Paul met Priscilla and Aquila did that stuff. The world is charged with the grandeur of God among normal folk -- you and I can be a part of that work.
Called To It, But Not Clocked In
There is a dangerous myth that has quietly invaded the modern church — the idea that "real" ministry happens only behind a pulpit, inside a stained-glass sanctuary, or on a foreign mission field supported by monthly newsletters. It is the subtle but suffocating notion that if you punch a time card, you are somehow punching out on God.
Scripture will have none of it.
Long before seminaries issued degrees and mission boards issued budgets, God was in the habit of drafting shepherds, fishermen, farmers, tax collectors, and — yes — tentmakers into the grand story of His redemptive work. The Apostle Paul, that hurricane of grace who turned the Roman Empire upside down, was by trade a craftsman who cut and stitched leather into shelter. And it was precisely in that workshop, not despite it, that the gospel advanced.
This is the revolutionary heart of what we call tentmaking.
Who Was The Original Tentmaker?
The term traces directly to Acts 18, where Paul — freshly battered from Thessalonica and Berea, standing alone in the marble-columned decadence of Corinth — walks into the workshop of a couple named Aquila and Priscilla.
They are refugees. The Emperor Claudius has expelled all Jews from Rome, and this husband and wife have washed ashore in Corinth the way driftwood finds a beach — carried by the tides of persecution. Yet there is no bitterness in their story, only the unmistakable fingerprints of Providence.
Paul meets them. They share a trade. They share a faith. And so he stays.
"Because he was of the same trade he stayed with them and worked, for they were tentmakers by trade. And he reasoned in the synagogue every Sabbath, and tried to persuade Jews and Greeks." — Acts 18:3–4
Picture it: the smell of leather and canvas. The rhythm of an awl through thick hide. Conversations in the half-light of a Corinthian workshop — and out of those conversations, a church is born.
Paul had no illusions about his preference. He wanted to preach full-time. He was a full-time preacher at heart. All Christians are full-time soul-winners. Yep, even when we have a full-time secular career to help pay the bills.
But he was also a man of extraordinary practical wisdom, and he understood something that many in ministry today have forgotten: financial neediness can compromise spiritual integrity. So he worked with his hands, kept his conscience clear, and later told the elders of Ephesus with evident pride, "These hands of mine have supplied my own needs and the needs of my companions" (Acts 20:34).
There was something deeply Christ-like about that. The Son of God Himself spent the majority of His earthly years not preaching in Jerusalem but working wood in Nazareth. The Ministry did not wait for the Jordan River. It happened in the sawdust.
Aquila and Priscilla: The Unsung Heroes of the New Testament
If Paul is the bright star of Acts 18, then Aquila and Priscilla are the constellation that gives it shape — and they deserve far more attention than church history has given them.
They are, in the truest sense, the prototype of the tentmaking Christian: workers by profession, warriors by calling.
After Paul leaves for Jerusalem, they stay in Ephesus. They don't coast or get lazy. They don't retire into comfortable irrelevance. They open their home, plant a church in their living room (1 Corinthians 16:19), and keep doing what they have always done — making tents by day, making disciples by night.
Then comes a turning point that reveals the extraordinary depth of their theological formation.
A man named Apollos arrives — brilliant, eloquent, "mighty in the Scriptures" (Acts 18:24). His gift is undeniable. But his gospel is incomplete. He knows the baptism of John; he does not yet fully understand the cross, the resurrection, the indwelling Spirit, or the mystery of a church containing both Jew and Gentile in one body. He is half a symphony — glorious, but unfinished.
So Priscilla and Aquila do something quietly courageous: "they took him aside and explained to him the way of God more accurately" (Acts 18:26).
Two tentmakers. One preacher. And in that private conversation, the trajectory of Apollos's ministry — and the Corinthian church's future — is forever altered.
This is tentmaking theology at its most beautiful: ordinary people, shaped by extraordinary grace, investing truth into the next generation of leaders. They did not wait for a platform. They did not need a title. They needed only what they had — a home, a heart for God, and the willingness to speak truth in love.
Decades later, Paul writes his final letter from a Roman prison cell. He is cold. He is lonely. He asks Timothy to bring his cloak and his books. And in the closing lines of that last, tender epistle, he adds almost as an afterthought — "Greet Priscilla and Aquila" (2 Timothy 4:19).
They are still there. Still faithful. Still at it.
That is the tentmaker's reward — not a stage, not a salary, but the quiet honor of still being in the game when the letters stop coming.
From Old Testament Workshop to New Testament World
The roots of tentmaking run deeper than Paul's needle and thread. Scripture is littered with men and women who wielded secular skill as a sacred instrument.
Bezalel and Oholiab were not prophets or priests — they were craftsmen. Yet God said of Bezalel that He had "filled him with the Spirit of God, with ability and intelligence, with knowledge and all craftsmanship" (Exodus 31:3). Their art built the tabernacle. The sanctuary of God was literally assembled by Spirit-filled workers with tools in their hands.
Joseph administered grain in Egypt. Daniel counseled kings in Babylon. Neither held a religious office. Both changed the world for God's people from within the secular system. As A.W. Tozer once thundered: "It is not what a man does that determines whether his work is sacred or secular; it is why he does it."
The ancient Hebrew had no vocabulary for the sacred-secular divide we have invented. The word avodah means both "work" and "worship." For the man or woman who walks with God, there has never been a difference.
Bi-Vocational and Beautiful
Today we have replaced the word tentmaker with the clinical term bi-vocational, but the reality is just as vibrant — and just as needed.
According to Barna Group research, a significant and growing number of American pastors serve smaller congregations that simply cannot afford a full-time salary. These men wake before dawn, work a job, study their Bible on a lunch break, and stand in a pulpit on Sunday with ink-stained or grease-stained hands. They are among the most credible witnesses the church has ever produced — because their people see them in the grocery store, in the break room, in the mess of ordinary life.
They cannot fake it. And they rarely do.
There is something profoundly evangelistic about the tentmaker's position. When a believer works alongside unbelievers — really works with them, sweats with them, meets deadlines with them, loses contracts with them — the gospel ceases to be a pamphlet and becomes a person. Lifestyle evangelism is not a program; it is a posture. And the tentmaker wears that posture daily.
As the great Charles Spurgeon said: "Every Christian is either a missionary or an imposter." The tentmaker simply refuses to let geography or occupation become an excuse.
The Theology of Monday Morning
Here is the truth that tentmaking forces us to reckon with: God does not take Mondays off, and neither should His people.
The workplace is not a spiritual waiting room between Sundays. It is a mission field — complete with broken marriages, quiet desperation, searching hearts, and people who will never, ever walk through the doors of a church building. According to Barna, the vast majority of Americans who do not attend church describe Christians not as irrelevant but as hypocritical — people who say one thing inside a building and live another thing outside it.
The tentmaker shatters that accusation by simply showing up — with integrity, with grace, with a work ethic that reflects a God who Himself worked six days and called it good (Genesis 1). The tentmaker's desk is an altar. The tentmaker's handshake is a sermon.
Francis of Assisi is famously credited with saying: "Preach the gospel at all times. When necessary, use words." Whether he said it or not, it is profoundly true — and profoundly tentmaking.
Every Skill, Every Season
Paul's example reminds us that tentmaking is not a permanent condition or a spiritual consolation prize — it is a strategic deployment.
When Silas and Timothy arrived in Corinth with financial support, Paul "devoted himself entirely to the word" (Acts 18:5). He did not sentimentalize his tent shop. He moved on. The point was never the tent — the point was the people.
This is wisdom. The tentmaker must always remember: the job is the scaffold, not the building. It is the platform from which the proclamation is made, the paycheck that funds the mission, the relationship that opens the door. It is not the end — it is the means to the End that will outlast every earthly enterprise.
Matthew 28:19 has not been repealed: "Go therefore and make disciples of all nations." See the Context. That command was given not to a professional clergy class but to a ragged collection of fishermen, former tax collectors, and reformed zealots — men who knew what it meant to have calluses on their hands and conviction in their hearts.
You do not need an ordination certificate to obey it.
A Word to the Tentmaker Reading This
Perhaps you are a nurse who prays over her patients between rounds. A contractor who builds with honest measure because you work as unto the Lord (Colossians 3:23). A teacher who sees twenty-eight image-bearers in a classroom instead of twenty-eight standardized test scores. A salesman who refuses to shade the truth because his identity is not in his quota but in his King.
