[Gary Petty] I read one time that this was
something that was posted, a notice that was posted on an employee bulletin board at a
business. It says, "Due to increased competition and
a keen desire to stay in business, we find it necessary to institute a new policy. We're asking that somewhere between starting
time and quitting time and without infringing on the time devoted to lunch, coffee breaks,
rest periods, storytelling, tickets selling, vacation planning, and rehashing of gossip,
each employee endeavors to find some time to set aside as what we're calling the work
break. This may seem a radical innovation, but we
believe the idea has possibilities. It can conceivably be an aid to steady employment
and regular paychecks. While adoption to the work break is not compulsory,
it's hoped that each employee will find time to give it a fair trial." But the six years that I spent working in
radio advertising, I came in contact with a lot of different businesses, small businesses,
big businesses. And one of the problems they all had every
one of them was how do we find and keep good employees? That's a problem that they all faced. You say, "Okay, employees, what does that
have to do with what we're going to talk about today?" Are you a good employee? Do you work hard? "What's that have to do with my Christianity?" Actually, the Bible talks about having a work
ethic. What does that mean? What does it mean that we are to have a work
ethic? What does the Bible really teach us about
work? There's an interesting story that we find
in 2 Thessalonians 3. That Paul is making some personal comments
here to the people of Thessalonica about a problem that they had. Picking it up in verse 6. He says, "But we command you, brethren, in
the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, that you withdraw from every brother who walks disorderly
and not according to the tradition which you received from us." Now, these people were disorderly. And he's actually saying, you know, these
people have become so disorderly in the congregation that we're just suggesting you don't even
talk to them. That's a pretty strong statement. Like what in the world were they doing? I mean, disorderly means that they're causing
problems, they're destroying relationships. I mean, what in the world are these people
doing to cause that kind of problem? You think well, they must have some heresy,
you know that they're teaching or what are they doing? He says, "For you, yourselves know… He says… Let me give you an example here. "For you, yourselves know how you ought to
follow us." He's talking about him and some traveling
companions who had been with him when he went to actually visit the church of Thessalonica. "How you ought to follow us, for we were not
disorderly among you." Okay, well, we didn't create this problem
when we were there so we tried to show you an example. He says, "Nor did we eat anyone's bread free
of charge, but worked with labor and toil night and day, that we might not be a burden
to any of you, not because we did not have authority, to make ourselves example of how
you should follow us." So he uses himself as an example. He says, “You know, when I came there,”
with his ministerial companions, he says, “we didn't taking money from you to serve
you while we were there.” But they worked day and night. And of course, we know that he was a tentmaker. So he says, "We worked our own jobs and didn't
take money, even though we could have. I mean, it would only be ethically right for
the church to support us while we were there." But he says, "No, we didn't ask anything from
you." So there's a problem here he's getting to
that has to do with disorderly conduct. He says, "For even when we were with you,
we commanded you this: If anyone will not work, neither shall he eat. For we hear that there are some who walk among
you in a disorderly manner, not working at all, but they're busybodies. Now those who are such we command and exhort
through our Lord Jesus Christ that they work in quietness and eat their own bread." Boy, what kind of major problem were they
having? Now, I don't know exactly, but the cause was
that there was a large enough group of people in their congregation who just refused to
work. They just didn't work. And it says there were busybodies. They spent their time just meddling in everybody
else's business. So they were creating this constant problem
in the church. Which I mean, that seems sort of odd to us
today. I mean, I don't think I've ever been in a
congregation where I've seen this exact problem where you had a large number of people just
creating all this problem at church because they just refuse to work. But there's an important statement he makes
here. He says, "For even when we were with you…" I'm sorry, he says, "For if they shall not
work, they shall not eat… If anyone will not work, neither shall he
eat.” That's the point he's making. Now, the Bible is very clear in the absolute
command to take care of the poor. Everyone has a responsibility to take care
of the poor. Poor people who are there because some calamity
has happened, because maybe they just don't have the skills to get certain jobs. Maybe they… you know, there's all kinds
of reasons why someone could be poor. And the church is given and ancient Israel
were given explicit commands to help take care of poor people. What Paul says here is, if a person is poor
because they won't work, you don't take care of them. Now, that seems strange too in the society
we live in. And why would he say that? If the person is hungry, and he says no if
it's because they refuse to eat, let them get hungry, and then they will go work. Let them get hungry then they'll go work. So he's making a point here. Now, once again, we have to put this in the
context of why he makes this statement. There is in the congregation a group of people
who cause nothing but problems in the church. They're meddling in everybody else's business
or probably just showing up at people's houses expecting to be taken care of. Although I have had… I have had as a pastor, a few people that
do that. I've come across people who will go from church
to church. And they'll come in and they'll spend three-four
months in a church living with people, being taken care of by people always saying they're
going to get a job. Sometimes I've seen it go on for six months
