The Christian doesn’t have to move an inch 
            to help evangelize the world. Each person can serve God and spread 
            the love of Christ in his place of work, no matter what his job is. 
            At work, Christians can explain their faith to others confidently 
            and give attractive examples of the Christian life—even in just 
            doing their jobs well. Harold Burke-Sivers writes that in such activity 
            Christians can imitate Christ and participate in the evangelizing 
            mission of the Church during every day of work. 
          
It's not easy being a Christian in the workplace. 
            Secular ideology is so pervasive in the professional environment that 
            we often have a difficult time fitting into the culture of the office. 
            Many of us simply "go with the flow," choosing to participate in the 
            promotion of secular thought and values rather than risk being ostracized 
            and ridiculed by defending the absolute truth of Christianity and 
            the moral certitude of the distinctively Christian vision.
          It's easy to see why. How many times have you been 
            involved in conversations with co-workers who staunchly promote the 
            "great goods" of pornography, spousal infidelity, contraception, masturbation, 
            in-vitro fertilization, sterilization, population control, euthanasia, 
            abortion, etc., and you are the only one speaking out for the truth? 
            One of two possibilities will result from defending the faith:
          (1) We will be placed in a very uncomfortable position 
            by those whom we see and work with everyday. We may suddenly find 
            ourselves excluded from impromptu "water cooler" conversations or 
            after-hours activities. We may even become the brunt of insensitive 
            jokes and hurtful, sarcastic remarks made behind our backs; or
          (2) We may stir something deep within one or two 
            of our friends: Maybe the lapsed Catholic who has been struggling 
            with how to talk to her daughters about sex, or the man whose obsession 
            with orgasm is causing his marriage to suffer, or maybe even the relativist 
            who's been contemplating the meaning of life. One of them may pull 
            you aside, while no one else is around, and ask you a few questions 
            about what you believe and, more importantly, how you are able—in 
            the midst of such adversity—to faithfully live out what you 
            believe.
          In embodying a Christian spirituality at work, 
            we become the evangelizing Church in the world and play a crucial 
            role in the reconciliation and conversion of humanity. Our mission 
            in the world, through which we derive our full identity as laypersons, 
            is "to seek the Kingdom of God by engaging in temporal affairs and 
            ordering them according to the plan of God. Through baptism, the lay 
            faithful are made one body with Christ and are established among the 
            people of God. They are, in their own way, made sharers in the priestly, 
            prophetic, and kingly office of Jesus Christ" (Lumen Gentium, 
            n. 31).
          Herein lies the essence of Christian spirituality 
            in the workplace. The laity are united to Christ and share in his 
            priestly mission through "the offering they make of themselves and 
            their daily activities" (Christifideles Laici, n.14). This 
            offering should be united to Christ's offering in the Eucharist "for 
            their work, prayers, and apostolic endeavors, their ordinary married 
            and family life, their daily labor, their mental and physical relaxation, 
            if carried on in the spirit—and even the hardships of life, 
            if patiently borne—all of these become spiritual sacrifices 
            acceptable to God through Jesus Christ" (Lumen Gentium, n. 
            31).
          The lay faithful share in the prophetic mission 
            of Christ through "their ability and responsibility to accept the 
            Gospel in faith and proclaim it in word and deed without hesitating 
            to courageously identify and denounce evil" (Christifideles Laici, 
            n.14). Laity also exercise their kingship "above all in the spiritual 
            combat in which they seek to overcome in themselves the kingdom of 
            sin, and then to make a gift of themselves so as to serve in justice 
            and charity" (Christifideles Laici, n. 14).
          The proper role and vocation of the laity is found 
            in their universal call to holiness, their state in life, and their 
            vocation within the temporal order. "This is especially true in the 
            primary areas of evangelization and sanctification" where laity provide 
            "consistent witness in their personal, family, and social lives by 
            proclaiming and sharing the Gospel of Christ in every situation they 
            find themselves, and by their involvement with the task of explaining, 
            defending, and correctly applying Christian principles to the problems 
            of today's world" (Instruction Regarding the Collaboration of the 
            Non-Ordained Faithful in the Sacred Ministry of Priest, Premise).
          The prayer and sacramental life of the Christian, 
            while prior to the active life, has to be intimately connected with 
            it. Therefore, professional and family life, lived in the presence 
            of God, should be the overflow of the interior life. "Awareness that 
            man's work is a participation in God's activity ought to permeate 
            ... even 'the most ordinary, everyday activities. For, while providing 
            the substance of life for themselves and their families, men and women 
            are performing their activities in a way that appropriately benefits 
            society. They can justly consider that by their labor they are unfolding 
            the Creator's work ... and contributing, by their personal industry, 
            to the realization in history of the divine plan'" (Laborem Exercens, 
            n. 115; cf. Gaudium et Spes, n. 34).
          Jesus calls us to be perfect as the heavenly Father 
            is perfect. This "perfection in Christ" that we seek in faith must 
            integrate the spiritual and temporal dimensions of the human person. 
            As such, lay people are to become as competent as possible in their 
            individual disciplines and professions, bringing the truth of the 
            Gospel and the natural law to bear on the temporal order. "The lay 
            faithful must accomplish their work with professional competence, 
            with human honesty, with a Christian spirit, and especially as a way 
            of their own sanctification. Moreover, we know that through work offered 
            to God, an individual is associated with the redemptive work of Jesus 
            Christ, whose labor with His hands at Nazareth greatly ennobled the 
            dignity of work" (Gaudium et Spes, n. 67). 
          
          Copyright  Harold Burke-Sivers
          
            
            Harold Burke-Sivers holds a bachelor's degree 
              in economics and business administration from the University of 
              Notre Dame, and a master's degree in theological studies from the 
              University of Dallas. He is a Benedictine Oblate of Mt. Angel Abbey, 
              a member of the Catholic Society of Evangelists, and serves as treasurer 
              for the Portland Black Catholic Lay Caucus. Harold currently works 
              as the security coordinator for the Salem-Keizer school district, 
              and is listed in the International Who's Who of Professional Management. 
              He and his wife Colleen have two young children.