How salvation motivates our work
iStock
For we are God's handiwork, created in Christ Jesus to do good works, which God prepared in advance for us to do (Ephesians 2:10).
Ephesians 2:8-9 shows us how the gospel enables us to rest from our work, as we know that our status as co-heirs with Christ is secure regardless of anything we accomplish. Ephesians 2:10 shows us that our response to that security is to want to be productive on the Lord's behalf.
Why?
Because working to earn someone's favor is exhausting. But workingin response to unconditional favor is intoxicating.
Furthermore, as Paul makes clear in today's verse, the very purpose of our lives—the reason we were created and saved—was not to wait around for eternity. Christ made us new creations so that we could "do good works!"
But Jordan, when Paul says "good works" he was talking about giving money to the poor, not writing an elegant line of code, right? Wrong. Of course "good works" implies charitable and evangelical things, but the meaning of ergon (the Greek word for "good works") is much broader. One commentary says it means "work, task, [and] employment."
Remember that work was part of God's perfect world prior to the Fall, and Jesus spent eighty percent of his adult life working as a carpenter. So why shouldn't we expect "good work" as we typically understand that phrase to be central to God's call on our lives?
OK, so part of our response to the gospel is to be ambitious for doing "good works" for others.
| Jordan Raynor helps Christians respond to the radical, biblical truth that their work matters for eternity. He does this through his bestselling books (The Creator in You, Redeeming Your Time, Master of One, and Called to Create), podcast (The Call to Mastery), and weekly devotional (The Word Before Work)—content that has served millions of Christ-followers in every country on earth. A sixth-generation Floridian, Jordan lives in Tampa with his wife and their three young daughters. Learn More » |
More on Servant Leadership
- The casualty of Christmas (by Carey Nieuwhof)
- Do you bury or bite when giving feedback? (by Miranda Carls)
- Leadership efficiency: the habit wasting your (and your team’s) time (by Christian Muntean)
- 21 signs your church needs to change (by Carey Nieuwhof)