and the people will take them in. A lot of times it's older people. Then they'll wear out there welcome there,
and go someplace else. And eventually, it comes down to this person
doesn't even look for a job. And so you have a conversation and say, look,
"You just can't come in and take advantage of these people." I mean, in some cases, large amounts of money
were given to then and then they disappear. Then I get an email from another pastor that
says, "Hey, so and so has showed up at my church and they just moved in with a couple
of the elderly people." And I've seen men… it's always men. But I've seen men be able to do this sometimes
for a couple of years before they get caught. Now, Paul would say, "Sorry, you don't work,
you don't eat. We don't give you anything. You don't work, you don't receive shelter." He's talking about Christians taking care
of Christians here. He says, "If you refuse to do certain things,
then the church is not to take care of you." So this means work is important. This is an extreme example but this is where
I want to start. It must be important for Paul to make these
instructions to a church. If a person refuses to work, it's not that
they can't work, or maybe they just don't have a lot of skills or whatever. And you know, they're doing the best they
can, maybe they have a real low paying job because that's all they can do then we're
supposed to take care of them, help them. “But if they refuse to work,” he says,
“then you don't take care of them.” So work is important. Work is an important part of who we are because
work is part of our Christian character. Now, I'm going to talk about being a workaholic
here. I might mention a couple of times. Being a workaholic is the other end of the
scale. Being a workaholic is spiritually wrong also. When we put ourselves into our work so much
that we're not having a right relationship with God, we're not taking care of our families,
we're not taking care of ourselves. And recreation is part of life. Fun is part of life. So that's that other extreme. But usually, we as human beings tend to fall
on the sort of lazy side than the workaholic side. So we're going to talk about work today. Because it is an ethical issue. Now, I will say this when I talk about work
here, and I've seen this happen in the church. I've actually had people come to me and want
to counsel because they'll say, "You know, I realized that I'm preparing for the Kingdom
of God. And since I'm preparing for the kingdom of
God, I'm just a" and you can fill in the blank. “I'm just a construction worker. I'm just a salesman. I'm just a housewife. I'm just a office worker.” And whatever they fill in and they say, "Probably
I need to get another job to prepare for the Kingdom of God." Your career isn't the issue, it's your work
ethic that's the issue. It's your work ethic that's the issue, not
what you're doing. I used to tell my kids, "Find out what you're
really good at, that makes you happy and go become the best at it. You may not make the most money, but you will
be happy." When you're doing work you love, you're happy. Now, unfortunately, every job has drudgery. We'll talk about that in a minute. And you can be trapped at a job sometimes
for a while that you hate. Okay, what do you do with that? Well, we'll talk about that in a minute, too. These are all real issues. This is practical Christianity, practical
Christianity. So it doesn't matter what job you do. God doesn't care if you're an architect. God doesn't care if you're a boss with 100
people. God doesn’t… Well, I say He doesn't care. What's really interesting is go through all
the scriptures about employers. There are lots of scriptures in the Old and
New Testament about employers. There's one of the laws in the Old Testament
that says, "If you withhold your wages that you owe people as an employer, God will punish
you." Is that a little scary? God says, "I hold that, personally, that's
a personal issue. If people work for you, and you hold back
their wages, then that's personal between Me and you. I will deal with that." So there's a lot of instructions about bosses
and employers. But we're going to talk about employees today. Most of us are employees. There's a few here that might own your own
business, but most of us do not. So what does the Bible teach about work? You know, I talked about your jobs. Most people will have multiple jobs in a lifetime. What's really different than say 50 years
ago, my dad, his dad, back then, most people had one career. Many times they worked for the same company
their entire lives. That's not true today. Most of you, if you're young, you're going
to have more than one career. You actually have more than one career. You may start out in something and end up
doing something totally different by the end of your life. In fact, the average person today will have
three different careers. Now, we're not talking about three different
jobs. You may have a career which you work for three
or four different companies, and then another career and you work for three or four different
companies. So it's changed from… it used to be you
get hired by somebody, you work for that same company maybe your whole life. It's not that way anymore. Remember, it's not the specific job. It's the work ethic that's the Christian part
of what you do. God doesn't care if you're a farmer. Be a good farmer. Like I used to tell my son he loved working
on cars, I said, "Go be a car mechanic." "I can't make a lot of money." "Just go be the best car mechanic you can
be." Now, he's selling insurance and loves it. So I was wrong on that one. I used to tell my kids, "I can't determine
what you're going to do, you have to decide that. You have to decide what you're going to do
because it's your life, it's not mine." So, learn the work ethic, and you're going
to be pretty much successful in everything you do. Now, I say successful, even if you do it right,
bad things happen. In preparing this, I looked up probably 10
websites. They were business websites. They were management websites. One was a college website giving advice to
students on reasons people get fired. And, you know, the number one was they just
don't do their job. Like, number two was people fall asleep. That kept showing up all over. People sleep, you know. Number three was they're spending all their
day on their cell phone, or, you know, they're just not involved in their work. There was all these reasons. But then I saw another list from a business
