Work and Our Labor in the Lord - Short Studies in Biblical Theology - Paperback

James M. Hamilton Jr.
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Work and Our Labor in the Lord:- In this book pastor, professor, and biblical scholar James Hamilton explores how work fits into the big story of the Bible; revealing the glory that God intended when he gave man work to do, the ruin that came as a result of the fall, and the redemption yet to come, offering hope for flourishing in the midst of fallen futility.”

Part of the  Short Studies in Biblical Theology  Series

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What Does the Bible Say About Your Monday?

Most Christians have a reasonably clear sense of what Sunday is for. But Monday — and Tuesday, and the rest of the working week — can feel like a different story entirely. Work is where we spend most of our waking hours. It shapes our identity, tests our character, and consumes the bulk of our energy. And yet for many Christians, it exists in a separate mental compartment from faith — something to be endured rather than redeemed, survived rather than understood.

Work and Our Labor in the Lord is James Hamilton’s answer to that disconnection. Drawing on the whole story of Scripture, he shows that work is not a secular intrusion on a spiritual life — it is woven into the very fabric of what it means to be human in God’s world.

About This Book

Work and Our Labor in the Lord is part of the Short Studies in Biblical Theology series published by Crossway and edited by Dane Ortlund and Miles V. Van Pelt. The series is designed to connect the resurgence of biblical theology at the academic level with everyday believers — helping readers see the whole Bible as a unified story culminating in Jesus, by tracing major themes through Scripture from beginning to end.

This volume — the third in the series — takes the theme of work and follows it from Genesis to Revelation. The result is a concise but surprisingly far-ranging book that illuminates one of the most universally experienced dimensions of human life from a genuinely biblical perspective.

Hamilton structures the book around the Bible’s four-chapter narrative: creation, fall, redemption, and consummation. In each movement, he shows how work takes on a different character — from the God-imaging task of the very good creation, through the painful toil and futility of the fallen world, into the gospel-shaped meaning available to workers who follow Christ, and toward the restoration of all things where work will be fully redeemed.

One endorser summarised the effect well: “People’s lives get turned upside down when they realise God cares intensely about their daily work.”

What the Book Covers — The Four Movements

Work in Creation — The Glory God Intended Before the fall, before sin, before toil — there was work. God himself works, and he made humanity in his image to work. Hamilton opens with this foundational truth, showing that work is not a punishment or a consequence of sin but a creation gift — the means by which image-bearing human beings reflect God’s glory and exercise his delegated dominion in the world.

Work in the Fall — The Ruin That Came The fall did not abolish work. It cursed it. The ground resists. Toil multiplies. Frustration, futility, and the groaning of Romans 8 enter the picture. Hamilton traces this honestly through the Old Testament narrative, showing how the story of work in a fallen world is marked by sweat and difficulty — and yet also by grace, as God continues to work through human vocation for his own glory despite pervasive sinfulness.

Work in Redemption — The Gospel and Vocation Hamilton shifts to the New Testament and the redemptive significance of work in Christ. He shows how work after the resurrection functions as a means of adorning the gospel, demonstrating love for God, and showing love toward neighbours. Work is not merely tolerable for the Christian — it is meaningful, because it participates in what God is doing in the world through his redeemed people.

Work in Consummation — The Restoration Yet to Come The book ends with eschatology — the hope that the redemption begun in Christ will one day be complete, and that work itself will be restored and glorified. This forward-looking vision gives daily work a significance that reaches beyond any individual career or task: every faithful act of work is a foreshadowing of the restoration to come.

What Readers Will Learn

  • Why work is not a secular activity but a creation gift intended to reflect the image and glory of God
  • How the fall corrupted work — and why frustration, futility, and difficulty at work are not signs of God’s absence but of creation’s groaning
  • How the gospel transforms the meaning of work for those who follow Christ
  • What it looks like practically to work in a way that adorns the gospel, serves neighbours, and glorifies God
  • How the whole Bible — from Genesis to Revelation — forms a unified, progressive narrative about the meaning of human work
  • The hope of consummation: that work, like all of creation, will one day be fully redeemed and restored
  • How to bring genuine theological clarity to the question “why does my work matter?”

Who Should Read This Book

Working Christians — whether in professional, domestic, agricultural, or manual work — who want to understand why their Monday has as much gospel significance as their Sunday.

Pastors and preachers who want to equip their congregations with a biblical theology of work and vocation, and who need a concise, academically grounded resource to inform their teaching.

Students and young professionals in India navigating the intersection of faith and ambition, career and calling, who want a theological framework for thinking about their work life.

Small groups or Bible study groups wanting a focused, accessible study on a topic that is universally relevant — every member of the group works, in one form or another.

Anyone who has found conventional faith-and-work books unsatisfying — because they tend to be either anecdotal (practical stories without biblical depth) or technical (academic arguments without personal application). Hamilton occupies the uncommon middle ground.

About the Author — Dr James M. Hamilton Jr.

James M. Hamilton Jr. holds a PhD from The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, where he is professor of biblical theology. He also serves as preaching pastor at Kenwood Baptist Church in Louisville, Kentucky. He is the author of God’s Glory in Salvation through Judgment, the Revelation volume in the Preaching the Word commentary series, and numerous academic articles and books on biblical theology. He is widely regarded as one of the leading evangelical biblical theologians of his generation.

In Work and Our Labor in the Lord, Hamilton brings his expertise in whole-Bible biblical theology to bear on a subject that touches every Christian’s daily life — with the combination of exegetical precision, accessible writing, and pastoral application that marks his best work.

Series Information — Short Studies in Biblical Theology

Work and Our Labor in the Lord is the third volume in the Short Studies in Biblical Theology series published by Crossway and edited by Dane C. Ortlund and Miles V. Van Pelt. The series is designed to help readers see the whole Bible as a unified story culminating in Jesus, by tracing significant themes through Scripture from beginning to end. Each volume is insightful, accessible, and practical — a bite-sized introduction to a major topic in biblical theology.

Other titles in the series cover themes including prayer, the covenant of works, the kingdom of God, the law, marriage, and many others. The full Short Studies in Biblical Theology collection is available at forthetruth.in.

What Others Have Said

“Embracing a robust theology framed in the four-chapter narrative of creation, fall, redemption, and consummation, Jim Hamilton skillfully handles the scriptural texts, displaying how human work is a central thread in the biblical storyline. No matter the present depth of the reader’s understanding of the integration of faith and work, the insights gained will prove inspiring and transformational.” — Tom Nelson, Senior Pastor, Christ Community Church; President, Made to Flourish; author, Work Matters

“People’s lives get turned upside down when they realise God cares intensely about their daily work. This short book walks us step by step through the big story of the Bible to show that God’s purpose for our daily labour is one of Scripture’s deepest and most important themes.” — Greg Forster, Director, Oikonomia Network, Trinity International University; author, The Joy of Calvinism

  • Weight : 0.167 kg
  • Dimensions : 20.3 × 13 × 1 cm
  • Format : Paperback
  • ISBN : 9788195940424
  • Language : English
  • Pages : 128
  • Publisher : FOR THE TRUTH
  • HSN : 4901

1 review for Work and Our Labor in the Lord - Short Studies in Biblical Theology - Paperback

  1. Raju Abraham

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