Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Thinking Christianly About Bus Driving
Thinking Christianly About Bus Driving
Aug 24, 2025 4:47 AM

“Is there a distinctively ‘Christian’ way to be a bus driver?”

Justin Taylor offers an insightful, varied response, asking six questions to sketch things out. Over at the Hang Together blog, Greg Forster adds another to the list.

In response to the last question — “Is there a distinctively Christian way to think about the particulars of each vocation?” — Taylor offers this:

My sense is that the more intellectual and aesthetically oriented the vocation, the more work has already been done on a distinctively Christian approach. This is, in my part, because the contrast will be more wide-ranging and apparent and because the Bible seems to have more to say directly about these areas. I’m thinking, for example, of areas like philosophy, education, and politics. (For some examples, see Alvin Plantinga’s “Advice to Christian Philosophers,” or the books in the Reclaiming the Christian Intellectual Tradition series.) The same would be true for aesthetics, as in music, fine arts, and design. It can be more difficult to see in areas oriented toward manual labor. But there is still much work that can be done in these areas. One of the problems is that intellectuals and philosophers are more inclined to know and study areas they are more interested in, and therefore other vocations e neglected in terms of analysis.

Taylor goes on to give a nod to the influence of Abraham Kuyperon such matters, andindeed, as Kuyper notes throughoutWisdom and Wonder: Common Grace in Science and Art, part of the difference in such “work being done” is due to the distinct differences in the work itself.

The basic techniques of bus driving, for example — steering, using appropriate turn signals, following your route, etc. — will naturally have a mon consensus to build from, while the basic techniques of more “intellectual and aesthetically oriented” work will requiredistinctly Christian choices about basic technique. Perhaps one reason we’re more inclined to “know and study” spiritual matters in more intellectually oriented vocations is that they require more spiritual knowing and studying up front.

Now, I say “up front” because, for the Christian, manual labor is bound to drift into the subjective and the spiritual at some point, as trusty as the Big Blue Book of Bus Driver Knowledge might be for ordinary day-to-day activities.

Speaking specifically of the realm of science —that glorious land of the observable and measurable —Kuyper notes that the Christian scientist “cannot remain satisfied with observing, measuring, and weighing,” and must press beyond, searching constantly for a “glimmer of divine life” in mon labors of his field.In a similar way, the Christian bus driver cannot remain satisfied with simply following maps and training manuals about bus driving, but should push beyond, seeking to “discern the living God” in such work, which could involve a host of unexpected twists and turns. At some point, the Christian bus driver’s technical knowledge about bus driving will need to be paired with and empowered by that same spiritual something that the Christian philosopher is forced to begin with.

We are, of course, speaking of “a distinctively Christian way to think about the particulars of each vocation.” When es to the work itself, there is meaning in all of our work. Further, as Lester DeKoster and Gerard Berghoef indicate in Faithful in All God’s House: Stewardship and the Christian Life, the work of the “manual laborer” —in this case, the bus driver es with its own particular form of Biblical affirmation that the lofty intellectual’s does not:

The forms of work are countless, but the typical one is work with the hands. The Bible has reference to the sower, to the making of tents and of things out of clay, to tilling the fields and tending the vine. Handwork makes visible the plan in the mind, just as the deed makes visible the love in the heart. While the classic Greek mind tended to scorn work with the hands, the Bible suggests that something about it structures the soul.

Read Taylor’s full post here.

Purchase Wisdom and Wonder: Common Grace in Science and Art.

Purchase Faithful in All God’s House: Stewardship and the Christian Life.