magazine. It was pretty interesting. It said, "We're going to tell you some other
reasons why people get fired. The boss wants to give the job to his nephew,”
okay. And then there were reasons why you get fired,
which you are doing a great job and your manager becomes absolutely jealous of you and gets
you fired. And I've known people that have gone through
that. Got fired because they were doing a good job,
and somebody got jealous. So, okay, life, you know, there's no magic
pill that says do this equals perfect success, that's not life. Sometimes you do it right and something bad
happens. The difference is when you're doing it right
you will find something else to do. You can recover from the problem if you're
doing it right. If you're doing it wrong… I mean, you get fired from someplace three
or four times just because it says you're insubordinate. You just aren't going to listen to your boss. You think he's an idiot, and you've been fired
from three places because you think the boss is an idiot. Guess what the next boss is going to do, not
hire you, right? They don't want to put up with that. So if you do it the right way, you have a
much better chance of recovering from the bad things when they happen. Do it the wrong way and sooner or later you
dig yourself in a hole. What does the Bible say about work? Let's go to Colossians. Say well, this isn't a spiritual issue. Whether I daydream on the job, whether I play
video games on the job when I should doing something else, that's not a spiritual issue. Colossians 3:22. Bondservants, now bondservants, so that was
you worked for somebody because you owed them something. This is a type of employership. I mean, there were businesses in the Roman
Empire where they hired employees. There were people that had bondservants. In other words, "you owe me something so you
got to work for me." There were people who… if you were craftsmen,
especially, you would be hired out to different people. Of course, they had slaves, too. So Paul is just talking to a class of people
that work for other people. He says, "Obey in all things your masters
according to the flesh,” what? Now, not if they tell you to do something
against God. Now, if your employer tells you to do something
dishonest, you say, "No." And sooner or later, most of us have had to
face that. I've had to face it earlier in my life. Or you just say, "I can't do that. That's immoral. That's wrong, whatever you're asking me to
do." I remember one radio station… I probably should have mentioned this before. I was really supposed to go date all the young
girls that worked at the advertising agencies after… you know, not date, just go to the
bar with them. I said, "I got a pregnant wife at home. I'm not going to go out after work and take
these young single women to a bar." He said, "Well, you don't have to let them
know you won't do anything." That's literally what I was told. "Just, you know, have some fun with them and
then you get the account." And I said, "I don't want the account that
bad." The owner of that radio station told me you
know… it was the number one radio station in Austin, Texas. He said, "You know, you're a nice guy and
in my experience, nice guys don't make it in a lot of companies." I didn't. So you obey them in their job what they're
telling you to do not with eye service as men-pleasers. In other words, you're not doing this because
you just want to get on the good side of your boss. But in sincerity of heart. In other words, you do your job, you do it
because you want to do the job right. Why? Because you're fearing God. "And whatever you do, do it heartily as to
the Lord and not to men knowing that from the Lord you will receive the reward of the
inheritance for you serve the Lord Jesus Christ." What? He makes this a spiritual issue. When you go to work, you give all that you
have because you think that you're serving God. "I'm serving God." Why would you do that? Because to your employer, to the people you
work with you are representing God to them. Believe me, they all figure out you're a little
bit different. They know your religion is a little bit different. Wherever you are, you represent God. And it's that way when you go to work. So when you go to work you give everything
you have. Look what it says in 1 Timothy. Here, Paul writing once again, 1 Timothy 6. He really spells it out here. He says, "Let as many bondservants as are
under the yoke…” in other words, sometimes when you work with somebody else, you're under
a yoke, right? You don't show up on time. And by the way, that's one of the reasons
that kept coming up, people were getting fired. Now, certain companies are very loose with
that policy, certain aren't. And if you work for a company and said, "What
time we start?" "Oh, 9, 9:30, you know, just sort of whenever
you come in." And there's companies like that. Then you get a company that says, "We expect
you here at 8:30." And you're there at 8:40 and they fire you. And you can say, "Well, the last company was
like this. This isn't fair." And they say, "But you don't work with the
last company. You work for us." And so it is a yoke to work for other people. Now it doesn't mean it can't be fun. I mean, I enjoy being a pastor. No, I love being a pastor. But there are days where it's tough. There's days where it's tough. He says, “yoke count their own masters worthy
of all honor." Why? I mean, all of us here have worked for some
person that you know, wasn't worthy of honor, right? We've all been there. So why would you do that? And here's why. "So that the name of God and His teachings
will not be blasphemed." So that the name of God won't be blasphemed. They may say, "I don't like you." They may not like you because you are so honest. They may not like you because you are obeying
God, but God won't be blasphemed. And that's why I said, when you go to work,
you represent God. When you go to work, you are there your work
ethic is part of your Christianity. So yeah, we should talk about this. Yes, it is important. And yes, it is one of the keys to success. And sometimes younger people, you know, struggle
with… you know, we all did when… Although I didn't. When I was young, I figured out somehow, I
don't know why, when I was about 15 years old, I made a list of all the things I wanted
to do in life. You know, get baptized. Find me a good woman that will take me, have
