Work is a creational or natural necessity but it’s also a Christian obligation. Charity is also a Christian virtue and obligation. Our English word charity is derived from the Latin caritas, which simply means love. We have come to think of charity as giving money and/or food to those in need but that is an application of charity but not charity itself. To give money, shelter, and other basic necessities to those who are truly needy is a blessed thing.
Paul was a theologian of the twofold kingdom. In what Calvin called the “spiritual” aspect of the kingdom we find a covenant of grace in which sinners are accepted (justified) and saved by God out of his free favor (sola gratia), through faith alone (sola fide), in Christ alone. There is another aspect of the kingdom, the common or secular. In that aspect we find a covenant of works. Our whole secular life, our job, school, relationship to the civil magistrate is a covenant of works. God is sovereign over both spheres but he administers them distinctly. In that sphere, we Christians have no particular advantages and we live under the same sorts of creational (natural) laws and general providence as everyone else. God makes the rain to fall on the just and the unjust (Matt 5:45). Christians live under the same laws of physics—though we interpret the significance of the world differently from unbelievers.
One of the creational laws under which both believers and unbelievers live is the law that requires the able-bodied to work in order to eat. Paul wrote to the congregation at Thessalonica, some of whom had become so worked up and confused about the return of Jesus that they had quit work and were now dependent upon other members of the congregation to support them while they waited for Jesus to return.
For even when we were with you, we would give you this command: If anyone is not willing to work, let him not eat. For we hear that some among you walk in idleness, not busy at work, but busybodies. Now such persons we command and encourage in the Lord Jesus Christ to do their work quietly and to earn their own living (2 Thess 3:10-12; ESV).
This is the positive aspect of the eighth commandment. Not only are Christians not to steal but they are fulfill their vocation by laboring to support themselves and to be able to relieve material needs within this congregation through almsgiving (the diaconal offering). Heidelberg 111 says:
111. But what does God require of you in this commandment?
That I further my neighbor’s good where I can and may, deal with him as I would have others deal with me, and labor faithfully, so that I may be able to help the poor in their need.
Work is a creational or natural necessity but it’s also a Christian obligation. Charity is also a Christian virtue and obligation. Our English word charity is derived from the Latin caritas, which simply means love. We have come to think of charity as giving money and/or food to those in need but that is an application of charity but not charity itself. To give money, shelter, and other basic necessities to those who are truly needy is a blessed thing. The visible church, considered as an institution, has an obligation to love its members by seeing to their well being. James says, “If a brother or sister is poorly clothed and lacking in daily food, 16 and one of you says to them, “Go in peace, be warmed and filled,” without giving them the things needed for the body, what good is that? 17 So also faith by itself, if it does not have works, is dead” (James 2:15–17). Indeed, this is his illustration of how true faith ought to manifest itself (2:14).
There is very little evidence in the New Testament that the visible church (the congregations) ever gave general welfare beyond the church itself. When there was famine under Caesar Claudius, the churches organized relief efforts for “the brothers living in Judea” (Acts 11:29–30). The “least of these” in Matthew 25:40 is specifically in the passage itself to “my brothers.” Christians ought to form agencies for general poverty relief and, indeed, they have been doing so for centuries but the explicit and implicit teaching of Scripture speaks to the responsibility of the visible church to professing Christians.
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