You are not a second-class Christian. You are not in a spiritual holding pattern, waiting for real ministry to begin.
You are the church in the wild.
The great hymn writer Fanny Crosby — herself a tentmaker of sorts, who wrote over 8,000 hymns while navigating a world that underestimated her — captured something of this spirit in her beloved "To God Be the Glory": "Great things He hath taught us, great things He hath done, and great our rejoicing through Jesus the Son."
That rejoicing happens in the sanctuary, yes. But it also happens in the shop, in the school, in the startup, in the hospital, in the home.
It happens wherever a child of God shows up and loves people the way Christ loved people — with skin on, with presence, with the gospel written not merely on paper but on the ledger of a lived-out life.
What's the Stitch with This?
Aquila and Priscilla never wrote a book. They never headlined a conference. But they served hosting an apostle, they planted a church, they discipled an orator, and were still faithfully at their post when the last letter of the New Testament era was being penned and sealed.
Yepk they made tents to bless the Lord and to help people. It was practical because it tends to rain where they lived. And in making tents for others, they also made disciples.
Not all are called to Full-time vocational ministry, at least not for their whole life as some are privileged to serve in, but they still have a red-hot passion for Jesus and for doing their part in bringing closure on His Great Commission.
May we do the same type of thing — in whatever workshop Providence has placed us — until the Day when the Master Craftsman Himself calls us home.
"The glory of God is man fully alive."
— Irenaeus of Lyon
Think about it. Your greatest contribution to Jesus and His Kingdom might be during only five or ten years of your time here. It may not be something you do, but who you are (you gave yourself to him as a living sacrifice) and someone you raise up.
"I beseech[a] you therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God, that you present your bodies a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable to God, which is your [b]reasonable service. 2 And do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind, that you may prove what is that good and acceptable and perfect will of God." Romans 12:1-2 nkjv
A sound ministering disciple with Jesus Christ is not some lukewarm follower from a distance, or some follower that runs way out ahead of His lead; they simply follow the Lord closely. They live for Christ -- He means far more to them than all horizontal service or ministry. They are someone who keeps in step with the Chief Minister. He or she walks so close that they get a bit dusty from the Rabbi's feet. kvs
On Work as Worship & Calling
Colossians 3:23–24
"Whatever you do, work heartily, as for the Lord and not for men, knowing that from the Lord you will receive the inheritance as your reward. You are serving the Lord Christ."
Exodus 31:3–5
"I have filled him with the Spirit of God, with ability and intelligence, with knowledge and all craftsmanship, to devise artistic designs, to work in gold, silver, and bronze, in cutting stones for setting, and in carving wood, to work in every craft."
Proverbs 22:29
"Do you see a man skillful in his work? He will stand before kings; he will not stand before obscure men."
Genesis 2:15
"The LORD God took the man and put him in the garden of Eden to work it and keep it."
(Work is not a result of the Fall — it is pre-Fall calling.)
1 Corinthians 10:31
"So, whether you eat or drink, or whatever you do, do all to the glory of God."
1 Thessalonians 4:11–12
"Aspire to live quietly, and to mind your own affairs, and to work with your hands, as we instructed you, so that you may walk properly before outsiders and be dependent on no one."
On Paul's Tentmaking Was Sterling -- It Had Financial Integrity With The Ministry
Acts 18:2–4
"And he found a Jew named Aquila... and because he was of the same trade he stayed with them and worked, for they were tentmakers by trade. And he reasoned in the synagogue every Sabbath, and tried to persuade Jews and Greeks."
Acts 20:33–35
"I coveted no one's silver or gold or apparel. You yourselves know that these hands ministered to my necessities and to those who were with me. In all things I have shown you that by working hard in this way we must help the weak and remember the words of the Lord Jesus, how he himself said, 'It is more blessed to give than to receive.'"
1 Corinthians 9:14–15, 18
"In the same way, the Lord commanded that those who proclaim the gospel should get their living by the gospel. But I have made no use of any of these rights... What then is my reward? That in my preaching I may present the gospel free of charge, so as not to make full use of my right in the gospel."
