The Words

Calling

English · 15th century · 15th century
The idea that work could be a calling was a Protestant invention, one that turned every occupation into a potential site of spiritual obedience.

In medieval Christian usage, vocatio referred almost exclusively to the religious life. A calling was a summons to the priesthood, to monastic orders, to a life set apart from worldly labor. The word carried the weight of divine authority. To have a calling was to have been chosen by God for a specific purpose, and the response was not optional.

Martin Luther, writing in the early sixteenth century, expanded the meaning in a way that would reshape the relationship between work and identity for centuries. Luther argued that every honest occupation could serve as a vehicle for fulfilling God's will. A farmer plowing a field was answering a calling no less than a priest at an altar. John Calvin took the idea further, emphasizing disciplined, relentless labor as evidence of divine favor. The Calvinist framework made industriousness itself a spiritual marker.

The Puritan minister Cotton Mather, writing in colonial New England, warned that it was not lawful ordinarily to live without some calling, for men would fall into horrible snares and infinite sins. By the eighteenth century, the word had crossed fully into secular usage. To have a calling no longer required belief in the God who was supposedly doing the calling. The divine scaffolding fell away, but the emotional architecture remained: the expectation that work should provide purpose, meaning, and a sense of being chosen.

Researchers at Yale University, including Amy Wrzesniewski, have found that people who describe their work as a calling report higher satisfaction than those who describe it as a job or a career. The finding carries an irony the word's original users would have recognized. The secular calling still demands the devotion that the religious one required, sometimes more, because it offers no sabbath.