children. Okay, that was number three. After that, it was work in radio, become a
television talk show host, become an author of books, work as a reporter for… I had all these things I was going to do. Some of them I've done, I tell you what, being
a minister wasn't on the list. Some I've done. Some I haven't. But we all struggle with, "What am I supposed
to do with my life?" You will have lots of choices in life and
you probably… whatever choice you make at 18, you're going to change. The important thing is, what is your work
ethic? Because you can change. I mean, I've known people who were doctors
and became something else at age 30 and have been very successful. They were successful doctors. Now, they're successful with something else. I mean, what a change. You become a doctor at 28, at 35 you change
jobs. You can have lots of choices in life. The important thing is if you learn how to
work, you actually are equipped to make those choices. And you'll be equipped to make the changes
if you want to. If you don't know how to work, you don't have
the ability to make the changes. There are people who are trapped in jobs because
they've never learned how to work and they can't get out of it. It's all they can do. Now, some people, it depends on your personality. You find a job and you like it, and you stay
in it for the rest of your life. And that's great too. But you have the equipment to make the decision. You see what I mean? You have the ability to make those decisions
because your character is right, your work ethic is right. Otherwise, other people make those decisions
for you. So that's what this is about. And so you are following God. You are doing this because you represent God. Now, that would change a lot of things, how
you handle a lot of things at work. So that's the first point I want to make. You know, when you go to work, you're going
to work there as a representative of God. Now, you have to accept that. If you don't accept that it's like everything
else. You either accept you're a Christian or not,
but we shouldn't call ourselves Christian if we don't believe that we are followers
of Christ and represent Christ. If we're Christians, we're representing. What we do at work counts. What we do at work matters. I mean, you spend 8 hours, you know, 40 hours
a week at least at work probably more. And a lot of even your happiness depends on
what happens when you work. You know, a lot of times people will drag
home their problems from work and bring them home and have a rotten marriage because of
the problems they have at work. Especially if they're both working, they both
drag it home and, you know, one can't help the other and they're unhappy. And the real issue sometimes isn't the marriage. The real issue is what's happening at work. The second point… Now, we're going to get down to some real
practical… the first thing here is a little bit conceptual. We work to represent God. Okay, so that means what I do is important. The second is that a proper work ethic requires
that there's a list, you accomplish the work that is assigned to you in the way that it
has been assigned to you and in the time allotted. Here's your job, do it this way and do it
in this amount of time. Now, sometimes you go back and say, "Hey,
this way doesn't work." Sometimes you go back and say, "Hey, I can't
do it in this amount of time." Sometimes you go back and say, "Hey, I finished
early so I didn't go to sleep, or I didn't sit around and, you know, just call up and
look at pictures of puppies. Instead, I've come and said, "What do you
want me to do next boss?" I mean, one of the reasons we hate work so
much is we get bored because we're bored with what we're doing. You're never bored when you're locked into
doing something and you're putting your effort into it. Proverbs 26. Here's where it shows laziness is a moral
deficiency. It is a moral problem. Proverbs 26:13, "The lazy man says, ‘There's
a lion in this road! A fierce lion in the streets!” In other words, "I can't go outside." They have an excuse for everything. I mean, the excuse is there's a lion in the
street is silly. There's a lion in the street, it doesn't matter. In other words, the excuse doesn't matter. "I'm just not going to do it. I just make up an excuse." "As the door turns on its hinges, so does
the lazy man on his bed." I love that one. You know, you've heard an old creaky door
that's all rusty and will hardly open. Although I have to admit it at 63 there's
days that getting out of bed is like that. But it's literal, because that's the sound
of my joints, okay. But we have to make ourselves get up and go. And there's a few people, most of us really
can't believe it, they just wake up, jump out of bed. They're happy. They're ready to go. And it's, like, the rest of us, we just sort
of walk around in a stupor for a while, and grunt for coffee and, you know. But you make yourself do it. More people have lost jobs because they simply
won't make themselves do it. And he calls this a lazy person. "The lazy man buries his hand in the bowl;
and wearies him to bring it back to his mouth." Now you can imagine, you take your spoon and
you stick it in the bowl and you just sit and stare and say, "Would someone feed me
please?" It's an absurdity to this. "The lazy man is wiser in his own eyes than
seven men who can answer sensibly." And that's very true. The more lazy we are, the more reasons we
have for being lazy, the more reasons why it's somebody else's fault. And the more reasons why, everybody that tells
us, "No, that's not how the way it works," we say they're either wrong or they don't
understand, or "Hey, get out of my face. You're oppressing me." And so we stay the way we are. So there is an amount of effort that we have
to put into this. A small business had a sign hanging on the
wall that said, "If you don't believe the dead come back to life, you've never been
here at quitting time." You know, all work does have some drudgery. I mean, I have to admit, when I'm doing paperwork
sometimes, I'd rather be out visiting people or, you know, working on a Bible study. I have certain paperwork I have to do. But it has to be done. So you pile through it, you know. I'll tell my wife, "I'm going up to my office. I'll be up there for three hours. I'm doing paperwork." And I find out when I tell her that she won't
even talk to me for three hours. It's, like, "He's up there. Leave him alone." But you got to plow through it, you got to
