Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
What’s the point of working anymore?
What’s the point of working anymore?
Jun 13, 2026 2:08 AM

Whatever the reasons behind “The Great Resignation,” Gen Z must keep in mind that we were designed to work, to produce, to create.

Read More…

Is there any value to work in today’s world? This is a question that many in Generation Z find themselves asking.

I started working at a very young age. By 12 years old, I already had two part-time jobs plus a side business of my own. At age 11, I started mowing lawns and doing odd jobs for neighbors. A year later I was working for a pany, then a pany, and finally bought my own riding lawn mower and trimmer for a side business. A year later I sold my equipment when I became interested in woodworking. I used the money from the sale to buy tools and lumber and began making and selling furniture. Through social media and local connections, I was able to find some small success throughout high school as a custom woodworker. I’ve always loved this kind of hands-on work. Of course, there were days I didn’t want to go out in the heat and mow lawns or stand in front of 300-degree grills for hours, but at the end of the day, the satisfaction of work and the reward of a paycheck were more than enough to keep me going.

Fast-forward to today. There’s an overwhelming message from social media and the news that, when es to work, the current system sets you up for failure. For the past two years, a trend has been building to quit jobs. Encouragement in this direction has gone viral on social media, with #quitmyjob gaining 276.5 million views, and #quittock boasting 16.2 million views. Many in the media are calling this “The Great Resignation.” In the words of Glenn Beck: “‘The Great Resignation’ is ultimately a crisis of freedom, identity, and exhaustion. It is, as noted in a recent Gallup report, an expression of great discontent. Gen Z feels like they have nothing to lose and nothing to gain.” My generation has been left with this question: When the system is designed for my ultimate failure, why play the game?

In the “State of the Global Workplace: 2021 Report” put out by Gallup, the researchers found that only 21% of employees in the U.S. and Canada are “engaged” in their work, which is to say, only 21% of employees find their work to be meaningful and a benefit to their overall well-being. This high level of disengagement is a major contributor to the great resignation. As people lose sight of the value of their work, they begin to look elsewhere for both satisfaction and a means of generating e.

Not unrelated to this trend, from the time I was born in the early 2000s, the welfare state in America has grown from $20.8 billion in outlays to $1.75 trillion. A world without a vast welfare state is foreign to Gen Z. In the past few years, we’ve seen stimulus checks and various social relief programs that have opened up even more avenues of receiving unearned e. Is it unfair to think that this contributes to the devaluation of work? When there are so many ways to get money “for free,” why would you work for it, especially in jobs deemed menial, demoralizing, or dead ends?

As Teddy Roosevelt said in 1903, “Far and away the best prize that life offers are the chance to work hard at work worth doing.” Earned money was the key for me: learning from a young age that you have to work for your e. Not only that you have to work, but that it is inherently good to work. While the message on social media and elsewhere has been that the workplace is toxic and the system is rigged against personal growth and well-being, this mantra is extremely harmful, especially to my generation, and should be resisted. As we begin building our careers, we should not only expect hard—and yes, even “menial” work—but strive for it. And if we see a problem in the workplace that makes fulfilling our responsibilities unnecessarily difficulty, we should work to fix it, not run from it. This is what we were designed to do: to work, to create, to innovate—and most of all, to glorify God through benefiting our neighbor/co-worker.

It’s that design aspect that I believe is missing in the thinking of so many in my generation. “So God created man in his own image, in the image of God he created him; Male and female he created them. And God blessed them. And God said to them, ‘Be fruitful and multiply and fill the earth and subdue it, and have dominion … over every living thing that moves on the earth’” (Genesis 1:27–28). Humans were created to work, to have dominion over the earth. Being made in the image of God, it is in our nature to work and to produce, not merely take.

As my generation moves into the workforce, we must not forget that we were designed to work, not to live off others, and that work is not always going to be the most fulfilling or creative. We don’t live in a paradise where our dreams are handed to us as an entitlement. Now, if “The Great Resignation” is, in fact, a signal that a reborn entrepreneurial spirit has been let loose in the culture, I am all for it. But if it’s about merely wanting to “be my own boss,” in an effort to avoid dysfunction, well, many will find that can be even more exhausting than having one! But whatever the reason so many are leaving their current places of employment, my generation should be looking for better ways to work, rather than excuses not to work. To do so would be to disdain our Creator’s own mand.

