The Paperclip Matters

Do you work in an office setting? Whether you have a corner office, share a cubicle, sit in an area with a few others, or just report occasionally to your supervisor’s office, integrity is necessary to live with a clean conscience and to enjoy favor with God and man. This is why the paper clip matters.

For the sake of this blog, the paperclip will represent anything at work supplied to you when you got the job to help you with your job. It can include everything from printer ink, copy paper, publications, sticky notes, calendars, pens, pencils, writing or drawing tools, receipt books, tape, and containers holding any of these items. Bigger items include vehicles, expense reports, office furniture, and secretaries or assistants. Some of these items are small and easy to rationalize if you borrow them.

Have you ever “borrowed” any of these to help your child do their homework or to avoid a stop by the store on the way home? Most of these things fit easily into your work bag brought from home. It would be convenient to take one or two items from work now and then and rationalize it. Rationalization is the struggle keeping you from integrity. Let’s consider some of the mindsets of rationalization:

  • The company won’t miss it. Hey, I’ll even replace it when I get a chance.
  • I need this so that I can help my child get a project done. My boss would want me to help my child.
  • I’m so busy, and I already work overtime. I don’t have time to go by the store to pick up my own supplies to use at home.

Every time you “borrow” these items from your workplace, you set a new precedent for your conscience to tolerate. It’s the small decisions we make every day that define our destination.

So what does it matter if you take a paperclip now and then? Who does it impact? Why can’t you take a paperclip?

Stealing is when you take something that isn’t yours without permission. It is #8 of the Ten Commandments.

Integrity is living a moral and ethical life in the sight of God and man.

Maybe you think taking a paperclip is not a test of your character. But if you follow Jesus, He sees you taking it. If you go back to the definition of stealing, then taking the paperclip matters.

Being a person of integrity may be a quieter life, one marked by humility, but it is rewarding because it affords you sleep at night and a sense of well-being during the day. Why negotiate with your conscience, or even with the Holy Spirit, when you can simply live your life in peace?

We’ve started a new year, another beginning. Do you want to be a person of integrity? Integrity doesn’t care who sees. Integrity doesn’t need an audience. Integrity is a decision to be who God created you to be, whether anyone is looking. Integrity is a core value for a follower of Jesus. It’s a way to shine your light in the darkness. People will notice and appreciate a person of integrity. Even if you work in a Christian environment, the standard may not be as high as presented in this blog. You can be the one to change this environment in your workplace by being a person of integrity.

 

Integrity is what you do when no one is watching; it’s doing the right thing all the time, even when it may work to your disadvantage. Tony Dungy

©Valerie Rumfelt

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3 comments

  1. Hello Valerie, I enjoyed reading about the sweet memories with our Mother. I too rejoice that she is safe with Jesus these days. Praise God!

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