make yourself do it. It has to be done. There is a point we have to face no matter
what the job you have. And sometimes when you start out in a job,
you know, they give you the worst jobs to begin with then you have to do the worst jobs. I think I've mentioned this before I worked… In the Worldwide Church of God, I worked in
SCP. And I worked two summers, where I was in charge
of the janitorial crew. Now, one of the things we had to do was the
bathhouses every morning after hundreds of teenagers went in and destroyed it. We would get a dorm of maybe, you know, 30
teenagers, and now we had to go clean up something that was, like, out of a horror movie. I can't explain what 200 teenagers will do
to a bathhouse, okay. And they would all be, I mean, griping and
complaining. They didn't want to go in, So I had to give
them the little speech all the time. That little speech was, "in life, you're going
to be asked to do things you don't want to do. We have an hour to do this. We can go make this a game and I am…" the
other two people I had working with me "we'll go in and help you do it. We'll get right…" I mean, the toilets were always clogged up. It was just horrible. "We will help you do this. And if we work as a team, and you do what
we say, we'll be done in a half-hour. And then the other half hour, you have off. You can do whatever you want. You can go sit around." You know, all they ever wanted to do when
they were done was just is sit around and talk. "You can do that. If you don't, you'll be here the full hour
and only half the job will be done and you will hate it every minute." And so we would go in, and for, you know,
20 minutes to a half-hour, we told them how to work as a team, we told them what to do,
how to motivate each other. When one person slacks, everybody's got to
make them work. And you know, they were always done in a half-hour. And then they had a half-hour off. Well, I can't say always. Because sometimes you get a group that just
wouldn't do it. And an hour later, they were mad and grumpy. They'd be mad and grumpy the whole rest of
the morning. They were upset. They hated it. How dare people make them have to do this? And they were miserable. Now, everybody had the same job and it was
just as bad for everybody. And you know, some groups came out of there,
fired up ready to go, "Hey, man, we got a half-hour." Other groups after an hour were, "We hated
this." And you know, it would take them a long time
to get over it. The idea is at times, we just have to say,
"The job has to be done," and we throw ourselves into it completely. Many years later, I had a man come up to me
and say, "Hey, you changed my life." I said, "I did. How did I ever change your life?" He said, "At SCP, that little talk you gave
to us every time when we had to go in and clean out the bathhouse." I said, "Yeah?" He said, "I applied that to my life." And he says, "Now I own my own business and
I'm quite wealthy." You simply attack the job at hand. And then you go do something else. But you attack the worst job by attacking
it. You go into it. You do your work. Now, work ethic requires that you accomplish
the work assigned to you, the way that it has been assigned, and in the time allotted. And so you do it. The third point, a proper work ethic requires
you use your time to give your employee a full day's work. You give them a full day's work. Say, "Yeah, but sometimes, you know, eight
hours is a long time." I understand. But when I started to look at the reason people
get fired, and so many of the times is because they're not working. They're talking, they're gossiping, they're
texting, they're doing all different kinds of things. Understand this, what if a friend of yours
said, "Here. I can't go to the store. I'm going to give you $100 to go to the store
and get all this stuff for me. Here's a $100. And since you're doing this for me, and it's
so nice, you know, get yourself some lunch." You say, "Okay," and you took their $100. And you're supposed to be back in an hour. You come back three hours later and instead
of the list, you have two things in a bag. And they say, "Well, wait a minute, you know,
I had all this stuff." And you say, "Yeah, but, you know, I was having
such a good time at lunch, picked up a couple of other friends and we used your money buying
lunch and all I had enough was to get you this." You'd say, "You stole my money," right? If someone did that to you wouldn't you say,
"You stole my money?" When you go and work for a person and agree
to work for them for a certain amount of money, and you don't give them a full day's work,
I don't care how much the money is, the money isn't the issue. It's you that's the issue, who you are. And you don't give them a full day's work,
you're stealing from the employer. You're stealing their time. "Here. I'm going to pay you to work for me." "Thank you. I'll take the money and I won't work." It's stealing. There's a point of dishonesty here. So we don't think that way. There's a point of dishonesty. Ways that we waste time at work. "Oh good, another survey." No, I'm going to go to the Bible. Proverbs 14, a couple of places in Proverbs. Proverbs 14. There's a lot of benefits to work in our character
and even some happiness. We'll talk about that in a minute. Proverbs 14:23. "In all labor, there is profit." There's a benefit from work. And once again, being a workaholic isn't the
issue here. It's working that's the issue. When you are supposed to work you work. "In all labor there's profit, but an idle
chatter leads only to poverty." In other words, you spend all your time talking
at work, on your computer at work, unless you're working on a computer, obviously, texting
at work, sharing all your different plans and, you know, getting together all the people
you're going out to dinner with afterwards, and you do all that while at work. You can end up in poverty because you're not
going to have a job. You say, "Boy, that employer sure is mean
and tough. What's their problem?" Now, remember, they paid you to work. They offered you money to work and you agreed
to it. If you don't like the agreement, quit but
don't steal from them. You know, you're going to get in a bad job
some point in life too. Once again, if you have the right character,
if you have the tools, you'll be able to get out of a bad job. If you don't have the tools, guess what happens? "I can't get out of a bad job because I can't
get any job," or you quit and end up what, doing nothing. I've seen people quit jobs. I knew a man one time who had been fired… I don't remember the exact number… It's been so many years ago. This was, like, 35 years ago. But I think he'd been fired from 12 jobs in
16 years all because of the Sabbath. I don't believe that. You might lose a job or two over the Sabbath,
but if you're a good employee, you're going to find a job someplace. I think he's a bad employee. Now, a couple of times might be over the sabbath
but I don't believe all of them were. Look at Proverbs 12:11. "He who tills his land will be satisfied with
bread, but he who follows frivolity is devoid of understanding." In otherwise words, he who just…"All I want
to do is have fun." Well, there's a time for fun, by the way,
God is not against fun. There's a time for fun. And it's great when your work is fun, too. I mean, I have fun times at my job sometimes,
and sometimes it's not. But when you just pursue having fun, instead
of getting joy out of your work, he says, you don't understand what's going to happen
to you. It doesn't work that way. Proverbs 19:15 "Laziness casts one into a
deep sleep, and an idle person will suffer hunger." In other words, when we are lazy, you know
what happens? We get tired all the time. We lose a desire to achieve anything. Part of work is achieving something. It's achieving something. Now, some of you remember a couple of years
ago, I kept using the example of how I told my wife I would paint the bathroom and then
didn't do it. Okay. Well, I don't know, about nine months ago,
I painted the bathroom, okay. But I have to tell you when I finished painting
the bathroom… she wasn't there I thought I'd surprise her. And I looked around and I thought, "I really
feel good about this." And then she walked in and said, "It needs
another coat." So I put another coat on, and I felt good
about that, too, right. When you accomplish something, you feel good
and that is worth… You know, sometimes you don't work because
of your boss and you don't work because of the money. Sometimes you work because in the end, "I
did a good job. I did that." It's your character that counts. It's who you are that counts. And so you do what's right. Otherwise, you just get… the more lazy you
are… Here's the strangest thing. You ever say, "Oh, I wish I had a day off
with nothing to do." Yeah, I do that and every once in a while
I try to take a day off with nothing to do. And it's okay for a while then I start getting
antsy and sort of nervous and sort of crazy like and then… then I have to tell myself,
"Settle down. There's work to do tomorrow. It's okay." So you can't be a workaholic either. But it's funny, if I had nothing to do all
the time, I'd be miserable. Wouldn't you? If you had nothing, no goals, nothing to do,
nothing to achieve, you'd be miserable. "Oh, I just wish somebody would take care
of me." No, you don't, you wouldn't live life with
somebody just taking care of you every moment. We're not designed to be that way. We're designed to go work and produce and
achieve. All of us are every human being. Or we just get sleepy. A fourth point is that a proper work ethic
means that we exhibit a very high standard of honesty and morality. Let's go to Titus 2. Titus 2, I'm going to read this from the NIV. In the King James, it says bondservants here
which is more of an employee relationship. But here in this translation… this is Titus
2:9. "Teach slaves to be subject to their masters
in everything, to try to please them, not talk back to them." Okay, you just don't talk back to your employer
all the time. Now, that doesn't mean you shouldn't give
good suggestions. Most employers want a good… I mean, you might get some hard-nosed person
that doesn't. But most employers want a good suggestion
if they can see it's good. "Hey, if we do this would this make this better?" You know, because they know you now hey, you're
concerned about the job. You're concerned about what you're doing. Your work is important to you. But he says, "And not to steal from them,
but to show that they can be fully trusted, so that in every way they will make the teaching
about God our Savior attractive." He says you be so honest, such a good upstanding
person, such a moral person, that you make Christianity attractive to pagans. "Boy, I wish I had more Christians like you
working, you know, for me because you're good workers. I can trust you, people. You're not going to steal from me. I'm not going to have to worry because I can't
figure out why.” You know, “I just bought a box of copy paper
and half of it it's gone." "Oh yeah, I took it home. You know, my kids use it." That's stealing. And so we are to make… It's so fascinating here. Paul over and over again says, remember when
you're out there working who you represent. Be moral and be honest. We should be very, very, very honest. And don't think they don't notice. People notice whether you're honest or not. They do. They will notice whether you're honest or
not. And this is more important than your job title. This is more important than how much money
you make, your honesty. I've seen Christians sacrifice their honesty
for more money, or sacrifice their honesty to get a higher position. And that's not what this is about. That higher position or more money means nothing
to God. Honesty means something to God. So don't buy into this sort of American dream. "The more power and money I have, the more
important I am to God," because that's not true. It's just not true. It's who you are as His child that's important
to Him. Let me just sort of wrap up with a few things
here. Why do we work then? Okay, we work to… What's our benefit, if you will, from working? Constructive work gives us a sense of purpose
and a sense of accomplishment in your daily life. You know, I'm 63. I know a lot of men and women that retire
at 65. I couldn't imagine retiring at 65. I can't even imagine… I’ve got so much more to accomplish. In fact, I'm getting to the place that I'm
even more serious about what I have to accomplish because, well, you know, I don't have a lot
of time left here. I'm going to live another 30 years. I got more things to accomplish. And so this constructive work gives us a sense
of accomplishment. Even if our boss… see once again it's you