2 Thessalonians 3:7–9
"For you yourselves know how you ought to imitate us, because we were not idle when we were with you, nor did we eat anyone's bread without paying for it, but with toil and labor we worked night and day, that we might not be a burden to any of you. It was not because we do not have that right, but to give you in ourselves an example to imitate."
God wants all His Kids Involved In Acceptable Worship.
He wants all His children as in Tactful Personal Evangelism a.k.a. Bold Witnessing to Up and Outers, to Down and Outers, and to Ordinary People in Every-Day Life.
Matthew 28:19–20 (The Great Commission)
"Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you. And behold, I am with you always, to the end of the age."
Acts 1:8
"But you will receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you, and you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem and in all Judea and Samaria, and to the end of the earth."
Romans 10:14–15
"How then will they call on him in whom they have not believed? And how are they to believe in him of whom they have never heard? And how are they to hear without someone preaching? And how are they to preach unless they are sent?"
1 Peter 3:15
"But in your hearts honor Christ the Lord as holy, always being prepared to make a defense to anyone who asks you for a reason for the hope that is in you; yet do it with gentleness and respect."
Colossians 4:5–6
"Walk in wisdom toward outsiders, making the best use of the time. Let your speech always be gracious, seasoned with salt, so that you may know how you ought to answer each person."
Matthew 5:16
"In the same way, let your light shine before others, so that they may see your good works and give glory to your Father who is in heaven."
2 Corinthians 5:20
"Therefore, we are ambassadors for Christ, God making his appeal through us. We implore you on behalf of Christ, be reconciled to God."
Would You Pray Something Like: Lord, I Surrender. Please Make My Life Real Worship Unto You in Ministry
Colossians 4:2–4
"Continue steadfastly in prayer, being watchful in it with thanksgiving. At the same time, pray also for us, that God may open to us a door for the word, to declare the mystery of Christ... that I may make it clear, which is how I ought to speak."
Ephesians 6:18–19
"Praying at all times in the Spirit, with all prayer and supplication... and also for me, that words may be given to me in opening my mouth boldly to proclaim the mystery of the gospel."
Luke 10:2
"And he said to them, 'The harvest is plentiful, but the laborers are few. Therefore pray earnestly to the Lord of the harvest to send out laborers into his harvest.'"
James 5:16b
"The prayer of a righteous person has great power as it is working."
Philippians 4:6
"Do not be anxious about anything, but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God."
On Discipleship & Investing in Others
2 Timothy 2:2
"And what you have heard from me in the presence of many witnesses entrust to faithful men, who will be able to teach others also."
Acts 18:26 (Priscilla and Aquila with Apollos)
"He began to speak boldly in the synagogue, but when Priscilla and Aquila heard him, they took him aside and explained to him the way of God more accurately."
Hebrews 10:24–25
"And let us consider how to stir up one another to love and good works, not neglecting to meet together, as is the habit of some, but encouraging one another, and all the more as you see the Day drawing near."
Galatians 6:9
"And let us not grow weary of doing good, for in due season we will reap, if we do not give up."
Proverbs 11:30
"The fruit of the righteous is a tree of life, and whoever captures souls is wise."
Daniel 12:3
"And those who are wise shall shine like the brightness of the sky above; and those who turn many to righteousness, like the stars forever and ever."
Know Him And What's Worth Knowing
On the Bi-Vocational Reality
- According to Barna Group, nearly 1 in 3 Protestant pastors in America is bi-vocational — holding a second job outside the church. Among churches with under 100 attendees, that number climbs significantly higher.
- A 2022 Barna study found that 38% of pastors have seriously considered quitting full-time ministry in the past year, citing financial strain as one of the top contributing factors — making the tentmaking model not just viable but increasingly necessary.
On Evangelism & Workplace Witness
- Barna Research reports that 47% of practicing Christian Millennials believe it is wrong to share their faith with someone of a different religion — a statistic that underscores the urgent need to recapture a biblical vision of everyday witness.
- According to a Lifeway Research study, 79% of people who came to faith say a personal relationship with a Christian was the primary factor in their conversion — not a church service, broadcast, or event. The tentmaker's relational platform is among the most powerful evangelistic tools in existence.
- The Lausanne Movement estimates that roughly 2.2 billion people live in regions classified as "limited access" or "closed" to traditional missionary activity — areas where tentmaking is often the only viable model for gospel presence.
On Unchurched Americans
- Barna Group data indicates that approximately 73 million Americans are "unchurched" — having had no meaningful contact with a Christian church in the past six months. The vast majority of them have regular contact with Christians in the workplace every week.
- 69% of unchurched Americans say they would be willing to listen if a friend shared their faith with them personally. The tentmaker's desk sits adjacent to that 69% every single Monday morning.
There's Power In Jesus Name -- He Ultimately Saves And Does Discipleship Through His Church
- The Navigators report that intentional one-on-one discipleship produces a multiplication effect: a disciple who disciples two others, who each disciple two more, can — within a generation — reach more people than any single large-scale evangelistic event.
- Research by Gary McIntosh and Charles Arn found that churches that prioritize relational, lifestyle-based evangelism grow at significantly higher rates than those relying solely on program-driven outreach.
Christian Quotes on Tentmaking, Evangelism, Prayer & Discipleship
On Tentmaking & Secular Work as Ministry
"It is not what a man does that determines whether his work is sacred or secular; it is why he does it."
— A.W. Tozer
"God is not saving the world; He is doing something harder. He is recreating it — and He is using ordinary people in ordinary places to do it."
— Dorothy L. Sayers
"The layman need not look for his field of evangelism: it is right there at his work."
— Billy Graham
"Work is not, primarily, a thing one does to live, but the thing one lives to do."
— Dorothy L. Sayers, Creed or Chaos
"The Christian's task is not to escape the world but to redeem it — to carry the light of Christ into every corner of ordinary life."
— Chuck Colson
"A tentmaker is not a lesser missionary. He is often a bolder one — because his credentials are not his title but his character."
— Patrick Lai, Tentmaking: Business as Missions
On Evangelism
"Every Christian is either a missionary or an imposter."
— Charles Spurgeon
"You are the only Bible some people will ever read."
— John MacArthur
"Witnessing is not a spare-time occupation or a once-a-week activity. It must be a quality of life."
— Greg Laurie
"The gospel is only good news if it gets there in time."
— Carl F.H. Henry
"God uses broken things. It takes broken soil to produce a crop, broken clouds to give rain, broken grain to give bread, broken bread to give strength."
— Vance Havner
"If sinners be damned, at least let them leap to Hell over our bodies. If they will perish, let them perish with our arms about their knees. Let no one go unwarned and unprayed for."
— Charles Spurgeon
"We are not cisterns made for hoarding; we are channels made for sharing."
— Billy Graham
On Prayer
"Prayer does not fit us for the greater works; prayer is the greater work."
— Oswald Chambers, My Utmost for His Highest
"You can do more than pray after you have prayed, but you cannot do more than pray until you have prayed."
— John Bunyan
"Prayer is not preparation for the work; prayer IS the work."
— E.M. Bounds
"Satan trembles when he sees the weakest saint upon their knees."
— William Cowper
"Don't pray when you feel like it. Have an appointment with the Lord and keep it. A man is powerful on his knees."
— Corrie ten Boom
"The one concern of the devil is to keep Christians from praying. He fears nothing from prayerless studies, prayerless work, and prayerless religion. He laughs at our toil, mocks at our wisdom, but trembles when we pray."
— Samuel Chadwick
On Biblical Discipleship
"The Great Commission is not an option to be considered; it is a command to be obeyed."
— Hudson Taylor
"Go to the people. Live among them. Learn from them. Love them. Start with what they know. Build on what they have."
— Jimmy Yen
"Discipleship is not a program. It is not an event. It is a way of life."
— Bill Hull
"Multiplication is always better than addition. One life poured into another, and then another — that is how empires of grace are built."
— Dawson Trotman, Founder of The Navigators
"The church exists for nothing else but to draw men into Christ, to make them little Christs. If they are not doing that, all the cathedrals, clergy, missions, sermons, even the Bible itself, are simply a waste of time."
— C.S. Lewis, Mere Christianity
"To him who is able to do far more abundantly than all that we ask or think, according to the power at work within us — to him be glory in the church and in Christ Jesus throughout all generations, forever and ever. Amen."
— Ephesians 3:20–21 (all vv. from the ESV)
Check it out -- you can now know God well, and make Him well known.