Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
‘Wisdom’s Work’: Exploring the earthiness of the Christian life
‘Wisdom’s Work’: Exploring the earthiness of the Christian life
Dec 12, 2025 11:35 PM

Christians have long struggled to fully understand and embody our position of dual citizenship—being in the world but not of it. Torn between faulty, formulaic approaches to cultural engagement, it can be hard to keep the faith, let alone allow our faith to fuel our earthly actions.

In Wisdom’s Work: Essays on Ethics, Vocation, and Culture, recently published by the Acton Institute, J. Daryl Charles explores these tensions, seeking a path toward a broader and richer cultural faithfulness. Rather than choosing between a lofty, detached spirituality and a flavorless public witness, Charles urges us to instead embrace the full “earthiness” of the Christian life in our modern age.

“There is a pressing need to relate our deepest convictions about all of life—convictions anchored in the doctrines of creation, providence, redemption, incarnation, and consummation—to the public sphere in all its variety,” writes Charles. “But this task incurs particular challenges and obstacles. Several of these are in-house in nature.”

Indeed, the church itself has often plicit in the confusion, whether observed through the fortification and domination strategies of modern evangelicalism or the more passive modations and capitulations across Mainline Protestantism. With these sort peting approaches at play, how might a different witness emerge—one that doesn’t seek to wage war against every earthly institution, but still remains faithful and distinct in a world desperate for truth, goodness, and beauty?

To find the answers, Charles addresses a number of our biggest challenges, from a range of false dichotomies (mind vs. spirit, private faith vs. public faith) to the modern church’s basic lack of natural-law thinking to the various modern distortions of “vocation” and economic life. Overall, however, “the great challenge in our era may be that Christians have e absorbed into the culture as a result of their lack of critical discernment so that they are scarcely identifiable from the surrounding culture.”

To confront this challenge, Charles argues, we need a new posture in the public square—one that rejects the mere escapism of the strictly heaven-bound believer while also enriching our view of earthly citizenship with the transformative power of the Gospel:

Our dual citizenship, even when our ultimate allegiance is to the city of God, nevertheless requires that we take our responsibilities to the city of man in earnest. A proper eschatological perspective holds the temporal and the eternal in a proper tension, and it does not release that tension. This posture, in turn, allows the munity neither to succumb to the entrapments of its cultural surroundings nor to flee the world and eschew responsible participation. Anchored in an awareness of divine providence mon grace and recognizing that the sovereign Lord Almighty places us in particular cultural contexts for a purpose, we take our stewardship of that calling seriously.

Charles organizes his essays accordingly, offering in-depth explorations and challenging reflections across a wide range of subject areas and disciplines. While some essays seek to assess and respond to existing struggles and challenges within the church, in particular (e.g. reviving natural-law thinking in a modern age), others provide broader foundational frameworks for thinking Christianly in specific areas of cultural influence (economics, education, charity, etc.).

In each case, bines theology, ethics, history, economics, education, and politics, weaving a rich and robust framework for understanding our role in public life. Whereas many faith-work primers deal only with broad concepts at the surface, or with “practical advice” for daily living, this is a collection that concerns itself with building a deep moral and theological case for the “space between” domination and escapism—inspiring a cultural imagination that is sure to orient our thought and action.

“To escape the world—or to wish to escape—is a repudiation of the doctrines of creation, redemption, and incarnation,” Charles writes. “At the same time, in our day the pendulum would seem to have swung in the opposite direction…Let us be clear: both isolation and capitulation are marks of unfaithfulness; both are a negation of the biblical witness…That is, as stewards of all of creation and God’s good gifts, we utilize everything within our means and at our disposal—creatively, winsomely, and soberly—with a view to honor the Creator. Such is an ethical mandate. It is also a vocational mandate. And, undeniably, it is our cultural mandate.”

Wisdom’s Work is now available at the Acton BookShop.

