“No man needs sympathy because he has to work, because he has a burden to carry. Far and away the best prize that life offers is the chance to work hard at work worth doing.”
ACTS 9:23-43
JOURNAL
Lately I have been thinking about how much time we waste. That thought really struck me while watching The American Experiment. Looking at those early generations, I realized they simply did not have time to waste. Everything required effort. Building a home, growing food, traveling, heating a house, washing clothes, repairing tools, even preparing a meal demanded hours of physical labor. Survival itself occupied the day. Idleness was not a normal way of life unless someone was sick, a drunk, or wealthy enough to avoid responsibility.
Today the opposite temptation exists. We have eliminated so much physical labor that we have created endless opportunities to waste our lives. Entire evenings disappear while staring at a phone. Hours are surrendered to entertainment without a second thought. In many ways, slothfulness has become socially acceptable. We have convinced ourselves that because we are busy, we are productive, when in reality much of our attention is simply being consumed.
Technology is an incredible blessing from God. It has removed countless hours of labor from our lives. But that blessing was never intended to create more idleness. It was meant to create more opportunity. If it once took an entire day to accomplish a task that now takes an hour, then that does not mean I have earned eleven hours of entertainment. It means I have been entrusted with eleven more hours to love, serve, build, teach, encourage, create, restore, solve problems, and glorify God. Every advancement should expand my capacity for meaningful work, not diminish it.
Roosevelt was right when he said that one of life's greatest prizes is the opportunity to work hard at work worth doing. God did not create me merely to be entertained. He created me to cultivate what He has entrusted to me. The blessing of God's Spirit is not given so I can pursue greater comfort. His Spirit empowers me to engage the world with greater purpose. The Spirit gives wisdom to solve problems, courage to face difficulties, compassion to love people, discipline to remain faithful, and strength to finish the work He has prepared for me.
That work is not limited to the extraordinary moments. In fact, most of God's work happens in the ordinary ones. Teaching a lesson well. Coaching a practice. Calling a customer. Mowing the yard. Washing dishes. Answering a text. Taking a walk. Reading Scripture. Writing a journal. Listening to a student. Praying with someone who is hurting. The small things are not interruptions to God's work. The small things are God's work.
That connects with today's reading. Job has been stripped of nearly everything. Family, friends, health, and dignity have all been taken from him, yet even in his suffering he continues wrestling with God. Paul stands on the opposite side of the story. After encountering Christ, he immediately throws himself into God's work. He does not pause to rebuild his reputation or worry about public opinion. He begins preaching so boldly that those who once welcomed him now seek to kill him.
Job's work is to remain faithful in suffering. Paul's work is to proclaim Christ despite persecution. Their assignments could not look more different, yet both are living fully within the purpose God has given them.
That reminds me there is no formula for following God. Sometimes obedience leads through blessing, sometimes through hardship. Sometimes God asks me to endure. Other times He asks me to advance boldly. The constant is not the circumstance. The constant is His presence and His purpose.
Psalm 23 says, "He guides me along the right paths for his name's sake." Those paths are rarely paths of idleness. They are paths of purposeful living. God is always leading somewhere. Even in the valley, He is leading. Even in seasons of peace, He is leading. My responsibility is not to predict the road. My responsibility is to walk it faithfully.
I want to see every day as a sacred trust. Every hour is an opportunity to become a conduit of God's power, love, and discipline. Every task, no matter how ordinary, is another chance to reflect His character. If God has blessed me with health, strength, knowledge, technology, and His Spirit, then those gifts are not meant to make life easier. They are meant to make me more useful.
The question at the end of the day is not whether I stayed busy. It is whether I faithfully invested what God placed in my hands. A life filled with small acts of faithful obedience is never a small life. It is the very way God changes the world.