Since embarking on tri-bible.ai several friends have pointed out John Piper's sermon "against" AI. John Piper's argument actually reinforces many of the biblical themes about craftsmanship and tools. His distinction is not between "good tools" and "bad tools." It is between tools and worshipers. Throughout Scripture, God repeatedly uses tools, materials, and skilled craftsmanship, but He always values the heart of the craftsman above the work itself. The Bible consistently presents craftsmanship as a gift from God that is meant to reveal His character, bless others, enable worship, and steward creation. Work with excellence is not merely practical. It is an act of worship when offered to God.
In Alpha Series we learn about Christopher Wren and the classic parable of the Three Bricklayers. It illustrates how having a sense of purpose changes your perspective. When asked what they are doing, the first man says he is "laying bricks," the second says he is "building a wall," and the third proudly says he is "building a cathedral."
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| Christopher Wren By Godfrey Kneller |
Here are the major biblical themes with representative references.
| Theme | Key References | Summary |
|---|---|---|
| God is the first craftsman | Genesis 1:1-31, Psalm 19:1, Hebrews 11:3 | God creates the universe with wisdom, order, beauty, and purpose. Human craftsmanship reflects His creative nature. |
| Humans created to cultivate | Genesis 1:26-28, Genesis 2:15 | Humanity is commissioned to rule, cultivate, build, and care for creation. Work is part of God's original design before the Fall. |
| Skill is a gift from God | Exodus 31:1-11, Exodus 35:30-35 | God personally fills craftsmen with His Spirit, wisdom, understanding, and skill for sacred work. |
| Excellence honors God | Ecclesiastes 9:10, Proverbs 22:29, Colossians 3:23-24 | Whatever our hands find to do should be done wholeheartedly as service to the Lord. |
| Beauty matters in worship | Exodus 25-40, 1 Kings 6-7, Psalm 27:4 | The Tabernacle and Temple demonstrate that beauty, design, and craftsmanship are part of worship. |
| Many gifts, one purpose | Romans 12:3-8, 1 Corinthians 12:4-31, Ephesians 4:11-16 | God distributes different skills so His people can build one another up. |
| Building wisely | Matthew 7:24-27, Luke 14:28-30, 1 Corinthians 3:9-15 | Construction becomes a metaphor for wisdom, discipleship, and ministry. |
| Stewardship of resources | Matthew 25:14-30, Luke 16:10 | Gifts, talents, tools, and opportunities are entrusted by God to be multiplied faithfully. |
| Ordinary work is holy | Acts 18:1-3, 1 Thessalonians 4:11-12, 2 Thessalonians 3:10-12 | Paul made tents while preaching. Everyday work has dignity and witness. |
| Eternal craftsmanship | Revelation 21-22, Isaiah 60 | The New Jerusalem is described with extraordinary architecture, precious materials, and artistic beauty. |
Major craftsmen in Scripture
- Bezalel: The first person explicitly said to be "filled with the Spirit of God." Scripture: Exodus 31:1-11, Exodus 35:30-35, Exodus 36-38. Skills: goldsmithing, silversmithing, bronze work, stone cutting, woodworking, engraving, artistic design, leadership of craftsmen.
- Oholiab: Bezalel's assistant, gifted by God to teach and collaborate with other artisans in building the Tabernacle. Scripture: Exodus 31:6, Exodus 35:34-35, Exodus 38. Skills: teaching, embroidery, weaving, fine linen work, artistic craftsmanship, collaboration.
- Huram-Abi (Hiram): Master craftsman commissioned by Solomon to create the Temple's bronze works and decorative elements. Scripture: 1 Kings 7:13-47, 2 Chronicles 2:13-14, 2 Chronicles 4:11-22. Skills: bronze casting, metalworking, engraving, architecture, decorative design, engineering.
- Noah: Faithfully built the ark exactly according to God's specifications, demonstrating obedience through skilled construction. Scripture: Genesis 6:13-22, Genesis 7:1-5, Hebrews 11:7. Skills: shipbuilding, woodworking, large-scale construction, project execution, obedience.
- Solomon: Directed the construction of the Temple, organizing thousands of workers and artisans while overseeing one of Israel's greatest building projects. Scripture: 1 Kings 5-8, 2 Chronicles 2-7. Skills: architecture, project leadership, administration, procurement, construction management, design oversight.
- Joseph: Designed and administered Egypt's food storage system that preserved nations during famine. Scripture: Genesis 41:33-57. Skills: strategic planning, systems design, logistics, administration, resource management, leadership.
- David: Though best known as a shepherd and king, he was also a skilled musician, poet, military strategist, and designer who prepared extensively for the Temple. Scripture: 1 Samuel 16:14-23, 1 Chronicles 22:2-5, 1 Chronicles 28:11-19, Psalm titles. Skills: music, poetry, worship leadership, military strategy, leadership, architectural planning.
- Ezra: A skilled scribe devoted to studying, teaching, and preserving God's Law after the exile. Scripture: Ezra 7:6-10, Nehemiah 8:1-8. Skills: writing, copying manuscripts, teaching, scholarship, interpretation, leadership.
- Luke: Carefully researched and compiled an orderly historical account of the life of Christ and the early church. Scripture: Luke 1:1-4, Acts 1:1-3. Skills: historical research, writing, editing, interviewing, documentation, medicine.
- Paul: Supported his ministry through tentmaking while producing letters that continue to shape the Church. Scripture: Acts 18:1-3, 1 Thessalonians 2:9, 2 Thessalonians 3:7-9. Skills: tentmaking, leatherworking, teaching, writing, church planting, leadership.
Tools mentioned in the Bible
- Construction: Hammer, chisel, axe, saw, adze, measuring line, plumb line, square, level (conceptually), rope. References: Isaiah 44:13, Amos 7:7-8, Zechariah 4:10, Isaiah 28:17.
- Metalworking: Furnace, bellows, anvil, tongs, mold, crucible. References: Isaiah 44:12, Jeremiah 6:29, Proverbs 17:3, Malachi 3:2-3.
- Agriculture: Plow, ox yoke, sickle, winnowing fork, pruning hook. References: Isaiah 2:4, Luke 9:62, John 15:1-8, Matthew 3:12.
- Shepherding: Staff, rod, sling. References: Psalm 23, 1 Samuel 17, Ezekiel 34.
- Writing: Reed pen, scroll, ink, stylus, seal ring. References: Jeremiah 36, Ezekiel 9:2, Revelation 5.
Powerful biblical metaphors involving craftsmanship
- Potter and clay (Isaiah 64:8, Jeremiah 18:1-6, Romans 9:20-21)
- Refiner of silver and gold (Malachi 3:2-3, Proverbs 17:3)
- Vine dresser (John 15:1-8)
- Builder and cornerstone (Psalm 118:22, Ephesians 2:20)
- Body being built together (Ephesians 2:21-22)
- Living stones (1 Peter 2:4-5)
- Master builder (1 Corinthians 3:10)
- Sharpening iron (Proverbs 27:17)
Key theological principles
- Skill originates with God. God gives wisdom, creativity, and technical ability (Exodus 31:3).
- The Holy Spirit empowers practical work. The Spirit's work includes craftsmanship, not only preaching or prophecy (Exodus 31:3-5).
- Beauty glorifies God. Artistic excellence reflects God's character and serves worship (Exodus 35-40).
- Work is worship. All honest labor can be offered to God (Colossians 3:23-24).
- Craftsmanship serves people. Skill is given to bless the community rather than elevate the individual (Ephesians 4:11-16).
- God is preparing an eternal masterpiece. Individual believers, the church, and the New Creation are described as God's workmanship and building (Ephesians 2:10; Revelation 21).
A verse that brings these themes together is Ephesians 2:10:
"For we are his workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand, that we should walk in them."
The Greek word translated "workmanship" is ποίημα (poiēma), from which the English word poem is derived. Paul presents believers themselves as God's masterwork, created to reflect the skill, beauty, and purpose of the divine Craftsman.
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