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Sloth, Workaholism and the Grace of SelfControl

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Title: Sloth, Workaholism and the Grace of SelfControl


1
Sloth, Workaholism and the Grace of Self-Control
Sw-sloth and self-control
R. Paul Stevens
2
Paul
  • Driven or Called?

3
Paul Driven or Called?
  • Prevailing against Christians Acts 91-2
  • Prevailing against Jews Acts 921-22
  • Prevailing in debate Acts 929
  • Prevailing against fellow believers Acts 152
  • Prevailing against everybody Acts 1717
  • Prevailing in the synagogue Acts 198-9
  • Sometimes angry 1 Cor 421

4
  • I strenuously contend with all the energy Christ
    so powerfully works in me. Col. 129

5
Symptoms of Workaholism/Driveness
  • 1. Gratified only by accomplishment
  • 2. Preoccupied with the symbols of accomplishment
  • 3. Caught in the uncontrolled pursuit of
    expansion
  • 4. Limited regard for integrity
  • 5. Possess limited or undeveloped people skills
  • 6. Highly competitive
  • 7. Often possesses a volcanic force of anger
  • 8. Usually abnormally busy
  • Gordon MacDonald Ordering your Private World, p.
    31-36

6
The Sources of Drivenness
  • Prior to meeting Christ, Paul was determined to
    find acceptance and righteousness with God
    through Jewish legalism and performance and was
    simultaneously compelled to eliminate Christians
    as a threatening sect. What happened at Damascus
    was not the changing of Pauls personality from
    one type to another. Rather, Paul was released
    from the self-justifying paralysis of his
    personality by an empowering and liberating
    experience of grace through which he knew himself
    to be unconditionally accepted by God. Since the
    great resources of his personality were liberated
    by his meeting with Christ, he was able to devote
    himself in an entirely healthy way in a
    magnificently liberating passionhis passion to
    love God and love his neighbor as himself. (see
    Drivenness CBEC)

7
Sources of Drivenness
  • Family of origin - praised for performance or not
    approved at all
  • Spiritual idolatry making something your
    ultimate concern other than the One that is
    ultimate (the tree of good and evil nailing
    your deepest desire to something other than God)

8
What Drivenness is Like
  • Workaholism provides an alternative ecstasy. In
    an insightful section on erotica, Killinger
    compares work experiences with sexual orgasms
    When there is a passionate obsession with work,
    erotic feelings can be expressed towards the
    accomplishments or products of work. The senses
    are aroused and alive when a coveted contract is
    signed, a record becomes a hit, or a sought-after
    degree is conferred (p. 34). Failing to find the
    divine source of legitimate ecstasy, people find
    unsatisfactory substitutes.

9
What Drivenness is Like to Others
  • disruption of family life,
  • neglect of spiritual growth,
  • diminishing returns for work,
  • physical tension,
  • loss of perspective on life
  • misdirected resentment in which others are blamed
    for the pain they experience
  • the children of workaholics are especially
    disadvantaged.

10
Do Workaholics Make Good Workers in a Company, a
Church or a Not-for-Profit?
  • NO!
  • Not at least in the long run

11
Workaholism/Drivenness is moral sloth
12
The Seven Deadly Work Sins
  • Sloth Sloth signifieth chiefly the
    indisposition of the mind and body and idleness
    signifieth the actual neglect or omission of our
    duties. Sloth is an averseness to labor, through
    a carnal love of ease, or indulgence to the
    flesh (part 1, x, 378).

13
  • Sloth is easily identified when the very thought
    of labor is troublesome, when ease seems sweet,
    when the easy part of some duty is culled out,
    when you work with a constant weariness of mind,
    when you consistently offer excuses or delays and
    when little impediments stop you. Richard
    Baxter, The Practical Works of Richard Baxter,
    vol 1 (Ligonier, Penn. Soli Deo Gloria
    Publications, 1990).

14
Workaholism as Moral Sloth
  • An indisposition of mind and body
  • A carnal love of work (not ease)
  • Indulgence of the flesh (flesh is not
    physical body but life lived outside of Christ
    as though he had not come)
  • When the thought of labour is sweet it is your
    meat and drink
  • When nothing can stop you working

15
The Slothful and Sluggard in Proverbs
  • Go to the ant, you sluggard consider its ways
    and be wise!
  • It has no commander, no overseer or ruler, yet it
    stores its provisions in summer and gathers its
    food at harvest.
  • How long will you lie there, you sluggard? When
    will you get up from your sleep? A little sleep,
    a little slumber, a little folding of the hands
    to rest and poverty will come on you like a
    bandit and scarcity like an armed man (66-11).
  • As vinegar to the teeth and smoke to the eyes,
    so is a sluggard to those who send him (1026).

16
The Slothful and Sluggard in Proverbs
  • The lazy man does not roast his game, but the
    diligent man prizes his possessions (1227)
  • The sluggard craves and gets nothing, but the
    desires of the diligent are fully satisfied
    (134).
  • The way of the sluggard is blocked with thorns,
    but the path of the upright is a highway
    (1519).
  • One who is slack in his work is brother to one
    who destroys (189).
  • A sluggard does not plow in season so at
    harvest time he looks but finds nothing (204).

17
The Sluggard in Proverbs
  • Derek Kidners notes He will not begin
    things.He will not finish things.He will not
    face things.Consequently he is restless (134
    2125, 26) with unsatisfied desire helpless in
    the face of the tangle of his affairs, which are
    like a hedge of thorns (1519) and useless
    expensively (189) and exasperatingly (1026)
    to any one who must employ him (Kidner,
    Proverbs, 42-43.)

18
A Picture of lonely, Pointless Busyness Moral
Sloth (Eccl 44-8)
  • There was a man all alone he had neither son
    nor brother. There was no end to his toil, yet
    his eyes were not content with his wealth. For
    whom am I toiling, he asked, and why am I
    depriving myself of enjoyment? This too is
    meaningless a miserable business. (48)

19
A Picture of lonely, Pointless Busyness Moral
Sloth (Eccl 44-8)
  • The compulsive worker living for routine (47-8)
    --"the compulsive money-maker...for he has
    surrendered to a mere craving and to the endless
    process of feeding it....Such a man, even with a
    wife and children, will have little time for
    them, convinced that he is toiling for their
    benefit although his heart is elsewhere, devoted
    and wedded to his projects" (Kidner, The Message
    of Ecclesiastes, 47).

20
A Picture of lonely, Pointless Busyness Moral
Sloth (Eccl 44-8)
  • And I saw that all toil and all achievement
    spring from one persons envy of another. This
    too is meaningless, a chasing after the wind
    (44)
  • The competitive urge (4.4) "all too much of our
    hard work and high endeavour is mixed with the
    craving to outshine or not to be outdone"
    (Kidner, The Message of Ecclesiastes, 45).

21
Sources of Busyness Moral Sloth
  • the desire to find approval for one's
    accomplishments
  • fear of death
  • failure to grasp a comprehensive vision for
    calling/vocation
  • evasion/denial of pain/anxiety
  • idolization of work--no limitation

22
  • But how do people move from a debilitating
    compulsion to a magnificent obsession?
  • Self-control is not merely a human
    accomplishment, not even a religious work, but a
    fruit of the continuous inundation of the Holy
    Spirit (Galatians 523).
  • How can we become accessible to such an indirect
    grace?

23
  • But how do people move from a debilitating
    compulsion to a magnificent obsession? In
    establishing a theology and practice of
    self-control, we must observe that self-control
    is not a human accomplishment, not even a
    religious work, but a fruit of the continuous
    inundation of the Holy Spirit (Galatians 523).
    How can we become accessible to such an indirect
    grace?

24
Dealing with Sloth and Moral Sloth
  • Personal inventory
  • Co-conspiracy for health
  • Lifestyle changes
  • Sabbath
  • Being grasped by the comprehensive call of God

25
The Christian Vocation
BELONGING TO GOD
Discipleship
In the Biblical Sense is --
26
The Christian Vocation
BELONGING TO GOD
Discipleship
BEING GODS PEOPLE
Holiness
27
The Christian Vocation
BELONGING TO GOD
Discipleship
BEING GODS PEOPLE
DOING GODS WORK
Holiness
Service
28
A Comprehensive Call
CONGREGATIONAL MINISTRY
PERSONAL SPIRITUALITY
FAMILY PRIESTHOOD AND SERVICE
COMMUNITY MISSION
REST
OCCUPATIONAL WORK
CIVIC-POLITICAL JUSTICE
29
The Typical Executive Life
Friendships
WORK
Citizenship
Family
Leisure
Church
Personal Renewal
30
The Typical Survival Worker
Friendships
WORK
Citizenship
Family
Leisure
Church
Personal Renewal
31
The Problem with a List of Priorities
  • Sunday
  • God
  • Family
  • Work
  • Monday
  • Work
  • Family
  • God

32
A Better Way Priorities in a Web
Re-Creation
Ongoing Learning
C
Work
D
B
E
A
Family
The People of God And Ministry
33
With God at the Center of it All
Re-Creation
Ongoing Learning
C
Work
D
B
God
E
A
Family
The People of God And Ministry
34
Dealing with Sloth and Moral Sloth
  • Personal inventory
  • Co-conspiracy for health
  • Lifestyle changes
  • Sabbath
  • Being grasped by the comprehensive call of God
  • Personal Spirituality

35
Personal Spirituality
  • 1. Assurance of grace. By grace you have been
    saved, through faith and this is not from
    yourselves, it is the gift of God not by works,
    so that no one can boast. (Eph 29-9) (Many
    addicted people are unsure of their relationship
    with God, even if they call themselves
    Christians.)

36
  • When a husband and wife really love each other,
    have pleasure in each other, and thoroughly
    believe in their love, who teaches them how they
    are to behave one to another, what they are to do
    or not to do, say or not to say, what they are to
    think? Confidence alone teaches them all this,
    and even more than is necessary. For such a man
    there is no distinction in works. He does the
    great and the important as gladly as the small
    and the unimportant, and vice versa. Moreover,
    he does them all in a glad, peaceful, and
    confident heart, and is an absolute willing
    companion to the woman. But where there is any
    doubt, he searches within himself for the best
    thing to do then a distinction of works arises
    by which he imagines he may win favour. And yet
    he goes about it with a heavy heart and great
    disinclination. He is like a prisoner, more than
    half in despair and often makes a fool of
    himself.

37
  • Thus a Christian man who lives in this confidence
    toward God knows all things, can do all things,
    ventures everything that needs to be done, and
    does everything gladly and willingly, not that he
    may gain merits and good works, but because it is
    a pleasure for him to please God in doing these
    things. He simply serves God with no thought of
    reward, content that his service pleases God. On
    the other hand, he who is not at one with God, or
    is in a state of doubt, worries and starts
    looking for ways and means to do enough and to
    influence God with his many good works Webers
    tensed up person!.
  •  
  • Martin Luther, Treatise on Good Works, in
    Luthers Works, trans. W.A. Lambert, ed. James
    Atkinson (Philadelphia Fortress Press, 1966),
    26-27.

38
  • Calvin reflects this idea as well We have not
    an uncertain God of whom we have created a
    confused and indistinct apprehension but one of
    whom we have a true and solid knowledge (Comm.
    Ps., 42). Salvation for Calvin was knowing God
    and knowing ourselves. This double knowing is
    the work of the Spirit, the testimonium internum,
    and internal persuasion (Inst., III, 2, 14-16).

39
Matthew 1128-30
  • Are you tired? Worn out? Burned out on
    religion?
  • Serious about integrating faith and work but
    discouraged
  • Inadequate / failure
  • Failure makes us fit to receive Gods grace
  • John Calvin

40
The Yoke of the Covenant
41
Matthew 1128-30
  • Learn the unforced rhythms of grace. I wont
    lay anything heavy or ill-fitting on you. Keep
    company with me and you will learn to live freely
    and lightly. (The Message)

42
How do you learn to walkin rhythm with Jesus?
43
Learning how to live a whole life
  • A prayer life vs. a prayed life
  • Gathering all of life together before God
  • The Psalms as our Text

44
Learning the Rhythms of Grace
  • Psalms 1 to 5

Thanks and acknowledgement to Dr. Uli Chi
45
Psalm 1
  • Reconnecting to the source of life They are
    like a tree planted by streams of water (3)

46
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47
Psalm 2
  • What dominates your perception and imagination?
  • I have installed my king on Zion, my holy
    mountain. (6)
  • Let God be God.

48
Psalm 3
  • Learning to pray what and where we are (not what
    / where we think we should be) Lord, how many
    are my foes! How many rise up against me! (1)

49
Psalm 4 - Evening
  • Learning to let go sleep as a spiritual
    discipline in peace I will lie down and sleep,
    for you alone, Lord, make me dwell in safety
    (48)

50
Psalm 5 - Morning
  • Offering all the pieces of your life to GOD for
    him to make whole
  • In the morning I lay my requests before you and
    wait expectantly. (3)

51
Learning Not to Play God
  • Idolatry is the greatest risk for all who work -
    From participating in Gods work to becoming God
  • Work and rest in rhythm

52
Living Whole and Holy Lives
  • So heres what I want you to do, God
  • helping you Take your everyday, ordinary
  • life your sleeping, eating, going-to-work,
  • and walking-around life and place it before
  • God as an offering. Embracing what God
  • does for you is the best thing you can do for
  • him.
  • (Romans 121 The Message)

53
Personal Spirituality
  • 1. Assurance of grace.
  • 2. The grace of self-control a fruit of the
    Spirit

54
Self-Control Misunderstood
  • The Unattainable Virtue of Temperance
  • The thinkers of the ancient Greek world proposed
    that one could deal with a life out of control
    through cultivating the virtue of temperance, one
    of the seven classic virtues. The philosopher
    Plato likened the human person to a chariot
    driven by two horses one good and one bad. The
    charioteer was reason. Mind control could keep
    the horses harmonized and balanced.

55
Self-Control Misunderstood
  • Temperance hijacked by Christian asceticism
  • Christians transformed moderation into
    abstinence, denial of sex, food, power, marriage
    and leisure. Unlike Jesus who was not a joyless
    ascetic, indeed was accused of being a drunkard
    and a friend of disreputable people, these
    serious Christians took to the wilderness partly
    to subdue the flesh (this was not the only reason
    they took to the desert).

56
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57
Saint Anthony and Elijah Ribera
58
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59
The Dormition of St. Ephraim the Syrian, Iviron
Monastery, Mt. Athos
60
The Goal of Monasticism
  • Ultimately Union with God
  • Proximately Purity of heart
  • Strategic - Asceticism

61
Why asceticism is needed
  • To wean people from the addictions of society
  • To confront oneself with ones false self and
    realize ones true self

62
Asceticism
  • Money, sex and power the demon of money is
    greed the demon of sex is lust the demon of
    power is pride.
  • The monastic vows of poverty, chastity and
    obedience was a direct response to these three
    temptations. The same is true in other
    traditions, e.g. the 17th century Puritan
    emphasis on industry, faithfulness, and order
    (Foster 1985, 4-12, quoted, Yung, 6).

63
The Contribution of Monasticism
  • Art
  • Philosophy
  • History
  • Architecture
  • Music
  • Science
  • Technology
  • Capitalism (in part, see Peter Bernstein, Against
    the Gods The Remarkable Story of Risk)

64
  • There is some cosmic serendipity to the fact
    that it was a monk who originally codified
    double-entry accounting the fifteenth century
    Franciscan and mathematician Fra Luca
    Pacioli.Pacioli studied mathematics at
    universities in Bologna and Padova.he frequently
    consulted on both architecture and merchant
    practicehe collaborated on numerous projects
    with Leonardo da Vinci.
  • John Dalla Costa, Magnificence at Work, 160-161.

65
  • Behind the attempt to inculcate temperance is a
    fatal assumption moderation can be obtained by
    moral education and mind control.
  • Human beings cannot pull themselves up by their
    own bootstraps. The human psyche is too volcanic,
    too unpredictable to be entrusted to mind
    control.
  • There is a better way.

66
  • Self-control is helpfully defined by Aristotle in
    his Nicomachean Ethics as having a grip on
    oneself rather than being gripped and controlled
    by everything else, in our case gripped by
    advertisements, the pressure to succeed and
    overwhelming work-loads.

67
The Balanced Life or the Disciplined Life?
  • Balance is bunk. Jesus did not live a balanced
    life and few saints speak of it they lived by
    white hot passion.
  • Balance is not attainable or even desirable.
  • What is needed is discipline the grace of
    self-control

68
  • Peter bids his readers to make every effort to
    add to your knowledge self-control (2 Pet 16)
  • He is inviting his readers to cooperate with the
    God who wants to imbue them with this character
    quality in what can be described as a mysterious
    symphony of wills, human and divine. Make every
    effort is alongside Gods gracious infusion.
    God, the perfect gentleman, does not force his
    way into our lives.
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