get a benefit from working. What did God tell Adam and Eve? Go to Genesis 2:15. Genesis 2. It's a very important passage here. "Then the Lord God took the man and put him
in the Garden of Eden to tend it and to keep it." "You are to work this garden." He didn't say, “Oh, here's the garden. It'll sort of grow itself. Just let everything run wild, it'll be fine." He says, "You are to tend it and to keep it." "You have work to do here, son, and you're
going to like working. You're going to get up in the morning and
you're going to enjoy going out and tending the garden." Without a sense of accomplishment, without
things to do, Adam would have been bored, even in Eden. We are designed to accomplish things. There's a study that was done in Harvard. And it's an interesting study because the
first time I read of this study was in the 1980s. And it had started kind of back in the 1940s. I just read this week because I was looking
at the study. The study continues on. Some of the people involved in this study
in the 1940s are still alive and they're still studying them, these people at Harvard. The people who started the original study
are all dead it's new, but they've been studying these… I think it was 465 boys. And they were all from inner-city, Boston. And they had all different backgrounds, and
all different economic backgrounds, and educational backgrounds, and ethnic backgrounds. You know, they're just from all over the place. And so they started to go through them. What were they like at 15 or where were they
at 25? So in the 1980s, these guys are in their 40s
and 50s. Well, they're in their 50s at this point. And they found some very interesting things. Now, as they continued on as they got older,
into their ‘70s and ‘80s now, and '90s, they found that there were two things that
changed their lives more than anything. One was the quality of relationships they
had when they were younger. Were there adults who loved them or not? Oh, yeah that makes sense, doesn't it? That was the most… The number one impact on their lives, whether
there were adults that loved them and interacted with them as children. The second one was whether they had work to
do as a child. You say, "Oh, we just put our kids in the
salt mines." This was as simple as mowing the grass. It was as simple as cleaning your room. And in doing so, they found out that these
young boys who had interactive relationships, people who actually
cared for them, and taught them and interacted with them, and then they were made to work. Those were the two greatest factors in their
success of life and how happy they were. People who work and put themselves into their
work are happier. They're not bored. They have purpose. And like I said, these jobs were just… "Okay, you're 15. Go get a job," you know. No. It could be as simple as, "Okay, you have
chores, and you have to take out the garbage and you participate in what the family does." Or sometimes a lot… These boys came from broken families. Still, there was always some adults somewhere
that interacted with them in a positive way. And they always had some value in their work. "I'm producing something, and as I produce
something, I have value. I produce something and therefore I have value." And as they grew up that changed their lives. One of the greatest gifts you can give your
children… the greatest gift you can give your children is your love and your time. A second greatest gift you can give them is
teaching them God's way. Now, you have to give them love and time before
you can teach them God's way. "Okay, we're going to have school today. I'm going to teach you God's way and the rest
of the time I'm going to ignore you." That doesn't work. You give them love and time first, and that
builds the relationship that you can say, "let me tell you about God," and it means
something. If we don't give our children of ourselves,
then somebody else gives them of themselves. And it's probably be the other kid next door. You see what I mean? We can't let other people raise our children. We have to give them our love and our time. Then the second most important thing you could
do is give them God's way and teach it and live it for them. And the third most important thing you can
do, make them do some chores, make them do some work. That there's purpose in work. There's meaning and work. I could remember my dad telling me… we’re
sanding floors, which is hard work. I was a teenager. He said, yeah, he says, "I worked hard, worked
hard. My dad pushed me and pushed me. Because he was pushing me all the time. “Do this better. Work harder, do this,” you know, just all
the time. He said that one day, he said, “Okay, you
got to finish this job.” And he left. And he said, I thought, "Good. I'm going to take a cigarette break." Because he was a chain smoker before he came
into the Church. He said, “But I couldn't. I tried, and I couldn't light it I had to
go finish the job." So when I was about 17, one day he said, "You
got to finish the job." I said, "Oh, good." And when he showed up I'm just finishing it. And he said, "Yeah, that's what I figured
how long would it take you to finish it." I thought, "Yeah, I just finished the job." He did the same thing to me that his dad did
to him. We have to realize we teach them to work. And I sure was proud of that floor. I still remember it. I still remember that it was a Lebanese club
and they had, like, a meeting room, ballroom in it. And that looked like a sheet of glass. That floor had been just sanded perfectly
and finished perfectly. And it looked like… And I still remember that. I was probably 17 years old. I don't remember any of the girls when I was
17. But I remember that floor. A secondary reason we work is to support our
families. This is important to God. 1 Timothy 5:8. I don't remember any girls because it seems
to me that I've been married… it seems to me, I've known my wife since I was a baby. It seems somehow we've been connected since
we were children. I know that's not true. But it seems to me that way. So I don't remember anybody else. Yeah, she's always been there. 1 Timothy 5:8. "But if anyone does not provide for his own,
and especially for those of his own house, he has denied the faith and is worse than
an unbeliever." Think about that statement. If you can work… Now, once again, sometimes we can't work or
sometimes we're limited at what we can do or sometimes we just don't have opportunities. I mean, sometimes you look at some… Darris McNeely just got back from a trip to
