
Right is not always popular.
And popular is not always right.
In the workplace, doing what is right is not a reaction to who is watching, but a reflection of who you are becoming.
Every task, every decision, every conversation is a test of your values.
James 2:8 reminds us:
“If you really keep the royal law found in Scripture, ’Love your neighbour as yourself,’ you are doing right’.
So, what does doing right look like at work?
✅ When you choose honesty in your report instead of tweaking figures to impress.
✅ When you treat subordinates with dignity, not as tools to achieve your targets.
✅ When you speak truth to your boss respectfully, even when it’s uncomfortable.
✅ When you give credit to a colleague who truly did the work, instead of taking the spotlight.
✅ When you refuse to participate in gossip, slander, or office politics.
✅ When you keep confidentiality instead of spreading privileged information.
✅ When you deliver excellence, even when no one is monitoring your performance.
✅ When you apologise instead of defending your error.
✅ When you stay ethical in procurement, sales, and decision-making, even if it costs you profit.
✅ When you mentor others freely, helping them grow instead of feeling threatened by their rise.
✅ When you forgive quickly and choose collaboration over competition.
✅ When you prioritise people over position, and truth over trend.
Doing right is not weakness — it’s moral strength.
But remember this:
✅ Doing what is right builds trust.
✅ Trust builds influence.
✅ Influence sustains leadership.
When you love your neighbour in the workplace — your team, your boss, your clients, even your critics — you are not just doing right, you are shaping culture.
So today, don’t just do your job — do what is right.
Because in the end, your right actions will speak louder than your position, title, or pay grade.
Reflect on this:
Which area of your daily work challenges your integrity most — honesty, humility, or honouring others?
Start doing right there. That’s where true transformation begins.




