WORK AND FAMILY
Relationships Are Everything
7.14.02
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Article:
Two are better than one, because they have a good return for their work. If one falls down, his friend can help him up. But pity the one who falls and has no one to help him up! (Eccl. 4:9-10 )
"The Teacher" in Ecclesiastes struggled for meaning in daily toil, and many today identify with him.
American society worships self-sufficiency, independence . . . the "self made" individual. But as the Teacher attests, noble work at the expense of relationships is meaningless.
Incessant striving for power, popularity, and possessions can alienate friends, family, and God. Pursuit of wisdom, pleasure, and work for their own sakes, the Teacher says, is chasing after the wind. Apart from relationships, life and work lose their lasting rewards. We finally acquire what we longed for only to ask: Is that all there is?
"What does a man gain from all his labor at which he toils under the sun?" (Eccl. 1:3)
Then, amid the Teacher's sea of cynicism, comes a refreshing and hopeful thought: "Two are better than one, because they have a good return for their work. If one falls down, his friend can help him up."
In relationship, life and work acquire meaning. A wise youth minister said many times, "To God, relationships are everything." We are created for meaningful, abundant lives in communion with God and others. By design, our greatest fulfillment begins when we enter a relationship with God through Jesus Christ. That primary relationship enables us to develop healthy, satisfying relationships with others. Our daily tasks are more attainable when we can share the load. Equally rewarding, we return the favor when we lift up someone who falls or needs encouragement. God's best gifts come in relationships.
Life's lessons are best learned in a supportive community that allows us to practice, succeed, and even fail. The courage to risk comes more easily with safety nets—God-given relationships developed through time and energy. When we inevitably miss a step and fall, our nets are there. And through encouragement, faith, and love, we also hold the net for others and help them to their feet.
At times, daily work is wearisome. But God's blessings through well-tended relationships more than compensate. Yes, relationships that give life meaning were God's idea!
Questions for discussion:
- What is gives your life meaning?
- Does your approach to life and work help or hinder your relationships with God and others?


READER'S COMMENTS
Great Article and true. Two are better than one. God will make people act on your behalf. Last quarter our sunday school lesson came from Gensis from the begining, on to Abraham, Sarah, Hagar, Issac, Ishamel and to Joseph.
It is good when others are around to guide, encourage and show you, but the real work is up to you to get it done. But we should always give credit to whom credit is due it is God that allows this to take place.
1. There is no self made person -- It is God that allows us to do whatever we do
2. Each person have to develop a sincere relationship with God for ourselves...this can not be inherited nor can it be handed down to others...
3. Life Lessons -- maybe this is part of an answer to one of my silent questions.
Angela
Oh so god is a puppeteer?
Jeeble, while there are many instances where people talk of God as if he were a puppeteer this certainly isn't one of those instances.