Share This Episode
Wisdom for the Heart Dr. Stephen Davey Logo

The Sacred Calling of Work Part 2 (Titus 2:9-10)

Wisdom for the Heart / Dr. Stephen Davey
The Truth Network Radio
March 26, 2026 12:00 am

The Sacred Calling of Work Part 2 (Titus 2:9-10)

Wisdom for the Heart / Dr. Stephen Davey

00:00 / 00:00
On-Demand Podcasts NEW!

This broadcaster has 1596 podcast archives available on-demand.

Broadcaster's Links

Keep up-to-date with this broadcaster on social media and their website.


March 26, 2026 12:00 am

A Christian's work is not just about getting a paycheck, but about serving God and living out their faith in their daily tasks, no matter how small they may seem. By being honest, loyal, and faithful, Christians can bring glory to God and point others to Him.

COVERED TOPICS / TAGS (Click to Search)
Christianity Work Honesty Loyalty Faithfulness Eternity Gospel
YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE:
Living on the Edge Podcast Logo
Living on the Edge
Chip Ingram
In Touch Podcast Logo
In Touch
Charles Stanley
Sound of Faith Podcast Logo
Sound of Faith
Sharon Hardy Knotts and R. G. Hardy
Pathway to Victory Podcast Logo
Pathway to Victory
Dr. Robert Jeffress

Welcome to Wisdom for the Heart with Stephen Davey. Stephen has been teaching the Bible for over four decades, and we bring you these messages to help you know God, think biblically, and live wisely. Just before Stephen's message today, please take a moment to like and subscribe to this podcast. that helps more people find this biblically faithful teaching.

Now, here's Stephen. What would happen in our world? If everyone began to work. With this mark of honesty. But what would happen in our world if Christians began to work.

Honestly. See, Christianity. makes that cubicle. That that hole. That office, that boardroom, nothing less than a holy of holies where God touches.

Earth.

Now, Paul actually puts together a string of participles that describe what it means to be well-pleasing. Paul refers to complicity. Not Argumentative. That's how you can be well-pleasing. And he keeps raising the bar, doesn't he?

With each one of these, he's going to raise the bar. The slave in Paul's day had to be submissive, that was the way it was. But now he's told to be reliable. That's even harder. And now he's told...

And every employee to this generation is told Don't Argue back. Don't grumble. Don't complain. Don't voice displeasure.

Okay, I'm gonna do it. I get paid to do it. I showed up, didn't I? I'll do it. But I don't like it.

At all. He says, don't be that way. Don't be argumentative. And that effectively shuts down most of the inner office conversation. I mean, what in the world are you going to talk about at the water cool if you can't run the boss down and talk about your supervisor and how bad the corporation is and the low wages and the unfair treatment?

Oh, lunch is over, man. I've got to go back to work. Work won't be nearly as fun. If you can't do that. See, Paul is getting under the skin of work.

to the very spirit. of the worker. I can remember when our children were young. They had their chores. Marcia had it all mapped out.

And on one occasion, They were getting older, she said, you know, honey, we... We got to deal with Hearts And not just hands. And so she informed them that From now on, they not only had to do their chores in order to get their allowance, But they had to do their chores. with a good attitude. It was six months before I got my allowance.

I mean, taking out the trash had a whole new dimension to it. This is the idea here. And by the way, in case you're wondering, this characteristic doesn't mean that you can't express a grievance. Uh through legitimate means. It doesn't mean that your boss can't be wrong.

It doesn't mean that management is to be complied with if it means you commit sin in so obeying. He's not telling them and us to do something unethical. Or immoral. Because your boss demanded that a guy came up to me a few weeks ago, and he told me I lost my job because I told my boss I would not any longer lie for him. See, it may mean you do have to find another job in order to keep your conscience clean.

But Paul is referring here to an employee that isn't being asked to do something immoral. He's just being asked to do something he doesn't want to do. And he says, okay, I'm going to do it because I got to do it, but I want you to know I don't like it one bit. That's what he's talking about. And you see, for that Christian, With that kind of spirit, he's forgotten that he's on a sacred assignment.

This vocatio is a calling From God, no matter how distasteful. It is where you are, and where you are is the calling. of God. who sovereignly will work through you. to fulfill his purposes.

See, Paul is dealing with the will. Humility. He's dealing with the heart. Reliability. He's dealing with the Spirit.

Complicity.

