Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Working for Our Neighbor: A Lutheran Approach to Vocation and Economic Life
Working for Our Neighbor: A Lutheran Approach to Vocation and Economic Life
Feb 11, 2026 7:46 AM

“If you are a manual laborer, you find that the Bible has been put into your workshop, into your hand, into your heart. It teaches and preaches how you should treat your neighbor.” –Martin Luther

Christian’s Library Press has now released Working for Our Neighbor, Gene Veith’s Lutheran primer on vocation, economics, and ordinary life. The book joins Acton’s growing series of tradition-specific, faith-work primers, whichalsoincludes Baptist, Wesleyan, Pentecostal, and Reformed perspectives.

Veith, who describesMartin Luther as “the great theologian of vocation,” believes Luther’s approach is distinct in approachingvocation as a manifestation of “the spiritual and the physical, transcendence and incarnation, ascent and descent, faith and love, love of God and love of neighbor.” Luther’s theology “shows the interconnections of faith, work, and economics not just theoretically, but practically,” Veith writes, “and discloses how the ordinary, seemingly secular activities of everyday life are essential dimensions of Christian spirituality.”

Beginning with a hearty critique of Max Weber’s classic work, The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism, Veith argues thatthe Reformation’s influence on capitalism has long been mischaracterized and misunderstood. AlthoughWeber properly identifieda variety ofpsychological and cultural factors, his analysis of the theological and spiritual connections fell remarkably short.

For Weber, vocation was mostly a motivation for Christians to “find the assurance of their election in economic success.”

According to Veith, Luther would beg to differ:

Weber should have attended to Martin Luther, the true theologian of vocation…In the Lutheran tradition, the purpose of all vocations—which include our multiple callings in the family, the church, and the society, as well as the workplace—is to love and serve our neighbors. God himself providentially works through human beings in their diverse callings, and this is the outworking of his love for his creation.

According to Luther and the Lutherans, the economic order is a vast network of loving and serving, giving and receiving, in which God is present and in which Christians live out their faith. This does not mean that self-interest is not in play or that economic activity can be motivated sheerly by benevolence. The world is, indeed, governed by sin, as the fall contaminates our best efforts and best intentions. And yet, even though the multitude of different actors in the economic order are pursuing their own interests, God is making them all meet the needs of others. And Christians, as their faith es active in love, can participate with God in his love of the world.

Luther’s doctrine of vocation is profoundly ethical, and it discloses the ethical depths and possibilities of economic life.

Veith proceeds from here,connecting vocation to justification, good works, and Christian freedom, and demonstrating “how the Lutheran contribution to economics can transfigure ordinary life, and work, with the powerful presence of God.”

Purchase Working for Our Neighbor and add it to your Goodreads bookshelftoday.

Check out the other titles in our series of tradition-specific primers on faith, work and economics.Each offers a distinct contribution to the subject, and when taken together provides a rich and coherent framework forChristian stewardship.

Subscribe to CLP’smailing listor follow CLP onFacebookorTwitterfor updates on ing titles.

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
Looking for happiness, finding faith
Dr. Arthur C. Brooks spoke about “happiness” at an Acton Lecture Series event last week. Dr. Brooks, a professor of Business and Government Policy at Syracuse University and a visiting scholar with the American Enterprise Institute, presented evidence which suggests that religion is the greatest factor in general human happiness in the United States. Religion, argues Dr. Brooks, is essential to human flourishing in the United States and public secularism should be strongly guarded against by everyone – religious or...
Saviano’s Gomorra and the plague of crime and corruption in Italy
When thinking of southern Italy, Americans probably imagine the Amalfi Coast, Mount Vesuvius, and lemon groves, but to the average Italian the picture is of rotting garbage in the streets of Naples and the Mafia. These realities have been strikingly portrayed in Roberto Saviano’s book Gomorra (ET), which is also the basis of a newly-released motion picture in Italy. Saviano is a young journalist who clearly describes the dark side of his country. It is probably the most courageous “j’accuse”...
Farm bill takes aim at taxpayers
The new farm bill may be one of the most shameless displays of government largesse ever, even more so when you consider who will most benefit from the pork. Citizens Against Government Waste called it “The most farcical farm bill in history.” The Economist dubbed it “Harvest of Disgrace.” The Wall Street Journal opines, “If farm prices stay high, consumers face higher grocery bills and farmers get rich. If farm prices fall, taxpayers kick in the difference and farmers still...
Book Review: Carl Anderson’s ‘A Civilization of Love’
On March 29, Carl Anderson’s A Civilization of Love (HarperOne, 2008) first appeared on the New York Times Best Seller list as one of hottest-selling books in America among the “Hard Cover Advice” category. Since then the author has been on an energetic European and American tour to promote his book. In just 200 pages, Anderson writes convincingly to elaborate a treatise to dispel dominant secular ideologies whose ethical frameworks falsely aim at human fulfillment and forming good and just...
Climate change warrior to head the SBC?
Rumorhas it that the Rev. Johnny Hunt is on the short list (if you consider six guys "short") to preside over the Southern Baptist Convention this summer. Big Daddy Weave notes that Reverend Hunt signed the Southern Baptist Environment and Climate Initiative. Could his signature on this initiative cause him trouble during the nomination process? Were he to be elected, would it signal a shift in the prevailing Southern Baptist Convention reluctance to engage issues like climate and energy? We...
European foreign aid caught between dishonesty and incompetence
International aid groups have criticized the EU and many of its member states for falling behind their promises to step up foreign aid to 0.5 per cent of GDP by 2010 and 0.7 per cent by 2015. On the one hand, these groups are right to expose the accounting tricks governments use in order to promote themselves as saviors of Africa. On the other hand, the aid groups should consider very carefully whether their focus on state aid is really...
Did Maxine Waters just suggest that she might try to nationalize the US oil industry?
Why yes, yes she did: Link: Via Hot Air. ...
‘Liberty, fraternity, equality, adultery!’
There is a fascinating article from City Journal‘s Myron Magnet titled, “Mr. Sammler’s City,” which gives some insight and background to Saul Bellow’s Mr. Sammler’s Planet. This is one of Bellow’s novels I read for my research on Henderson the Rain King, and Magnet’s piece serves as an excellent primer. Here’s a sample: Sammler, for his part, can’t help recalling that almost all modern revolutions, from the Jacobins to the Nazis and the Communists, have ended with the streets running...
Memorial Day: John Gillespie Magee Jr. & ‘High Flight’
John Gillespie Magee, Jr. is remembered fondly by American aviators who defended and sacrificed for this nation in World War II to the present day. He is remembered for his touching poem High Flight, which he penned in 1941. Magee was born to an American father and British mother in Shanghai, China in 1922. His parents were Christian missionaries in the country. Well educated in China, England, and the United States, Magee received a scholarship to Yale University, where his...
Dealing with rising gas prices
As the Drudge Report today hails ing of the fuel-efficient Smart car, it might be worth pointing out other ways in which people are adapting to deal with higher fuel prices. I don’t mean to minimize any of the pain associated with skyrocketing energy costs, whether personal (I feel it, too) or economy-wide, but it is interesting to observe the myriad and often unexpected effects of price changes. It’s the market working. Or, to put it another way, it’s the...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved