a theology of work
I've been reading Moltmann and Barth on work, and am left with some questions.... How do you define work, if you are a full-time mum? Or if you work part-time in a laundrette, but really your heart is in designing and making clothes? Or if teaching maths is what you get paid to do, but you call yourself a theologian? Darell Cosden writes Human work is a transformative activity essentially consisting of dynamically interrelated instrumental, relational and ontological dimensions. His book unpacks that dense definition, offering some helpful insights about how a christian ethic of work needs the balance of all three of his dimensions, but I still feel he is presuming a neat, easily identifiable "job" which he calls work. Work for many of us today is less often a single job, career or vocation, than a portfolio of projects- some of which are paid and some voluntary; some of which are long term and some may be only a day or a few hours; some with a regular fixed timetab...