The Joy of Glory

Discovering endless joy in the boundless glory of God…

Tag: sin

The Problem of Work After the Fall

*This is part two of the blog series: A Mini-Biblical-Theology of Work. Part 1 can be found here.

Have you ever attempted to use something for a task other than it was designed for and it turned out bad, frustrating, or even painful?

So… this one time I had friends over at my house once who were helping my brother and I pull weeds because as soon as that chore was done we could go play. Now I don’t know how it started, but in the midst of weed pulling someone got hit in the face with some dirt.

This led to an all out dirt war.

31c96-umbrellaAt one point, someone grabbed an umbrella. Maybe it was me or maybe it wasn’t…why assign blame? Anyway, that person brilliantly began using the umbrella as a shield against the onslaught of soil. The umbrella changed hands a few times and it ended up in the hands of one of my friends.

My younger brother charged him with a massive handful of dirt. So my friend naturally held up the umbrella to protect himself and one of the spokes caught my brother’s eyelid! Let’s just say he could close his eyes and still see.

The point is that using the umbrella for something it was never designed for brought much pain! We broke the umbrella’s purpose and, as a result, broke my brother’s face!

In the fall, Adam and Eve broke the very purpose of their God-given work and it brought pain! Adam and Eve’s occupation was to point to God! His greatness, goodness, and beauty! Their rebellion/sin was to make everything about their own greatness, goodness, and beauty.

They broke the purpose of their work and Genesis 3:17 reveals to us the painful result…

Genesis 3:17, “…to Adam [God] said, ‘Because you have listened to the voice of your wife and have eaten of the tree of which I commanded you, ‘You shall not eat of it,’ cursed is the ground because of you; in PAIN you shall eat of it all the days of your life…

Not only did their sin bring pain, but also frustration! Using something for a task other than what it was designed for can often bring frustration. A few days ago, my little girl attempted to use the TV remote as a cell phone. This very quickly led to frustration! In breaking the purpose of their work, Adam and Eve’s sin did not only lead to pain, but also to frustration.

Genesis 3:18-19, “…thorns and thistles it shall bring forth for you; and you shall eat the plants of the field. [19] By the sweat of your face you shall eat bread, till you return to the ground, for out of it you were taken; for you are dust, and to dust you shall return.”

thorns

God said, work will be frustrating as the ground will fight you and eventually beat you! You will sweat as you war with the earth until it wins! You will die and you will become a part of the very ground you tried to work…dust.

All your work is futile!

Painful, frustrating work, that seems futile. This is the reality in which we all live and work! This is why our work is painful and frustrating. All of us approach our work through the lens of Genesis 3! We do this in two primary ways… by viewing our work primarily through the SIN of Genesis 3 or through the CURSE of Genesis 3.

Here’s what I mean… First, many of us view our work through the sin of Genesis 3.  Adam and Eve’s sin was choosing to make themselves like God. Instead of working for his glory, they chose to promote their own.  And this is what we do… we work for our own glory!

We look for satisfaction, joy, purpose, meaning, identity, etc in our work! And we don’t ever find it because satisfaction is always one more step away. We get a promotion, but it’s really the next promotion where we will find satisfaction. We get a raise, but it is really the next raise that will bring contentment. Just a little more recognition will bring joy.

…and the joy of glory is always one step beyond our grasp.

Instead of worshipping God through our work and pointing to his glory, we use it as a means to worship ourselves and promote our own glory. Our work consumes us, making us crazy as it becomes our everything! Our very identity and worth is completely wrapped up in our job.

workaholic

This is one of the primary ways we approach work as a result of the fall. We view our work through the sin of Genesis 3 and we worship work. Our job becomes our everything.

Yet, there is a second common approach to work.  Many of us view our work through the curse of Genesis 3. We look at work and see it as nothing but painful, frustrating, and futile.

Ecclesiastes 2:18-19, “I hated all my toil in which I toil under the sun, seeing that I must leave it to the man who will come after me, [19] and who knows whether he will be wise or a fool? Yet he will be master of all for which I toiled and used my wisdom under the sun. This also is vanity.”

The author of Ecclesiastes, laments that he has spent his whole life working and for what?  He says it all amounts to nothing in the end! It’s futile. Death will take away everything we have “gained” through all our toil! Even what we leave behind to be enjoyed by our heirs may only be wasted. Everything seemingly comes to nothing!

All our work and toil ultimately feels pointless, and many of us can, primarily, view our work this way.  So, we end up wasting our work. We are lazy in it, because ultimately… work is nothing.

After the fall… work looks mostly like a problem. We either view it through the sin of Genesis 3. We worship work because it is everything! Or we view it through the curse of Genesis 3. We waste work because it is nothing.

Woman asleep at computer

We know this is not how it was created to be! Is there any hope or are we doomed to pain, frustration, and futility in our work?

That is the question we will tackle tomorrow…

Lent Devotional: Job 34-35

Job 34-35 (click here)
Therefore, hear me, you men of understanding: far be it from God that he should do wickedness, and from the Almighty that he should do wrong. (Job 34:10)

Reflection
Is it ever “right” to accuse God of wrong? Is it ok for us to be angry with God?

We must answer these questions carefully and not be overly simplistic. Scripture tells us that God is never in the wrong, he never acts wickedly, he never sins, etc. Therefore, it IS sin to accuse God or be angry with him. There is no such thing as justified anger at God, for he never does anything wrong…he never does anything worthy of our wrath.

Yet…as soon as I say that, people begin to get upset because there are many times in their life they have “felt” wronged by God. Perhaps you have felt this way. Anger towards the Lord has festered in your heart. Are we just supposed to suppress that anger and put on a hypocritical face of love towards the Lord? No.

If we are angry with God, we should be honest about it. He knows anyway. Confess it, pray for comfort, and help… and eventually… repent. He is faithful and just to forgive. When we sin by being angry with the Lord, we don’t sin again by hypocritically hiding that anger.

Ultimately, we need to see that our anger is pointed in the wrong direction. Typically when we are angry at the Lord, it IS because some injustice has taken place, but such injustice should make us angry at sin, death, and Satan! We should not be angry with the only solution to those problems! The Lord is the solution! He has promised to deal, in a real/final way, with sin, death, and Satan. When we are angered by injustices, let us not aim that anger at the only one who has promised to bring us the justice we desire.

*The complete SVCC Lenten reading guide is available here.

Lent Devotional: Job 27

Job 27 (click here)
Far be it from me to say that you are right; till I die I will not put away my integrity from me. 6 I hold fast my righteousness and will not let it go; my heart does not reproach me for any of my days. (Job 27:5-6)

Reflection
Job will never agree with his friends that he is being punished for some hidden sin. To have a relationship of integrity with God is more valuable to him than life itself. His friends say, “Repent and you will have favorable circumstances again,” but Job says, “I haven’t sinned.”

Let’s imagine for just a moment that Job did what his friends asked. He repented (even though he had not sinned) in order to experience God’s good gifts again. If he did that… he would actually be proving Satan’s accusation in chapter 1, namely, that Job only follows God because of God’s good gifts.

Job will not try to manipulate God! He will not give into his friends who are actually serving as tempters on behalf of Satan. No. He will hold fast to his integrity and value God above all!

Temptation to sin can come from anywhere…even through people attempting to give us “Godly” counsel. Job was able to spot the temptation because he knew the Lord intimately and he knew he’d done nothing to harm that relationship. We will be able to spot and fight temptation more effectively when we know the Lord more intimately.

*The complete SVCC Lenten reading guide is available here.