits and assists people who have difficult, usually dirty, jobs that most of us have either never heard of, or simply take for granted. Here are some favorite examples of jobs he has highlighted: salt miner, snake wrangler, aerial tram greaser, bowling pinsetter mechanic, communications tower hand, and worm grunter (really).
You want to know what I think would be a dirty job? Figuring out how to use a mess like me to do good work – God’s work.
For we are God’s handiwork, created in Christ Jesus to do good works, which God prepared in advance for us to do.
(Ephesians 2:10 HCSB)
When Mike Rowe visits workers for his television show, he does some of the workers’ tasks himself. It’s real work that they would’ve had to do otherwise, and it makes for good TV, but there’s a catch. Do you think he does those tasks as well or as fast as the experienced workers would have done it themselves? Of course not.
Rowe helps out but slows them down and often makes a mess of things, because each task is something he’s never done before. But what if he spent all day, every day, with each of these specialty workers and faithfully followed their example? He’d probably get pretty good at the work.
We are God’s handiwork. One of the byproducts of being made in His image is that we have the privilege of taking part in His work. And we shouldn’t act like we’re just popping in and out to check on how God is doing. We need to dig in, follow His example, and get our hands dirty.
God is always working and has created each of us in a unique way; and the verse above says that there are good works He has prepared for us in advance. It may even be a dirty job, but He made us to do it.
By Mark Stuart
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