This week’s episode builds on Monday’s article of the same name, “Your Family Is More Important Than Your Job.” Here is the transcript of the podcast:
Have you ever struggled with balancing your work aspirations and family obligations? I have, and on today’s episode, that’s the question we are going to explore. I think most of us want to grow and excel in our work, which requires a level of commitment. At the same time, we want to invest in our families. It’s been said that no one says on their deathbed, “I wish I would have spent more time at work,” but the struggle is often in figuring out how to find the balance between investing in your career and investing in the people who matter to you.
I told part of this story in the article that I posted earlier this week, but it was really the beginning of when I came to terms with this, early in my experience as a head of school. (if you want to hear the story, you’ll have to listen to the podcast!).
First of all, work is necessary and can have great value. One of the things God created us to do was work, which was evident in the Garden of Eden when God told Adam and Eve that one of the three things He wanted them to do was to take care of His creation. At the same time, one of the other of the three things God wanted them to do was to build a family. (The third was to fill the earth.) The problem comes when we pit those two things against each other, or sacrifice one for the sake of the other. The other problem comes when we confuse a job with our calling to work. The end result tends to be that we seek to find greater value in our work than in our family, and our family pays the price.
If you have a family, part of your calling is that family. Yes, God has called you to Kingdom work in your career, but He would not sacrifice your family on that altar, no more than He would let Abraham sacrifice Isaac. In that circumstance, God was asking Abraham for willing obedience to serve Him and did not intend for Abraham’s family to be sacrificed in the process. He wanted to show Abraham -and, by extension, us – that God is more important than your family. But your family is also very important to God and functions as a picture of God’s character and nature to the world (again, at Creation, Scripture tells us that man and woman together reflect God’s full image). And so God wants you to protect and care for your family.
God ordained that we should work at the beginning of creation, but He wants your work to be a calling, not a job, and therefore the content and context of what you do can change to fit the time and circumstances for which He wants to use you. However, He also established the importance of family from the beginning. He is not a “lesser of two evils” divine being who gives these two things and then forces us to choose which is less damaging; rather, He always has a right and good way of doing all that He has established. He therefore will not call you to do something that costs your family. If that is happening, it’s because of expectations that you are placing on yourself, not that God is placing on you. When that happens, it’s time to recalibrate your expectations to align with God’s and to commit your work to His purpose, not your own.
Here’s what you need to take away: if your job is costing you your family, you have a problem. I would also say that if your job is a ministry, and it’s costing your family, you are out of alignment with the work God has called you to do. Yes, God should be the most important thing in your life, but second to that is the ministry that He has called you to carry out through your family.
When I came to this realization in my own path in that first head-of-school role, I made some changes so that my work was not superseding my family. I started leaving to come home no later than 5:00. I set limits on what I would say yes to. And I intentionally protected my family time. Sure, there were emergencies and exceptions, but that’s what they were – emergencies and exceptions. During the next 25 years, God moved me to three more schools, and now to a new phase of ministry. By God’s grace, I have preserved and protected my family, and I believe my ministry to my family has had more of an impact on the lives of others than anything else I have done. So I still say to people: your family is more important than your job.