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When we approach our work with intention and care, we begin to see how everything, big or small, reflects God's creation, becomes a God-honoring act of stewardship, and blesses others.
I love Wendell Berry. I love to read most of what he writes, be it short story, novel, poetry, or essay. He has just the right mix of progressive and conservative, witty and romanticized, uplifting and scathing, and all throughout, he has a holistic Christian attitude that resonates with me (and the Bible, I鈥檇 say). One essay by Berry in particular has really affected the trajectory of my life. is in many ways a treatise that disputes the body/soul attitude so prevalent in our modern world. It is a strong argument for valuing the created world not only insofar as it belongs to God in a sphere sovereignty sense, but also in the general revelation sense. God speaks to us and is revealed to us most primarily through the creation. In both of these regards, the creation in its totality is sacred and holy.
It鈥檚 a bit of a long read鈥攖hough certainly one that I鈥檇 recommend鈥攕o let me point out one passage in particular that guides much of what I do in my life.
By denying spirit and truth to the nonhuman Creation, latter-day proponents of religion have legitimized a form of blasphemy without which the nature- and culture-destroying machinery of the industrial economy could not have been built 鈥 that is, they have legitimized bad work. Good human work honors God鈥檚 work. Good work uses no thing without respect, both for what it is in itself and for its origin. It uses neither tool nor material that it does not respect and that it does not love. It honors Nature as a great mystery and power, as an indispensable teacher, and as the inescapable judge of all work of human hands. It does not dissociate life and work, or pleasure and work, or love and work, or usefulness and beauty. To work without pleasure or affection, to make a product that is not both useful and beautiful, is to dishonor God, nature, the thing that is made, and whomever it is made for. This is blasphemy: to make shoddy work of the work of God. And such blasphemy is not possible so long as the entire Creation is understood as holy, and so long as the works of God are understood as embodying and so revealing God鈥檚 spirit.
When one studies God鈥檚 world and takes it seriously, he can鈥檛 help but want to do something, to make something that honors God and the world He created.
I am a philosopher by education, but a barista, a baker, a business owner, a chef, and a keeper of a public house by trade. I have a rare opportunity that few are afforded. Since I am my own boss (as loaded as that phrase is), I am allowed to make real decisions that truly are effective within my company. I am allowed to choose from where I source my raw materials, my coffee, milk, flour, eggs, meat, and the hundreds of other ingredients I need to make my business run. I can ask questions about where they came from, who made or grew them, what their relationship is to the dust that God created, how they honor or dishonor God in their production. I can choose good work.
And then I get the chance to take these things that God has made good and that many within the supply chain have treated with love and respect and make something good myself. I can add my own knowledge, care, and love to coffee beans and milk, using tools that I understand intimately (caf茅 owners must also be espresso machine repairmen after all) to create a final product that honors God and blesses my patrons. When someone purchases a latte at the , it is useful and beautiful. It honors its ingredients from farm鈥攚hether that be a coffee plantation in Nicaragua or a dairy in Nebraska 鈥攖o cup. And it is never shoddily done. I have the opportunity to see God at work and read the revelation of His creation every day. When I bake bread or pizza crusts, I am reminded that the Kingdom of God is like leaven mixed into flour. When I get to host a reunion of old friends over a glass of wine, I am reminded of the faithful, everlasting love God has for us. And then there are those mornings, alone in a quiet shop, when I take the first sip of a latte, and I get to taste and see the goodness of the Lord.
While culturally there is a bit of a long standing gag about the philosopher-cum-barista, to me, being a craftsman is a natural result of the pondering mind. When one studies God鈥檚 world and takes it seriously, he can鈥檛 help but want to do something, to make something that honors God and the world He created.
This isn鈥檛 to say these choices can only be made by those in positions of relative power, be they entrepreneurs or educators. We all make things, whether it is food for dinner or conversation or a home. We all have the opportunity to make a choice between the shoddy and the honorable. There is always something, no, everything at stake. Indeed, this can be a frustration with the 鈥渋n all things鈥 attitude that pervades Berry and Reformational Christianity (and this site, of course). It sometimes feels like you are never allowed to rest. You must always choose the less shoddy, and therefore the more difficult thing.
Perhaps such a bold, idealistic sounding statement may give you the wrong impression of my own choices or my own recommendations on how to live. Am I implying that we always use organic-free-range-local-no-corn-syrup-home-made everything? No. We consciously try to support local agriculture, but we live in Iowa where fresh tomatoes aren鈥檛 available twelve months per year. We also live in an economic world where we have to make choices with finite amounts of money; it would be a mistake to let our ideals about food crowd out God鈥檚 created revelation about money and running a business. There are a lot of ideals to work with and to think about. When I make a product, I have to strike a balance between its cost and price. I have to think about my communities of suppliers and of patrons. I have to think about nutritional value and taste.
Dutch economist and philosopher Bob Goudzwaard talked about the 鈥渟imultaneous realization of norms鈥 to describe this idea. The Reformational tradition has long had an understanding that life has multiple facets 鈥擪uyper called them , Dooyeweerd 鈥攁nd that God calls us to behave differently in different parts of our lives. We will interact differently with one human being who is our son and another human who is a customer, for example. But Goudzwaard reminds us that while we can theoretically separate out these modes of existence, our lives are a singular whole. When I interact with a customer, I do not stop being a father; I must fill these roles simultaneously. And so each of my choices must strike the balance, understanding the multi-faceted nature of the whole of life. When I decide on a coffee roaster or where to purchase vegetable oil, I need to keep a lot of roles in mind. The most expensive isn鈥檛 always the best. The most local isn鈥檛 always the best.
I think that鈥檚 why I like the word 鈥渟hoddy鈥 so much. It鈥檚 a broad umbrella term that can affect every mode of existence that I inhabit. It doesn鈥檛 create a false dichotomy, implying that there is only one choice. It doesn鈥檛 criticize something for being wrong, but rather for being lazily and unconsciously, unconscientiously done. It understands that as we avoid shoddiness, we need to strike a balance in our own situations, with the resources available to us in our own locales. But through it all, it calls us to do our best, our utmost, at all times. To interpret the ways God is calling us to act, the things God is calling us to use and to make, and through it all, with thoughtfulness and care and love, to work hard for Him, for our communities, for ourselves, and really for the whole of creation.
This is our original calling as stewards, as gardeners, and as co-creators with God. It is the way we are faithful to the text of God鈥檚 original Word, the first book of creation. And further, when something is truly a labor of love, it is no difficult thing at all. To quote Berry again, 鈥淕ood work鈥oes not disassociate life and work, or pleasure and work, or love and work.鈥 My prayer is that every evening when I go to sleep, I can look at the ways that I have filled my role as creator and interpreter of God鈥檚 general revelation and echo His words by saying, 鈥淚t was good.鈥
This essay comes from the In All Things archives. It was originally published on April 9, 2015.
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How much are we allowed to enjoy the good things of this world? Examine the role food plays in allowing us to celebrate God's goodness and provision in our lives.
An excerpt about the Broetje鈥檚 orchard from the book 鈥淢y Business, My Mission鈥 by Doug Seebeck and Timothy Stoner, originally published on In All Things on February 22, 2016