Srimad Bhagavatam Canto 10, Chapter 24, Text 18

 SB 10.24.18

tasmat sampujayet karma
 svabhava-sthah sva-karma-krt
anjasa yena varteta
 tad evasya hi daivatam
 
Translation: 
 
Therefore one should seriously worship work itself. A person should remain in the position corresponding to his nature and should perform his own duty. Indeed, that by which we may live nicely is really our worshipable deity.
 
Purport: 
 
Lord Krsna here proposes the modern if absurd philosophy that our work or occupation is really God and that we should therefore simply worship our work. Upon close scrutiny, we observe that our work is nothing more than the interaction of the material body with material nature, as Lord Krsna Himself states in a more serious mood, in the Bhagavad-gita (3.28): guna gunesu vartanta. Karma-mimamsa philosophy accepts that good activity in this life will give us a better next life. If this is true, there must be some type of conscious soul different from the body. And if that is the case, why should a transcendental soul worship the interaction of the temporary body with material nature? If the words sampujayet karma here mean that one should worship the laws of karma governing our activities, then one may astutely ask what it means to worship laws and, indeed, what might be the origin of such laws and who is maintaining them. To say that laws have created or are maintaining the world is a meaningless proposition, since there is nothing about the nature of a law that indicates it could generate the existential situation it is supposed to govern. In fact, worship is meant for Krsna Himself, and this real conclusion will be clearly revealed in this chapter.
Srimad Bhagavatam Canto 10, Chapter 24, Text 17
Srimad Bhagavatam Canto 10, Chapter 24, Text 19