To join theOn Call in munity, like us onFacebookor follow us onTwitter.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Sports Journalism, Cultural Marxism, and the Miami Dolphins
Class struggle. Racially-charged rhetoric. Anti-capitalist diatribes. Sounds like the lineup to a “Fantasy Diversity” team from a sociology professor at Wellesley College, right? Alas, I’m merely referring tothe controversysurrounding ex-Miami Dolphins players Jonathan Martin (black) and Richie Incognito (white). For those who haven’t been paying attention – and thank your lucky stars that you haven’t – Martin left the team for personal reasons and his fellow offensive lineman Incognito was released by the Dolphins for allegedly being the bully who...
U.S. Catholic Bishops Issue ‘Special Letter’ on HHS Mandate
The United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) has issued a “special letter” regarding the Obama administration’s HHS mandate. The USCCB, meeting this month in Baltimore, passed the letter unanimously. Calling the HHS mandate “coercive,” the bishops state that they have tried to work with the current administration, to no avail. Beginning in March 2012, in United for Religious Freedom, we identified three basic problems with the HHS mandate: it establishes a false architecture of religious liberty that excludes our...
Richard Weaver on Liberty and Christianity
Richard Weaver, one of the great intellectuals of the 20th Century, and author of Ideas Have Consequences, published an essay in the early 1960s on Lord Acton (pdf only). Much of Weaver’s essay is worth highlighting, but one excerpt in particular reminds us of the central significance of Christianity in the battle for freedom. It reminds us too of the dangers of secularism and where our indifference to God is inevitably leading us. It was inevitable that, lacking one vital...
When Did College Education Reduce To Making Money?
Someone should tell university administrators and educators that their primary purpose is to guarantee that graduates will have better es than those who are not fortunate enough to attend college. In addition, colleges and universities are now, it seems, supposed to be places where everyone equally es one of the “Joneses.” In an article titled, “Rethinking the Rise of Inequality“, Eduardo Porter of the New York Times writes that college education is about solving the e disparity problem. Porter opens...
Jordan Ballor in Washington Post on Amazon Sunday Deliveries
On Monday, Amazon announced that it would immediately start offering Sunday deliveries. This new initiative will not only satisfy consumers who do not want to wait all weekend for something to arrive, but it will also give the cash strapped U.S. Postal Service revenue as they will be making the Sunday deliveries. This might be good news for the USPS and impatient consumers, but it effectively makes Sunday another weekday. Cecelia Kang, a reporter for the Washington Post, interviewed Acton...
How Can Businesses Fight Human Trafficking?
The Business as Mission movement, writes Elise Hilton in this week’s Acton Commentary, is creating alternative and wholesome sources of e while offering ‘restoration’ for survivors: Human trafficking feeds on the vulnerable, and that includes the poor. Children are especially at risk, as they can be sold by parents into slavery and have little or no education or means of self-support. For the Business as Mission movement, this means intentionally focusing on areas that are economically depressed and unstable. Businesses...
How I Solve the Crisis in Underemployment and Student Loan Debt for Liberal Arts Majors
In his article today Anthony Bradley asks, “When Did College Education Reduce To Making Money?” Our country’s narcissistic materialism has created a neurotic obsession with disparities between the es of individuals resulting in an overall devaluing of the learning goals and es of what colleges exist to plish. There is a major disconnect here. I wonder if this explains why many parents do not want their children studying the humanities in college. While pletely agree with Anthony about what the...
Mark Perry: ‘The College Textbook Bubble is Starting to Deflate’
The educational cronyism of textbook publisher cartels ing to an end as digital alternatives are on the rise, or so says AEI’s Mark Perry in a recent article. “Hear that hissing sound?” he writes, “It’s the sound of the college textbook bubble starting to deflate. . . . The era of the college textbook cartel and $300 college textbooks is ending.” I have written on this subject in the past for the PowerBlog (here and here), mentioning Perry’s coverage of...
Principles for Executive Stewardship
Over at Desiring God blog, Sam Crabtree offers 16 simple principles, each panied by Scripture, to help reorient our thinking about the work of our hands, particularly among those in executive and administrative roles. Highlighting our persistent human tendency to neglect our Creator, Crabtree cautions against the subtle temptation to begin operating “as if we really can execute on our tasks all by our lonesome, without the constant help of our God.” What distinguishes a distinctly Christian executive? Some examples:...
Feisty Nuns’ Pipeline Battle Cute but Wrong-Headed
There are days when policy conflicts appear to be clear cut. Such is the case with the nuns and monks protesting a proposed pipeline across their Kentucky land. As a property rights advocate, I agree wholeheartedly that the Sisters of Loretto and monks of the Abbey of Gethsemani are well within their rights to protest running a pipeline across their property. I disagree vehemently, however, with the rationales behind the protest – namely the religious’ ill-advised environmental opposition to fossil...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved