Silas
Beloved
What you are facing right now feels chaotic and unfair, and the sting of false accusations can cut deep. Yet that very turmoil is often the chisel God uses to shape us. Before He works through us in the ways He has prepared, He always works in us. The clumsy edges of resentment, the urge to defend yourself at all costs, the desire to prove your worth by pointing out someone else’s failure, these are the things He may be removing. It hurts when He chips them away, but submit to that work. Don’t rebel against the preparation. The certification and licensing you carry are not just professional credentials; they are part of a stewardship. Right now, the greater test may not be whether your colleague follows protocol, but whether you can trust God with your reputation while you simply do your work with integrity.
Notice how easily the heart cries out for peace in the workplace, yet peace will always remain fragile if we look to a supervisor’s clarity or a colleague’s change as its source. Jesus didn’t say He would bring us peace as a distant gift; He is our peace. When your mind is caught in a loop recounting every overstep and every unjust word spoken against you, you are looking at yourself and your circumstances rather than at God. Unbelief feeds on that focus. It whispers that nothing can change, that fairness is lost. But acquaint yourself deeply with God in this season, and let that knowledge multiply grace and peace in you. The more you know Him, the more His peace can rule in your heart even when the external war hasn’t ceased.
There is another caution here. In every age, voices rise up crying “peace, peace” when there is no real peace. Some may tell you to just smooth things over, or they may flatter the supervisor into thinking all is well while the team quietly suffers. You are praying for an end to negativity, and that is right, but beware of a false peace built on ignoring truth or denying the need for accountability. Real harmony is not the absence of conflict; it’s the presence of integrity. You cannot force your supervisor to see your role clearly, nor can you force a colleague to work within their bounds. But you can refuse to become a busybody, meddling in their affairs out of frustration. You can refuse to breathe out cruelty or rail against them, even when you feel like David surrounded by false witnesses and those who hate with cruel hatred.
So wait on the Lord. Impatience makes us reach for control and leads to sharp words that only deepen the divide. Instead, let integrity and uprightness preserve you. Do not slide into gossip or bitterness. When you must speak, let it be with the restraint of one who knows that the Lord rebukes what needs rebuking; you do not need to carry that heavy sword. Keep serving your clients with excellence, which is the very reason you were placed in that role. The work God has for you there remains. He often uses unlikely pressure to position us exactly where He wants us, doing exactly what He has gifted us to do.
Finally, labor to enter into His rest. That sounds backwards, but it is the way of the kingdom. Satan will constantly challenge your position of faith and trust. He will try to stir up anxiety all over again each morning. So stand firm. Remind yourself that the same Lord of peace can give you peace always, by all means, long before the meeting resolves or the policy changes. The work of redemption in your life and in that place is ultimately His to finish, and He rewards you for being the faithful instrument. Trust that He is working, even now, far more than you can see.
Notice how easily the heart cries out for peace in the workplace, yet peace will always remain fragile if we look to a supervisor’s clarity or a colleague’s change as its source. Jesus didn’t say He would bring us peace as a distant gift; He is our peace. When your mind is caught in a loop recounting every overstep and every unjust word spoken against you, you are looking at yourself and your circumstances rather than at God. Unbelief feeds on that focus. It whispers that nothing can change, that fairness is lost. But acquaint yourself deeply with God in this season, and let that knowledge multiply grace and peace in you. The more you know Him, the more His peace can rule in your heart even when the external war hasn’t ceased.
There is another caution here. In every age, voices rise up crying “peace, peace” when there is no real peace. Some may tell you to just smooth things over, or they may flatter the supervisor into thinking all is well while the team quietly suffers. You are praying for an end to negativity, and that is right, but beware of a false peace built on ignoring truth or denying the need for accountability. Real harmony is not the absence of conflict; it’s the presence of integrity. You cannot force your supervisor to see your role clearly, nor can you force a colleague to work within their bounds. But you can refuse to become a busybody, meddling in their affairs out of frustration. You can refuse to breathe out cruelty or rail against them, even when you feel like David surrounded by false witnesses and those who hate with cruel hatred.
So wait on the Lord. Impatience makes us reach for control and leads to sharp words that only deepen the divide. Instead, let integrity and uprightness preserve you. Do not slide into gossip or bitterness. When you must speak, let it be with the restraint of one who knows that the Lord rebukes what needs rebuking; you do not need to carry that heavy sword. Keep serving your clients with excellence, which is the very reason you were placed in that role. The work God has for you there remains. He often uses unlikely pressure to position us exactly where He wants us, doing exactly what He has gifted us to do.
Finally, labor to enter into His rest. That sounds backwards, but it is the way of the kingdom. Satan will constantly challenge your position of faith and trust. He will try to stir up anxiety all over again each morning. So stand firm. Remind yourself that the same Lord of peace can give you peace always, by all means, long before the meeting resolves or the policy changes. The work of redemption in your life and in that place is ultimately His to finish, and He rewards you for being the faithful instrument. Trust that He is working, even now, far more than you can see.
