What Matters Most in Your
Job?
Michael Zigarelli
From: Faith at Work (Moody
Press, 2000)
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If you’re like I am, you work for a
living. It’s not always fun, it’s not always meaningful, but most
months it pays the bills.
Let me ask you to take two minutes and
think about this job of yours. Think about the tasks involved, the
people with whom you typically associate, the work environment, the
product or service you provide. Think about what you like and don’t
like about it. And think about what you’re doing in your work life
that matters the most.
That last one is
kind of tricky. Many of us can rattle off our daily routine to
anyone who asks. And we could talk for days about what we enjoy at
work and (especially) what can be improved. But identifying what
really matters in our work – what has lasting significance – is
another question. A critically important question.
To better answer
it, come at this from another angle. This approach has been helpful
to a countless number of my undergraduate and MBA students.
Fast-forward the tape of your work life to a few years down the
road. You’re now retiring. There’s a dinner to honor you and all the
others in your cohort who have earned the gold watch (or pewter
plaque, depending on the generosity of your employer). Look around
the room. Who’s there? Who is speaking with whom? What’s the mood in
the place? Do people seem to be enjoying themselves? From across the
room, a co-worker glances over at you and whispers to a friend. The
friend responds with a nod, eye contact and a casual wave. A lot of
people are talking about you tonight because this is your
night. What are they saying?
The time comes
for the obligatory short speeches commemorating, thanking, sometimes
roasting the retirees. One by one, employees come to the microphone
to share stories and raise a glass. Some stories are funny, some are
touching, some seem merely polite. Obviously, there wasn’t much to
say about that person. Then up steps the person slated to say
a few words about you, your career, your contribution…about all
you’ve meant to the organization. What will this person say? What is
it about you that will be remembered as significant? What is it
about all of those years – about all of that effort – that this
person thinks really mattered?
If you would, let
that set in for a second. Don’t sell yourself short by rushing
through this exercise. What’s being spotlighted in this short
speech? Accomplishments? Securing clients? Work ethic? Your
personality? What will stand out when others reflect on the job to
which you gave your life?
Now take this
scene one last step. Imagine for a moment that the person at the
podium is not your co-worker, but Jesus Christ Himself. You didn’t
know he had a ticket to this shin-dig, but there he is, scars and
all. He even managed to somehow get around the jacket-only
requirement.
Unlike the other
speakers, though, he elects to sit down with the microphone – and
right next to you. The room falls strangely silent – more quiet than
it was for the others – as he says your name. A smile comes to his
face, a smile of caring, a smile of friendship. He says your name
again. “I’m going to tell you good folks what this employee did at
work all of these years that really mattered,” he begins.
You listen in awe
at what’s chronicled over the next few minutes. Everyone in the room
is captivated by just how different this speech is from all the
others. What Jesus emphasizes as important is quite unlike what was
emphasized by the other speakers. Had you only known Jesus’ opinion
about what your goals should be on the job…had you only been able to
see what was preventing you from pursuing those goals…had you only
heard His words decades ago…
What
Matters Most in Your Work?
What matters most in the Christian’s
work life is not what matters to the world. It’s not the size of the
paycheck, the impressiveness of the business card, the prestige, or
the number of battles won. It’s not even your productivity or the
quality of your work, although hard work is certainly a worthy
pursuit. Instead, when it comes to your job, what matters most to
the Man with the microphone is the extent to which you were
Christ-like from 9 to 5.
Stop the presses! This is a
revelation, right?
Hardly. Many of
us Christians know this implicitly. We hear it pretty regularly from
the pulpit. Problem is, our thinking gets transformed from Sunday to
Monday. Invisible but powerful workplace realities create obstacles
to Christ-likeness on the job. Some are work environment realities,
some are innate to our nature, but all of them relegate God’s
priorities to the back seat. By Tuesday, they may fade from the
rear-view mirror entirely.
From what I’ve
seen, that’s a source of continuing frustration for many Christians.
We struggle with it. We feel guilty about it. We may even recommit
for awhile to doing things differently on the job. Somehow, though,
many of us backslide into this traditional mind-set about how we
should think and act in the workplace.
Perhaps you too
have had some personal experience with this. Perhaps you’ve made
some effort to apply your faith in the workplace, only to be
repeatedly discouraged by the results. Perhaps you’ve even reached
the point of concluding that real, enduring change is hopeless for
you. It’s not. It’s just a matter of seeing more clearly –
maybe for the first time in your life – the many obstacles that have
prevented you from modeling Christ on a daily basis. And then it’s a
matter of cooperating with God to defeat them.
What’s keeping
you from being more Christ-like in your job and in your career? What
are the barriers that have always stood in your way? And how can you
overcome them to pursue what really matters at work? These
are questions worth exploring long before your retirement dinner.
Excerpted from Faith at Work: Overcoming the
Obstacles to Being Like Christ in the
Workplace (Moody Press, 2000). Used by permission. All rights
reserved.
Michael Zigarelli, Ph.D., is an Associate Professor
of Management at Messiah College and the editor of
the Christianity9to5.org.
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