Work

Leaving your faith at the door

Kara Martin // July 31, 2018, 7:45 pm

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Photo by Soragrit Wongsa on Unsplash.com

One of the saddest stories I have heard about faith and work was from a businessman who was a fund manager running his own company.

He was a Christian who had achieved great success in a difficult industry, running a company that was mostly made up of non-Christians. He told me that his faith was an integral part of his success at work: He prayed regularly about major decisions, he saw his success as a sign of God’s blessing, and he used his wealth to bless many individual ministries as well as Christian organisations.

“Checking your faith at the door” means that you walk into a room as less of the person you could be.

I asked him about how he managed to sustain his faith in some of the tough ethical dilemmas he must face in his business, and particularly when many work colleagues weren’t Christian.

With pride he said: “My colleagues will tell you that I am no Christian pushover. I have a saying that when I walk into the boardroom, I check my faith at the door.”

To “check your faith at the door” means that you walk into that room where the biggest decisions are made as less of the person you could be or should be; it means that you have left behind the most important thing you possess: Your connection to the Sovereign God of the universe and the empowering of His Spirit.

It means that you still think it is possible to live dualistically: Separating your faith from your everyday life. It means that your whole company is missing out on the wisdom that faith brings. It means that your work colleagues are missing out on a critical witness of the power of faith to transform every part of our lives, including how we make work decisions.

So we have a choice.

Do we pretend that our work doesn’t matter to God? Do we check our faith at the door? Do we feel guilty working in our secular jobs rather than going to Bible college and doing “Gospel work”?

The choice is actually between worshipping work or worshipping God through our work.

Or, do we seek to worship God through our work?

Do we seek to serve God and others in the way we work, the choices we make, what we say and do at work, how we treat other people?

In effect, the choice is actually between worshipping work or worshipping God through our work. Ironically, when we cut God off from our work, or eating, or relationships, we end up not making those things subject to his control, and we allow those things to replace God at the centre of our decision-making, as the source of our identity and pride and sense of security. We worship the created thing rather than the Creator.


This extract from Workship: How to Use Your Work to Worship God has been republished with permission. It can be purchased here

How to transform your workplace

As Christians, God has placed many of us in strategic positions in workplaces across industries, across the country, reaching millions of people. How can we make a difference for God in those places, and among those people, the majority of whom would never come through the doorway of a church?

Here are seven ideas:

  1. Pray
  2. Be hospitable
  3. Promote truth
  4. Make your workplace more beautiful
  5. Show compassion
  6. Change the cultural atmosphere
  7. Do excellent work
About the author

Kara Martin

Kara Martin is a project leader with Seed, a lecturer with Mary Andrews College, and formerly the Associate Dean of the Marketplace Institute at Ridley College in Melbourne, Australia. She has worked in media and communications, human resources, business analysis and policy development roles, and as a consultant. Kara has a particular passion for integrating our Christian faith and work. She is married to David, and they have two amazing adult children.

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