The concept of Christian vocation has long centered around work. This narrow concept of vocation conflating “call” and “career” is problematic for both humans and all creatures. I examine how problematic interpretations of vocation are oppressive for humans and nonhuman animals. If nonhuman animals are laborers, then the theo-ethical systems that protect human workers should also include nonhuman animal workers. However, simple support for nonhuman laborers is insufficient as a just theo-ethic. I explore attitudes towards labor in Christianity, and how a persistent rhetoric of “call as career” denigrates the concept of vocation for all creatures. I also explore how intersecting concepts of animality, class, ability, and race coalesce to maintain the forced labor of creaturekind. I argue for the delinking of labor and vocation, and a repudiation of the idea that the purpose of existence is work, calling out Christianity’s complicity in the oppression of human and nonhuman workers.
Attached Paper
In-person November Annual Meeting 2025
Creaturely Labor and the Problem of Christian Vocation
Papers Session: Entangled Freedoms: Ethics & More Than Human Animals
Abstract for Online Program Book (maximum 150 words)