Now he deals with the hands. Notice The fourth characteristic is this mark of honesty. At the beginning of verse 10, he throws this in. Not. Pilfering.

Yeah. It's a word used in the Greek world for embezzlement, literally laying on one's side. In other words, it means to put something aside for yourself that doesn't belong to you. The Greek word Also referred to someone who was light-fingered. Tell light fingers.

He's stealing from his employer. Not necessarily big stuff. Just a lot of little stuff. Supplies. Equipment Padded expense accounts.

In an hour later, out an hour earlier. Not showing up. Not doing what you said you'd do. Taking a day's work and turning it into three, and all of those things that none of us are guilty of in here. This is exactly what Paul is referring to.

According to the U.S. Department of Commerce, by the way, Employee dishonesty, I've learned, costs American businesses over 50. billion dollars a year. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce I read reports that one out of every three, and I found this rather shocking.

But the U.S. Chamber of Commerce reported that one out of every three businesses that closed down. failed Because of the direct result or from the direct result of employee Staff. All the security cameras that companies have. Or not.

for people like us that jump there. but people who work there. And again, it isn't necessarily big stuff. Just a lot of little stuff. What would happen in our world If everyone began to work.

With this mark of honesty. What would happen in our world if Christians began to work. Honestly. Let me tell you about one country that experienced a reformation. It was a revival that swept through Wales in the early 1900s.

And over 100,000 people responded to the gospel and came to faith. And began to make restitution. That was the interesting part. Which, by the way, happens to be one of the marks of genuine conversion. Over the years, along the coast in the shipyards, which was a major industry.

Still is. Workers had pilfered all kinds of things. Stolen. Everything from wheelbarrows to hammers. Equipment However, this article wrote: As people sought to be right with God, they started to return what they had taken, with the result that soon the shipyards of Wales were overwhelmed with returned property.

There were such huge amounts of tools and machinery being returned that several of the archers actually put up signs asking the men to stop. One sign read: If you've been led by God to return what you've stolen, please know the management forgives you and wishes you to keep what you took. It didn't the world didn't know how to handle it. Titus, you want to impact the island of Crete? Start by having all those who serve another.

Stop. Stealing. And return. What they had stolen, do we work with the characteristic of humility? We could all get all bothered with And rightly so, with the institution of slavery, Paul tells the slave.

Would you start working honestly for your employer? And he tells every one of us. in this free culture. You want to impact your world? show up with the distinction of reliability.

Show up with the attitude of complicity and the mark of honesty. He adds to the list another, the demeanor of loyalty. He writes, but showing all good. Faith.

Now you could translate this and it'll help to expand it. Show yourself completely faithful. in goodness. Show yourself completely faithful. And here's another show and tell, by the way.

The word showing here means to show for the purpose of proving. A point. What's the point? You belong to Jesus Christ.

Okay, prove it. How do you prove it? He tells them to show this demeanor of loyalty or faithfulness. In other words, prove to your employer that you have the best of intentions. For him, her, the place where you work.

Isn't that a distinguishing mark? Of any employee. To show that you have the best of intentions? You're not there just for a paycheck. You're actually there to promote the best interests of that corporation.

One commentator wrote it this way: the Christian employee. Should not leave his loyalty in doubt, but to give ample evidence of it. Tragically, good faith loyalty to one's employer and to one's fellow employees is a common casualty of the modern work ethic, even among Christians. And I'll tell you, having pastor for many years hearing all sorts of disputes, I can tell you that one of the chief violations in this is when Christians work for Christians. Hey, I'm a Christian.

My boss is a Christian. I can get away with this. I don't have to do that. They ought to just, you know, understand. We're brothers.

Loyalty It is something that is waning as the Protestant work ethic wanes. where you actually show up with the intention of helping to advance This business. By the way, that mark of loyalty is the very characteristic that set Daniel apart in the Old Testament. You remember him? It took him from middle management to a senior position in the kingdom of Babylon.

The king appointed Daniel. Over all these political leaders, so that the Bible reads: the king would not suffer loss. That's a nice way of saying, so the king wouldn't get robbed blind. He needed an honest man who would be loyal to the crown, loyal to the kingdom. A loyal to the king.

Himself. And you can't help but wonder why would Daniel ever care? How about the king? Of that, the kingdom of Babylon, he'd been abducted as a teenager. He'd been unwillingly castrated.

