FB Pixel

It’s vacation season.

Across the country, people are counting down the days until they can step away from work. Some are boarding airplanes for destinations they have dreamed about for years. Others are packing up the family for a week at the lake. Many of us will just enjoy a slower pace at home, spending an evening on the back porch with a glass of lemonade instead of answering one more email or working one more shift.

There’s something refreshing about getting away from our daily routines. Vacations remind us that we need rest.

But they also raise an interesting question: Why do we work in the first place?

Investor Warren Buffett often challenges young people to “look for the job you would take if you didn’t need a job.” Most of us don’t have the luxury of choosing a career based solely on what sounds fun, but his comment points to something many people feel deep inside. We don’t just want a job that pays the bills. We want our work to matter.

But this desire didn’t come from a career coach or a self-help book. It came from God.

Many people assume work was part of the curse that came after Adam and Eve sinned. But the curse didn’t create work. It created weeds. It created frustration. It created aching backs, difficult coworkers, broken equipment, and all the other headaches that remind us we live in a fallen world.

But work came first.

Before sin entered the world, God placed Adam in the garden to “work it and take care of it” (Genesis 2:15). The Bible presents work as part of God’s good creation, not as a punishment. Paradise wasn’t a permanent vacation. Adam had responsibilities before there were thorns. He had purpose before there was pain.

That’s an important distinction. God didn’t invent work as punishment for our sin. What once had been joyful would now require sweat. The curse didn’t create work – it made work harder.

That changes the way we think about our jobs.

Work is one of God’s good gifts.

Why do so many people enjoy building a deck, planting a garden, baking bread, repairing an engine, teaching a child to read, writing a story, or serving a customer well? Why does finishing a project, even something like mowing the lawn or preparing a meal, bring satisfaction?

Because we were created by a God who works. We don’t work because the world is fallen. We work because God made us in His image.

From the opening pages of Scripture, we meet a Creator who brings order from chaos, beauty from emptiness, and life where there was none. And that is why we enjoy creating things. We like seeing our flowers bloom after planting them, balancing the books, fixing an engine, stepping back to admire a freshly painted room, or finally figuring out why the printer wouldn’t cooperate.

That doesn’t mean every day at work is exciting or enjoyable. Some jobs are repetitive. Some are physically exhausting. Some people are caring for aging parents around the clock. Some are raising little ones. Some are retired from their careers but busier than ever serving at church, volunteering in their community, or helping grandchildren.

The work looks different in every season, but the need to contribute never really goes away. Perhaps that is why vacations are refreshing. Vacation isn’t valuable because work is bad. It is valuable because rest is also part of God’s design. And it prepares us to return to our work refreshed and reminded of our purpose.

So enjoy every moment of your vacation. Explore, relax, and embrace the gift of rest. And when it comes to an end, don’t think of work as the interruption. Think of it as one of God’s original gifts – a chance to reflect the Creator who made us in His image and designed us with purpose from the very beginning.

Sign up to receive more hope from HOPE 100.7 via email.

"*" indicates required fields

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Be Notified of New Comments
Notify of
guest
0 Comments