http://www.theologyofwork.com

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Overview

The Theology of Work Project consists of members from across the spectrum of the Christian faith, working to explore, develop, record and disseminate a Theology of Work that will serve as a scaffold for researchers, writers, teachers and others to build upon.

The Theology of Work is intended to be:

1. rooted in the entire Bible, rather than only isolated texts
2. timeless, in the sense of elucidating truths about work in Christian perspective that do not depend on particularities of the work or the worker, which tend to change over time.
3. timely, in the sense of providing processes by which reliable answers can be developed for the myriad questions that arise in specific workplace situations, which tend to depend heavily on the particularities of the context in which they arise.
4. understandable to all of its intended audiences without requiring specialized theological terms.
5. as broadly acceptable as possible, without departing from orthodox/historical Christian theology.
6. cognizant of the major published works in the theology of work, whether in agreement or disagreement at various points.

The Need for the Theology of Work Project

Most people spend a major portion of their lives working. Since God is Lord of all that is, visible and invisible, then God must be surely also be the Lord of work. Therefore, Christian workers urgently need to know precisely how God is present and active in their work, or how God could be present and active in their work. In recent years hundreds of books, papers, curricula, magazines, courses, seminars and other materials have been produced to meet this need. Regrettably, there seems to be little common theological perspective among these materials. For example, some of them proclaim that a Christian's primary role in the workplace is to evangelize the people among whom they work, while others say that their primary role is to perform their job responsibilities excellently and ethically. Some state that sin is the chief problem in the workplace, which can only be remedied by confessing faith in Jesus Christ. Others barely mention sin at all, portraying vision or growth as the chief benefits of applying the Christian faith to the workplace. Writers in the field don't seem to hold a common idea of what the Christian faith means in the context of work, let alone how to apply it. Anyone perusing the faith-and-work shelf at the bookstore can easily end up confused, misled, or simply soured on the whole endeavor.

Perhaps because of this confusion, practitioners and scholars in related fields such as economics, management, and pastoral care, find it difficult to engage theology as a potential contributor to their work. For example, economists are increasingly aware that people do not always behave as rational, self-interested actors. While a theological perspective could contribute to a more accurate and complete understanding of economic behavior, an economist seeking help could benefit greatly from a well-developed foundational theology of work developed by people representing the breadth of the Christian faith.

Even when common theological ground is discovered among work/faith practitioners and theologians in one generation or one cultural context, the consensus has seldom been transmitted to later generations or to different cultures. Each generation and each culture has had to re-discover even the most basic elements of the theology of work, without effective help from those who have gone before, or those who labor with the same issues in other societies.

The Theology of Work Project is intended to offer a common theological foundation for writers, teachers and others in the field to anchor their particular research, development, application, writing, and teaching; not only for the present generation, but as a building block for the next generation to use, add to and strengthen. Fortunately, many of the beliefs and values crucial for applying faith to the workplace are shared by most Christians across generations and cultures, including such values as honesty, compassion, and fairness in business dealings.

The Audience for the Project

The Theology of Work Statement is intended first of all for people who write or develop materials or teach or guide Christians in non-church-related workplaces. Second, it is meant for theologically-savvy Christian workers, for people of other faiths (or of no faith) seeking to understand a Christian perspective on work, and for scholars and practitioners in related fields, including economics, management, government and law, who seek to engage Christian theology. Third, it is meant to offer people in the traditional Christian disciplines-such as Biblical studies, theology, preaching, education, pastoral care and counseling and missions-a theological perspective from which workplace-related writing, teaching, and practice can be conducted.

With this in mind, the Theology of Work Project does not intend to answer every question that arises in the realm of work, but rather to provide a foundational biblical perspective on work, answers to key questions in the theology of work, and processes by which workplace practitioners and those who assist them can find answers to particular questions that arise in the contexts of their daily work. The Format for the Project's output

The primary product is expected to be a website making use of open-source construction similar to Wikipedia, thereby granting access universally to the document. However other formats are possible: journal articles, a website, seminars or workshops, electonic media and perhaps others. It may be that an ongoing community engaged in the theology of work will also emerge form the Project. Criteria for the Project's work

The Theology of Work Statement is intended to be:

1. rooted in the entire Bible, rather than only isolated texts
2. timeless, in the sense of elucidating truths about work in Christian perspective that do not depend on particularities of the work or the worker, which tend to change over time.
3. timely, in the sense of providing processes by which reliable answers can be developed for the myriad questions that arise in specific workplace situations, which tend to depend heavily on the particularities of the context in which they arise.
4. understandable to all of its intended audiences without requiring specialized theological terms.
5. as broadly acceptable as possible, without departing from orthodox Christian theology.
6. cognizant of the major published works in the theology of work, whether in agreement or disagreement at various points.


The Project will conduct its work through three approaches, termed Exegetical, Key Topics, and Contextualized Processes. Most of the results produced by the Exegetical and the Key Topic approaches will have widespread application and universal, unchanging validity. For example, research on Genesis 3 may lead us to conclude that all legitimate work between the Fall and the New Creation is suffused with God’s presence, as well as marred by sin. Such a conclusion is universal in the sense that it does not depend on circumstances of particular work or workers. It is also constant or “timeless” in the sense that its validity does not change over time. The Exegetical and Key Topics approaches together are expected to lead to a relatively compact foundational theology of work, with an emphasis on the timeless, universal aspect of the Project’s criteria.

In contrast, the Contextualized Processes approach will develop processes or methods for people to find answers to their own questions arising in the workplace. A working Christian will face thousands of particular decisions in the course of a career.

In the Exegetical approach, the Bible is divided into a number of segments. Each section is assigned to a researcher/writer, who reads the section closely and catalogs every passage that might contribute significantly to the theology of work. The catalog will need to keep track of several kinds of passages: those that contribute directly to the theology of work, those that contribute indirectly, and those that provide important background for the theology of work.

Besides the Exegetical approach, the Project will also address Key Topics arising in the workplace. For example, a Key Topic might be, “Does God call people to work and/or to particular kinds of work or jobs?” a question asked by millions of Christian workers every day. Each topic will be assigned to a researcher/writer, who conducts the basic research and drafts the corresponding section of the Theology of Work. Researcher/writers working on Key Topics will make extensive use of books and articles in theology of work, business management and ethics literature, biblical commentaries, systematic theologies, and historic statements of faith. Because so many books and articles have been written touching on each of the Key Topics, the researcher/writers will have much material to guide — or misguide! —them. The most important part of their task may be sifting and weighing these materials in light of a fresh reading of the biblical passages relevant to their topic.

We recognize that it would be impossible to analyze every possible workplace situation in advance and have a prefabricated answer to every question that arises in the workplace. Therefore, the Contextualized Processes approach aims to give workers (and those who support them) one or more methods to find reliable, practical answers to questions that continually arise in the workplace. Specifically, we will develop models, frameworks, checklists, and/or methods that take the user step-by-step through the process of developing their own biblically-grounded, context-sensitive practical answer to any specific workplace issue. Researcher/writers in the Contextualized Processes approach will make use of theological methods and theology of work literature, systematic theologies, and books and articles by workplace Christians, and will try to learn from groups already engaged in similar processes in other fields.


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