Seeking to Do the Lord’s Work

A seminary dean is inspired by a grocery clerk to look at his vocation in a new light.

Jeffrey Japinga

We have different gifts, according to the grace given to each of us…–Romans 12:6 (NIV)

I was at one of those large gatherings, in a room filled with people you know only by their name tags. When I asked a woman I’d just met one of the typical questions we all ask in settings like that–“What do you do?”–I expected a typical response in return.

But that’s not what I got.

She smiled and said quietly, “I bring hope to people who are hurting.”

With a little more digging, I got the answer I originally expected: She was a clerk in a grocery store. But she didn’t see her job simply as a job. It was also a way to use the gifts of hospitality and love God had given her to help make the world a better place.

And so, she said, she paid special attention to people who looked sad or careworn, and intentionally offered them a simple word of kindness. “I think it makes a difference,” she said.

What do I do? I’m a seminary dean, and with the academic year just starting, I’ve got a to-do list the length of my arm. If we met today, I could tell you all about that, and you could tell me your job title and functions too.

But because someone recently gave me an answer I didn’t expect, it’s helped me see my work in a whole new way.

What do I do? I use my gifts of administration and teaching to help prepare people for ministry and build up the kingdom of God. It doesn’t make my to-do list any shorter, but it does make it more compelling.

This Labor Day, why not ask yourself: What larger work has God called me to do? Then look for it.

Bless the work of our hands, Lord, that it may always bring you glory.

Share this story

Faith Over Fear Right Rail Ad 300x600

Community Newsletter

Get More Inspiration Delivered to Your Inbox

Scroll to Top