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
You Are The Special
The much-touted Lego Movie drops on disc today, and before you pick up your copy, I encourage you to remember that “Everything Really Is Awesome.” Emmet’s words to Lord Business apply to us all: You don’t have to be the bad guy. You are the most talented, most interesting, and most extraordinary person in the universe. And you are capable of amazing things. Because you are the Special. And so am I. And so is everyone. The prophecy is made...
A Cultural Case for Capitalism: Part 2 of 12 — The Great Society
[Part 1 of 12 here] In the 1950s and ‘60s, blacks were winning the civil rights they should have had all along, but in the midst of this positive trend, increasingly aggressive minimum wage regulations and extensive welfare programs were beginning to displace paratively free market of labor and private charity. munities flooded with this state-sponsored mode of redistributive justice now face far higher levels injustice in the form of unpunished crimes munity breakdown than before the redistributive justice arrived....
Audio: Sirico on Poverty, Pope Francis & Obamacare in Baton Rouge, Louisiana
This morning, Acton Institute President Rev. Robert A. Sirico took some time away from his preparations for Acton Universityto speak with Jim Engster, host of The Jim Engster Showon WRKF radio in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, discussing how to address the issue of poverty in society, and the approach taken by Pope Francis and the church in general to that and other issues. They also discussed the problems with the ObamaCare model of health-care reform, among other issues. You can listen...
A Cultural Case for Capitalism: Part 5 of 12 — Capitalism from Christendom
[Part 1 is here.] mon reading of Western history holds that the principles of the free economy grew out of the secular Enlightenment and had little to do with Christianity. This is mistaken. The free economy (and we can speak more broadly here of the free society) didn’t spring from the soil of the secular Enlightenment, much less, as some imagine, from a Darwinian, survival-of-the-fittest, dog-eat-dog philosophy of life. The free economy sprang from the soil of Christian Medieval Europe...
Which U.S. States are the Most Corrupt?
There’s an old saying that corruption is authority plus monopoly minus transparency. bination makes state-level governments especially prone to the temptations of corruption. A new study in Public Administration Review, “The Impact of Public Officials’ Corruption on the Size and Allocation of U.S. State Spending,” looks at the impact of government corruption on states’ expenditures. Defining corruption as the “misuse of public office for private gain,” the authors of the paper note that public and private corruption can have a...
A Cultural Case for Capitalism: Part 3 of 12 — What Economic Freedom Is and Isn’t
[Part 1 is here.] Even a cursory look at the annual list of the freest and least free economies in the world suggests a strong correlation between economic freedom and the prosperity of its citizens, including its poorest citizens. But there’s another correlation that tends to capture the attention of those making a cultural critique of the free economy. They note that America is economically free, and that it’s experiencing cultural decay, so they conclude the first causes the second....
A Cultural Case for Capitalism: Part 4 of 12 — The Crunchy Con Critique
[Part 1 is here.] The free economy frees entrepreneurs to create new wealth for themselves and others, which brings us to the issue of consumption. In his book Crunchy Cons, conservative author Rod Dreher describes consumerism this way: “Consumerism fetishizes individual choice, and sees its expansion as unambiguous progress. A culture guided by consumerist values is one that es technology without question and prizes efficiency…. A consumerist society encourages its members both to find and express their personal identity through...
How Economic Growth Sparked an Adoption Revolution
I love babies. Andbecause I love babies, I love economic growth. I’ve explained that connection several times on this blog already, but there is another oft-overlooked way that economic growth helps babies. Inthe early 1900s, there weremore babies than parents could feed. Illegitimate infants suffered high rates of mortality from murder (usually by the mother) or neglect (as wards of the state). Today, a hundred years later, the situation is drastically different. As Megan McCardle notes,adoptable infants are so rare...
Journal of Markets & Morality on Journaltalk
As a new feature for the Journal of Markets & Morality, the folks at Journaltalk have helped us create discussion pages for the editorial and each of the articles of our most recent issue, vol. 17, no. 1 (Spring 2014). The issue is ing in print in the next few weeks but already published online. While all articles require a subscription (or a small fee per article), this issue’s editorial on the state of academic peer review is open access....
Rethinking Religious Liberty in America
There is an informative podcast on a new book titled The Rise and Decline of American Religious Freedom over at the Library of Law and Liberty. The author, Steven D. Smith, is the Warren Distinguished Professor of Law, University of San Diego and Co-Executive Director of the USD Institute for Law and Religion. Smith challenges the popular notion that American religious freedom was merely an enlightenment revolt from European Christendom and was meant to uplift a secular interpretation of the...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved