Whatever task you must do, work as if your soul depends on it, as for the Lord and not for humans, since you know that from the Lord you will receive the inheritance as your reward; you serve the Lord Christ.
- Colossians 3:23-24
I love to go camping, and like many people who do, I tend to romanticize it. I savor the smoky taste of food cooked over a fire. I revel in the beauty of nature—the glory of a sunrise, the sounds of birds chirping, the chill of the night air. I boast in the feeling of “roughing it” (albeit in my REI tent and sleeping bag), abandoning the creature comforts of modern society for a weekend in the woods.
But for all that romanticism, even the most devoted outdoorsman must admit that much of camping is a drag. Constantly swatting at bugs gets old. Sleeping on the ground makes you feel rugged, but it also makes you feel sore. And as for when nature calls, well, the less said about state park bathrooms, the better.
But the reason so many, myself included, still enjoy camping is because of those moments when the little aggravations are overwhelmed by something glorious you never could have experienced back home. Camping is, as a recent New Yorker article puts it, “full of rain, mosquitos, and, intermittently, the sublime.”
It occurs to me that the same is true of life in Christ. There are many who, upon giving their lives to the Lord, find themselves chasing spiritual highs: emotional worship experiences, life-changing mission trips, etc. They want for every day with Jesus to be a thrill, every step of obedience to feel life-changing.
But the truth is, some days Paul just made tents. While we are drawn to big moments and key sermons and turning points, we should also remember that even the greatest of the apostles knew the drudgery of a hard day’s work and the inconveniences that come with it. Not every day was a mountaintop experience.
The key—for the titans of the early church and for ordinary believers today—is to remain faithful when you’re not making headlines, to give the Lord everything you have even when you’re not yet seeing the fruit. Don’t make the mistake of thinking there is nothing spiritual in your day-to-day life, because God is found there too.
Rather, devote your drudgery to the Lord, seeing even the most ordinary tasks as opportunities to give God glory and find his blessings. For it is in the simple, common things of life that you sometimes stumble upon the sublime.