He'd been made a eunuch. He'd be single the rest of his life. He was inducted into the political system of education to be used by the government because he was bright. And so eventually, you find him as you read his biography as about a 90-year-old man. He's so remarkable.

With the kingdoms that had come and gone, and now Persia rules, and Darius, his new boss, promotes them. Why? Because he knows that man will have my best interests at heart. He won't steal from me. It'll keep all these other politicians clean.

And they have only one recourse and that's to try to bump him off. Daniel belongs. You imagine he's an exiled Jewish man. Forced to learn a new language. A strange place.

a different kingdom that is pagan to the core. And he shows up to advance and for the betterment of this kingdom. Raise it even higher. And Daniel never went home. Never went home.

But it was because of Daniel's loyalty to the king and the king's assignment that God was glorified. Daniel's legacy of integrity would so set him apart that he would eventually become the leader over all the other Magi who served with him in that office. And Daniel would use his position to teach the gospel through Old Testament prophecies he had at his disposal, like the prophecies of Isaiah, so effectively that 600 years later, the legacy he began in Babylon will be seen in that entourage of Magi who traveled from Persia with their gifts of gold and frankincense and myrrh, arriving in Jerusalem and posing a question to King Herod: where is he who's just been born the king of the Jews? See, they trace that legacy all the way back. To this eunuch.

Who had every reason to be bitter. Had every reason to just set minds so that he could. He could just explode the kingdom of Babylon and Persia. Instead, he worked out of loyalty. Why?

He understood he was on assignment. He was the ambassador of God. See, before you tell your world what the gospel means, Make sure they can see the difference the gospel makes. in your life. One more.

The perspective of eternity, Paul adds. This final purpose statement. Verse 10, so that. In other words, do all the above, sow that. They will adorn the doctrine of God our Savior in every Respect.

The word adorned. is the word cosme oh which gives us our word cosmetics. Their lives serve as a beautiful cosmetic which enhances the truth. of God Our Savior. In fact, that word cosmo was used In the ancient world of Paul, For the setting of jewels in such a way that their beauty would be highlighted.

The setting had everything to do with that. Today you go to the mall, you walk into that jewelry store and Oh, the setting is magnificent. In fact, they have different lights in there than in the mall. Those jewels are going to shine in there actually more than they'll do ever shine out there, but in there, they sparkle. You're living, as one commentator writes.

A life that adds luster. to the gospel. What kind of setting Are our lives to the gospel of God? Our Savior. In fact, you read into that this highest of motives.

Live a life That that adds sparkle. To the gospel of God our Savior. Why? Because your boss needs. The Saviour.

You work for an employer with the thought that your boss and your coworkers and your friends are dead. They're going to live forever one day. But there are only two options, according to the Bible, heaven. which is a literal place, and hell, which is equally a literal place. And because of that, you show up.

Not just to get a paycheck, not to make it through another week to the weekend or to get to retirement, but because you're the light. You're there to live in such a way that you add luster to the gospel. They see you and they think, man, why does that guy or gal work that way? What is it about you?

Well, let me tell you. I really don't work for you. I work for God. You got to tell me about this God. Because I hate this job.

Justin Martyr wrote in the second century that those around believers should be ready to hear the gospel by either watching the Christians' lives or by doing business with them. Ha ha ha ha. I wonder how many people would be receptive to the gospel after doing business with us. No wonder Jonathan Edwards, though, puts this perspective into a wonderful quote when he says he prays that God would stamp eternity on his eyes so that he would view everything in the context of its eternal consequences. See, that turns work.

into worship. That doesn't mean you go out, you do something amazing or. famous or big. Paul is basically in this family talk just saying, Go do your job, show up. Work hard.

Smile often. Stay out of trouble. Stay out of the way of troublemakers. Don't talk back. Tell the truth.

Don't steal stuff. Because you're living for something greater than the weekend. Or age 65. You're there on assignment to point people to God, your Savior. There are a lot of Christians willing to do great things for God.

Paul said, would you just go back and do A lot of little things. For God And according to Paul's letters, Even little things are events where God Through you. touches earth. I close with the willingness of a young girl to serve in whatever useful way she could for God's glory. She was taught a lesson and became A lesson for us.

I came across this recently. A pediatrician by the name of David Cerciera, wrote this in a Christian journal. published just a couple of years ago. He wrote about a little girl five or six years of age named Sarah. He said it all started with my wife's Sunday school class.