Watch J. Daryl Charles’ 2017 Acton lecture, “Natural Law and the Protestant Reformation,” below:

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
Americans Don’t Know Pope’s Environmental Views (And What That Means For Us)
There has been no document by a world leader that has received more attention this year than Laudato Si. Three months have passed since Pope Francis released his encyclical on the environment, and yet the media coverage and mentary on it has hardly waned. Here on the Acton PowerBlog, Bruce Edward Walker has piling a daily list of links related to news mentary on the encyclical. To date he has 62 posts with hundreds of links. As the Associated Press...
Shareholder Activists’ War on Science
The so-called bee controversy is gaining traction, claiming pany that has promised shareholders it will stop selling neonicotinoid pesticides (pesticides also known as neonics, which they incorrectly blame for colony collapse disorder). Green America announced last weekend it has secured a promise from Lowe’s Companies, Inc., to “phase out neonics and plants pre-treated with them by the spring of 2019 (or sooner, if possible). It is also working with suppliers to minimize pesticide use overall and move to safer alternatives.”...
What is the Moral Difference Between Taxation and Charity?
What is the difference between paying a tax and donating to a charity? Is it moral to force others to give to the cause of your choice? Is it moral for the government to force others to give to the cause of your choice? Rob Gressis, a professor of philosophy, went on campus at California State University – Northridge, to ask students those questions. You can see an extended version of the video here. ...
How Amazon is Like a Sweatshop (And What That Reveals About Flourishing and Justice)
Liberal and conservative, right and left, red state and blue state—there are dozens, if not hundreds of ways to divide political and economic lines. But one of the most helpful ways of understanding such differences is recognizing the divide between advocates of proximate justice and absolute justice. Several years ago Steven Garber wrote an essay in which he explained the concept of “proximate justice”: Proximate justice realizes that something is better than nothing. It allows us to make peace withsomejustice,somemercy,...
Income Inequality And Poverty Aren’t The Same Thing
e inequality and poverty are separate issues. For many people this is obvious. But there are numerousChristians who believe that e inequality is an important issue because they assume it is a proxy for poverty. If this were true, Christians would indeed need to be concerned about e inequality because concern about poverty is a foundational principle of any Christian view of economics. Fortunately, there is neither a necessary connection nor correlation. A country could have absolutely no poverty at...
Rev. Robert Sirico Takes On Trump’s Comments On Pope Francis
p Last week, the Washington Postfeatured an interview with Donald Trum, entrepreneur-turned-presidential candidate. Trump is clearly no fan of the ments on capitalism and free markets, and his approach to dealing with the pope on this topic is rather unique: Trump wants to scare Pope Francis. mon for someto criticize Pope Francis’s wariness about capitalism, but Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump just took that to a new level, saying he’d try to “scare” the pope by telling him: “ISIS wants...
The Denver City Council’s Despicable Disregard for the First Amendment
If you want to sell chicken sandwiches as the Denver Airport you need to check your First Amendment rights at the gate. That seems to be the message sent by the Denver City Council to Chick-fil-A, a fast-food chain that is seeking to open a store at the Denver International Airport. The Council is considering turning away the popular franchisebecause pany promotes a Christian ethic in their business dealings. This offends the Council who is worried about how it will...
Video: Creation And The Heart Of Man
Pope Francis has started an important global discussion on the environment with the release of his encyclicalLaudeto Si’, which the Acton Institute has been engaging in with vigor since it’s release, and has been ably covered as well here on the PowerBlog by the likes of Bruce Edward Walker and Joe Carter. But this isn’t the first time that Acton has waded into the debate over protecting the environment; Acton Founder Rev. Robert A. Sirico was debating Matthew Fox, proponent...
How Protestant Missionaries Spread Democracy
Over the past 500 years, some countries have proven to be more receptive to democracy than others. What accounts for the disparity? What causes some countries to be more likely to embrace democratic forms of governance? As empirical evidence shows, one strong predictor is the presence of Protestant missionaries. “Protestant missionaries played an integral role in spreading democracy throughout the world,” says Greg Scandlen. “We could preserve our own if we learn from their ways.” Today we may think of...
Could Wealth Redistribution End Global Poverty?
Americans make up around four percent of the world population and yet they control over 25 percent of the world’s wealth. What if we were to simply redistribute our wealth to the most needy people on the planet—wouldn’t that end global poverty almost overnight? “The answer unfortunately is no,” says philosopher Matt Zwolinski. “Sharing one’s wealth with those who have less is admirable and it often helps to relieve immediate suffering. But just sharing existing wealth we’ll never be enough...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved