LeadersServe

Issue #420, April 8, 2026

Do you ever wonder if what you do today really matters? In this series we’ll explore why our daily work carries deep and lasting significance*. Our daily work occupies most of our time and energy—whether teaching students, building kitchens, plumbing homes, farming fields, writing software, or working in an office.  

Most Christians are familiar with the Great Commission in Matthew 28:19–20: “Go and make disciples of all nations.” This is central to the mission of the church, and we tend to focus on it. But the first chapter of the Bible introduces an earlier commission:

God blessed them and said to them, “Be fruitful and increase in number; fill the earth and subdue it. Rule over the fish in the sea and the birds in the sky and over every living creature that moves on the ground” (Genesis 1:28, NIV). 

This verse provides God’s plan for mankind from the beginning.  His call was for people to partner with Him to develop the world and extend the goodness, order and beauty He placed within it. This was His first commission and it directly relates to the work you do every day in several ways. 

Your work helps fill the earth.  

“Be fruitful and increase in number; fill the earth…”  God created a beautiful garden that occupied a small area, but there were vast areas untouched by His goodness, beauty and order. God didn’t do that work; He gave humans the mandate to increase and fill the earth with people, homes, farms, cities and gardens. The work you do today is in some way a response to His call to fill the earth with His purposes.  

Some leaders focus on creating a product or service that will produce income. But serving leaders see their work as participating in God’s plan to fill the earth with His goodness, beauty and order.

Your work helps subdue the earth.  

“and subdue it…” God’s call to Adam and Eve to subdue the earth was a call to make it useful. This was a call to create civilization and culture—to develop art, education and culture. It was a call to explore the earth, discover the minerals hidden in the soil and the vast reserves of oil underground. It was an invitation to discover better ways to grow crops and build structures. It was a call to find ways to organize people in societies that allow them to flourish and thrive. It was a mandate to find ways to communicate and share thoughts and ideas with others. Your work today does something to make the world more useful.

Some leaders use their work to exploit the earth, seeking to maximize personal gain at the expense of others. But serving leaders see their work as a means to make the world more useful for others.

Your work helps rule over the earth.  

In the final part of this commission God tells the first couple to “rule over” the world around them, particularly the animal world. This has the idea of partnering with God to take the world somewhere. God could have done this on His own, without any help from us. But He invited man to participate in His work.

Adam was called to cultivate creation, developing its potential and bringing increasing order and beauty. He had at his disposal “gold, resin/pearls, and onyx.” (Gen. 2:10-12). Scripture later describes the New Jerusalem using similar materials—gold, onyx, and precious stones (Revelation 21:18–21)—suggesting that human work ultimately contributes to God’s unfolding purposes.

Some leaders seek power and authority to benefit themselves. But serving leaders see their work as partnership with God to bring His good rule upon the earth.

For further reflection and discussion:

  • How do I tend to see my work, as a necessary evil or as an integral part of God’s plan for the world? What difference does it make in my leadership?
  • Do I see my daily work as having equal significance traditionally recognized “Great Commission work”? How could my daily work also contribute to the work of the Great Commission?
  • In what specific ways does my work make the world a more useful place?
  • In what ways does my work help bring a bit more of God’s order, beauty, and goodness into the world?            

Until next time, yours on the journey,

Jon Byler

In the next issue, we’ll look at how our daily work is an act of worship.

*Many of the thoughts in this series come from Jordan Raynor’s book “The Sacredness of Secular Work,” which I highly recommend.