CHRIST AND THE GOSPEL OF THE WORKSHOP
by J. C. Ryle - Written about 1877
(1) The Workshop needs the Gospel. -- The working man shares with every member of the human race the heritage of a fallen nature, and for that no healing is found save in the Gospel of Christ. But the cares of life press with special severity upon the working classes. With them there is often a continual struggle for existence; and if their earnings commonly suffice to supply them with daily bread, they live so near the border line which separates them from actual want, that any failure of work, an attack of illness, or any of those changes which in a highly complicated state of society are continually taking place, suffice to render them destitute. Surely then the workshop needs the Gospel; " each man must bear his own burden;" but the burden, the " load" of the working man is often a heavy one, and no one can so well help him to bear it as the great burden-bearer, the Lord Jesus Christ. Without the Gospel, the life of daily toil must always be an anxious one; with it there shall be such compensations as shall sweeten and ennoble it: without the Gospel, the workshop shall at best furnish a provision for the wants of time; with it, it shall prove a training-place for the occupations of eternity.
(2) The Gospel needs the Workshop. -- Truth through personality is the method by which God communicates His will to man; and personality "sanctified in the truth " (John 17:17) is the final product of the Gospel. But, if so, the Gospel needs a field in which to carry out its beneficent design; and that field is commonly found in the life of honest industry. It was so in the case of our blessed Lord. The only perfect life that has ever been lived upon earth was mainly passed, not in the abode of learned leisure, not in the solitude of the desert, not even in the Temple of God, but in a village shop. The Gospel made use of a workshop in which to mould and perfect the human character of its Founder; it was there that the Lord Jesus was trained for His great work; nor did He quit it until He entered upon the final stage of His earthly ministry. Christ has thus by His example consecrated the field of honest labour as a fitting training-place for heaven; there, in the fullest sense of the word, His servants may serve Him; there,- in the letter no less than in the spirit, they may follow the example and conform to the image of their risen Lord.
In the workshop of Nazareth, therefore, we may thus perhaps find an answer to some of the pressing social questions of the day. Christianity is a social religion, designed to work a social revolution, to raise and purify the social condition of mankind; but it does so, not by destroying society, but by regenerating it; not by reducing every member of the body politic to the dead level of uniformity, but by teaching each member to do aright the work that belongs to him; not by preaching revolution and seeking to roll back the world into chaos, but by establishing in men's hearts those principles of truth, righteousness, and love, which, just so far as they prevail, turn this fallen world of ours into a paradise. And Jesus Christ laid the foundation for this beneficent work when He lived the greater portion of His life as a labouring man; when, beginning at the bottom of the social scale, He accepted and ennobled a life of manual toil; when, renouncing the countless sources of supply that were open to Him, He earned His daily bread in the workshop of Nazareth.
Nor do we find in this homely example an answer only to some of our modern social difficulties; we also learn from it how close an alliance may exist between industry and piety, between even the rudest forms of daily labour and the purest aspirations, the highest attainments of the consecrated life. The workshop is a large word. With few, we may say with no, exceptions, every man has his workshop. The merchant, the tradesman, the soldier, the sailor, the statesman, the student, the professional man, each has his field of labour, his workshop in which to carry on his daily toil. And if it be said that some few are exempted from this common lot and may, if they will, spend their days in idleness, I answer that the workshop of the idle man is a scene of unending toil. Rest after labour is sweet, but the "idle man knows no rest; the change to work would be refreshing, but idleness refuses to work; the wheel goes round unceasingly, the door turns ever upon its hinges, the soul of the sluggard desireth and hath nothing.
Given, then, to each of us the workshop in which to carry on the work of life, there need be no collision between the two sides of that life, the human and the Divine. The presence of God may be as truly enjoyed, the love of Christ as truly felt, the indwelling power of the Holy Spirit as truly realized in the workshop as in the sanctuary; nay, it is there that God would have each one of us fight out the battle of life; not shirking duty, not restlessly pursuing change; but whatsoever the hand findeth to do, doing it with our might. And if at times discouraged and cast down, let the thought of that Galilean workshop come to our aid, the thought of Him who laboured on from year to year in patient, uneventful, unrequited toil; nay, rather of Him who has ascended from the workshop of Nazareth to the throne of the universe, and thence dispenses grace to His toilers, to every man according to his need.