Cartoonist Scott Adams has become famous for his humorous cartoon strip “Dilbert”. He also wrote a book in the 1990s called “The Dilbert Principle”. In it he mocks technology, leadership fads, and incompetent managers. Many laugh out loud at the connections the book makes with their own work-a-day world. Regarding employee laziness and deceit, the author writes: “When it comes to avoiding work, it is fair to say I studied with the masters. After nine years . . . I learned just about everything there is to know about looking busy without actually being busy”.
Believers, however, have a much higher calling when it comes to dealing with employers. In the Scriptures, we are encouraged to exhibit a respectful attitude toward those who supervise us. “Bondservants, be obedient to those who are your masters according to the flesh, with fear and trembling, in sincerity of heart, as to Christ; not with eyeservice, as men-pleasers, but as bondservants of Christ, doing the will of God from the heart” (Eph. 6:5-6). The right work ethic begins with a heart of sincerity in which we consider Jesus Christ our employer. We please Him when we diligently serve our boss and others in the workplace.
No matter who your boss is, you are really working for God. Whatever tasks you find to do, regardless if it’s big or small, perform it well, with all your heart. It is because there’s One who sees it all. Do your best in your work all for His glory.
A friend of mine, a hangman for the government used this religious line of thinking to justify his work. That it is though him that death-row convicts get to meet the lord. Thanks for sharing.
This is sobering