She had prepared a lesson on being useful to the Lord. She taught the children that everyone can be useful, and that usefulness was actually serving God, effectively, on that level, what I've taught on this level. The same principle. He writes, The kids quietly listened to my wife's words, and as the lesson ended, there was a short moment of silence, and a little girl named Sarah spoke up. And said Mrs.

Cerciera. What can I do? I don't know how to do many useful things. Not anticipating that ready response, my wife quickly looked around and spotted an empty flower vase on the windowsill there in the Sunday school classroom. And she said, Sarah, I know what you could do to be useful.

You could bring in a flower. and put it in that vase. God would be pleased with the difference that would make in this room for everyone who sees it. Sarah frowned and said, But that's not important. My wife replied, Well, if you do it, To please the Lord, and it will show people the creative glory of God, even in this small way, it will indeed be.

useful. Sure enough, the next Sunday, Sarah brought in a dandelion she'd picked. And she placed it in the vase. She continued to do so each week. Without reminders or help, she made sure the vase was filled with some bright Flour.

Sunday after Sunday after Sunday. When my wife told our pastor about Sarah's faithfulness to this small task. He actually took the vase upstairs in the main sanctuary and put it next to the pulpit and used it that morning as an illustration. for being useful. For God's glory.

Just a few days later, I got a call from Sarah's mother. She was worried that Sarah seemed to have less energy and didn't have any appetite, and so I made room in my schedule for her to come to the office. Since I was their pediatrician, I saw Sarah the following day. After Sarah had been put through a battery of tests and then several days of examinations. I sat numbly in my office with Sarah's paperwork on my lap.

The results were in Sarah had advanced. Leukemia. On my way home, I stopped to see Sarah's parents so that I could personally give them the news. Sarah's genetics and the leukemia that was attacking her little body were a horrible mix. Sitting at their kitchen table, I explained that there was nothing we could really do to save her life.

I don't think I've ever had a more difficult conversation than the one that night. Time Pressed on quickly. Sarah became confined to bed and to the visits that many people gave her and And then it came, another telephone call from Sarah's mother asking me to come see her. I dropped everything and rushed to their home. After a short examination, I knew that Sarah did not have long to live.

That was Friday afternoon. On Sunday morning, church started as usual: the singing, the sermon, and for me, great. Sadness. Near the end of the sermon, the pastor suddenly stopped speaking as he stared at the back of the auditorium. Everyone in our church turned to see what he was looking at.

It was Sarah. Her parents had brought her for one last visit she was bundled in a blanket and They carried her to the front, and she carried in her hand a bright flower. She placed it in the vase. It was still perched. on the side of my pulpit.

and she also dropped next to the vase a piece of paper that was folded. The service led out, and everyone gathered around, trying to offer as much encouragement and love and support as they could. This doctor writes, the following Thursday, Sarah passed away. The pastor asked me to stay behind after the funeral service, and we stood together at the cemetery as everyone walked back to their cars. He said, Dave, I've got something you need to see.

He pulled from his pocket the piece of paper that Sarah had left by the vase. He held it out to me and he said, You and your wife need to keep this. I opened the folded paper to read. in pink crayon. But Sarah had written with help, And it was simply this.

Dear God This vase has been the biggest honour. of my life. Sarah. She got it. Didn't she?

A simple task would become in her little mind. At that stage, The greatest honor. of her life. Can I ask you to retrace? The history of your life for just a moment, and what is it?

What accomplishment would you consider? Your greatest honor. I'm convinced that there are going to be a lot of surprised. first century bond slaves. standing in the presence of their Redeemer.

Rewarded and honored. for the simplest tasks. I'm convinced there will be many surprised 21st-century Christians. as well. I'm convinced there are a thousand things And a thousand more we never imagined would be considered an honorable thing.

That's because we've got in the way. from this idea of vocatio. And even the milking of a cow. As worship You see, this is the way we're to live. And to tackle the tasks assigned to us, and in so doing, display the beauty of the gospel and the treasure found in God our Savior.

We have far too many Christians who believe that Christianity is doing something big, something great for God. We need more Christians willing to do something little for God, something simple, something mundane, something. Ordinary, like putting a bright flower in a flower vase on a windowsill in a classroom. for someone. to see something Anything.

Done for him is useful, where the glory of God through a willing servant actually. Touches. Earth.

That was Stephen Davey, and this is Wisdom for the Heart, a production of Wisdom International. Learn more at wisdomonline. org.

Get The Truth Mobile App and Listen to your Favorite Station Anytime