Africa. And some of those people are doing as hard
as they can and there's only so much money they can bring in. You can work 15 hours a day and you're never
going to get out of a dirt hut. But they work, you know. You do your part. He's saying here the person says, "Nah, take
care of me." He says you're worse than a person that's
not even a Christian. See how much he ties this into our Christianity? We have responsibilities. We work for other people. You know, and I will speak to the young men
here. Guys, young men, when you marry and you have
children, and especially if your wife says, "I need to stay home and take care of those
children," your God-given responsibility is to take care of them. I don't care what the cost. If we can't do that don't get married and
don't have children. Be man enough not to do it. Our responsibility is to take care of those
if they need us. And, you know, sometimes women will have careers
and then have two or three children say, "I can't do this. I can't do both of them." And we man up. How many hours a week do you work to do that? As many as it takes. As many as it takes. That's what we do. And if we aren't willing to do that, you're
not worthy of a wife. It's that simple. That's what Paul is saying. There's a loss of manhood that I'm concerned
with. We sacrifice what we have to sacrifice for
our families. That's part of work. Now, fortunately, hopefully, you have a job
you don't have to do all that. But believe me, I know years ago, when I was
a kid, I saw men work two or three jobs to feed a family, not because they had a great
career. They worked two or three jobs just to feed
a family. They would do whatever it took. People had bigger families. The woman couldn't work. She had six kids. And that's what they did. Did they want to work three jobs? No. Why did they do it? It's what we do. We work to help those who are in financial
need. I know sometimes some of these ideas are not
popular in our society. The destruction of manhood is one of the most
terrible things that's happened to our country. And now what's happening is destruction of
womanhood. I mean, what God expects of women. If you destroy the men, what are the women
going to do, right, what choice do they have? And now where we have little three-year-olds
that have decided that they're of a different sex. And parents who say, "Okay." A society cannot survive that, understand
that. A society cannot survive that. Oh, it won't fall tomorrow, but it will fall. That is totally against the way anything is
worked. Even the pagans knew that much. Even the ancient pagans knew that much. Ephesians 4:28, "Let him who stole steal no
more." So he's just telling people in church look,
you got to change your… you know, if you used to be a thief, you're a Christian now. You got to stop being a thief. But notice what he says, "But rather let him
labor, working with his hands, what is good, that he may have something to give him who
has need." Paul actually says to people in the Church,
"Okay, not stealing is the letter of the law. You and I have to go way beyond the letter
of the law." He says, "Go work so you can help somebody
else and give them a hand up. Go work so you can give to somebody else. Somebody gives you a hand up you go work and
get somebody…" It's not, like, "Oh, good, somebody give me
a hand up," keep giving your hand out. No. If someone gives you a hand up you go work
and give somebody else a hand up. You and I are required by God to help each
other in our times of need, and our times of poverty, and our times of old age, and
our times of widowhood. We are required to help each other. It's at the center of God's way, that kind
of love. And he says, start in the Church of God's,
start in the house of God. And obviously with our own families, whether
they're in the Church or not. That's where we just start. And then the last reason, of course, is you
and I have a duty to pay tithes and offerings to God. It's a duty. We should work because we wish to fulfill
that duty. The work habits we form are part of our character. It's part of who we are. This is practical Christianity. "Wow, you've made looking at my cell phone,
at my desk, some church issue." "No, it's practical Christianity. This isn't a church issue. It's Christianity issue." Work is important. And every day you have an opportunity when
you go to work to be dependable and responsible and to show people what a Christian looks
like. We're honest, we work hard, we're trustworthy. Those are all words that came up in what we've
talked about here. Also, you could be a whole lot happier when
you just work hard. I don't care what it is. Scrubbing floors, cleaning toilets. I mean I think of all the things I've done
in my life, sanding floors, painting houses. Well, I did have one job I failed miserably
at. It was being a roofer. And the guy hired me… his son hired me and
I said, "I don't know anything about roofing. I know nothing." He said, "Yeah, well, don't tell my dad. We just need some guys to work." So I spent 12 hours on the roof, trying to
watch everybody else and figure out what they were doing. So at the end, the guy said, "You know, you're
a hard worker, but you know absolutely nothing about roofing." And I said, "I know I don't." He says, "Well, I'm going to pay you because
you're a hard worker, but I got to hire somebody that knows about roofing." I said, "I understand. I didn't tell your son I knew anything about
roofing." And of course, they all laughed. They thought it was sort of funny. I was so glad I got fired from that job. I hated that job. But you know, I wasn't going to quit. I had told him I'd work the summer. I was going to work the summer and I thought,
"By the end of summer I'll figure out how to be a roofer." But I was so glad I didn't have to figure
out how to be a roofer. But I said I would. You know why I was going to do that? Not because I have great character because
my dad had drilled me so much I had to finish the job. Even it was going to be all summer, I was
going to learn how to be a roofer. So I was glad. And don't ask me to roof because I have no
idea how to do that. But these things make us happier. And it's these things that make up our work
ethic. These are the traits that God is looking for. And these are the traits, not your job, but
these character traits that God is going to use to serve Jesus Christ when He comes.