Today
Americans celebrate Labor Day—a federal holiday that pays tribute to the
achievements of American workers by giving them an extra day to rest.
Many of us
live for these breaks from the normal work schedule. Many of us will have a
hard time waking up Tuesday, knowing that there are four more days until the weekend.
And many of us can’t stop thinking about the next job we’re working towards or
the day we retire.
Even if you
love your career, chances are that you’ve thought one of these things before.
We are human, and these feelings are natural—especially the desire for rest. But God also made us for work, and He made
us to work.
Blessed John
Paul II explored this idea in his 1981 encyclical, Laborem Exercens. In his
introduction, he reminds the faithful that, in being made in the image and
likeness of God, we are made to work:
THROUGH
WORK man must earn his daily bread and
contribute to the continual advance of science and technology and, above all,
to elevating unceasingly the cultural and moral level of the society within
which he lives in community with those who belong to the same family. And work
means any activity by man, whether manual or intellectual, whatever its nature
or circumstances; it means any human activity that can and must be recognized
as work, in the midst of all the many activities of which man is capable and to
which he is predisposed by his very nature, by virtue of humanity itself. Man
is made to be in the visible universe an image and likeness of God himself, and he is placed in it in order to subdue the
earth. From the beginning therefore he is called to work. Work is one of the
characteristics that distinguish man
from the rest of creatures, whose activity for sustaining their lives cannot be
called work. Only man is capable of work, and only man works, at the same time
by work occupying his existence on earth. Thus work bears a particular mark of
man and of humanity, the mark of a person operating within a community of
persons. And this mark decides its interior characteristics; in a sense it
constitutes its very nature.
Work is our mark. It is what we are made to do, and
it’s what distinguishes us from all other creatures.
We typically
forget these ideas as we fumble over the coffee machine in the morning, but
they are good to remember during those times when we don’t know why we set our
alarm clocks every day. Whether you just insert data in Excel sheets, whether
you fix air-conditioning units, or whether you teach a rowdy bunch of
kindergartners—you were made for this.
So as we
enjoy the last day of summer with family, friends, and barbequed hot dogs, let
us take time to remember the true value of the work that we are resting from.
Blessed John
Paul II, Pray for Us.
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