Integrity Moments

Integrity Moments is a 60 second workday devotional from CEO, Rick Boxx, that provides business leaders with helpful insight into what the Bible says about our work and how we can fully integrate our faith into our vocational calling.

Here’s what business leaders are saying about UBN’s Integrity Moments:

I just finished your 4-day devotional on Rebuilding Your Reputation and want to offer my sincere appreciation and gratitude for you writing it. I really needed it right now.

I love UBN’s Integrity Moments. I often share them with my team when it’s relevant to them, and I have invited others to subscribe. It’s a quick read, and it’s great how you pull out the biblical applications.

I read your Integrity Moments every day. Your design is really engaging for me. Three sentences, a verse, and a wrap up take-away. The last two Integrity Moments have been particularly meaningful and timely.

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Recent Episodes

Push Past Good Enough

2019-03-06T19:43:20-06:00March 8th, 2019|Tags: , , |

Recently, I heard Judi Bertels, CEO of African Vision of Hope, speak at a business meeting. She spoke about developing a culture fueled by its mission and values. Judi mentioned she values serving others above and beyond their expectations. Judi drives her staff to push past “good enough” in order to exceed the expected. Exodus 36:5 reads “The people are ...

Correcting Leadership Mistakes, Part IV

2019-03-06T19:24:07-06:00March 7th, 2019|Tags: , , , |

Deborah Grayson Riegel writes in a Harvard Business Review article how to correct leadership mistakes in a healthy manner. Riegel encourages us to take three steps. The 3rd and final step is to, “share what you will do differently next time.” This step requires self-reflection. We need to pause and reflect on what part we had in the mistake and ...

Correcting Leadership Mistakes, Part III

2019-03-05T23:48:29-06:00March 6th, 2019|Tags: , , |

In a Harvard Business Review article, Deborah Grayson Riegel writes about how to correct leadership mistakes in a healthy manner. Riegel encourages us to take three steps. The second step is “address what you need to do right now.” If you don’t identify what needs to be done to fix your mistake, your apology will seem meaningless. I once neglected ...

Correcting Leadership Mistakes, Part II

2019-03-05T02:23:04-06:00March 5th, 2019|Tags: , , |

Deborah Grayson Riegel writes in a Harvard Business Review article how to correct leadership mistakes in a healthy manner. Riegel encourages us to have a conversation with ourselves then with the other parties involved, addressing three parts. The first part is to “Take Responsibility.” Years ago, I took an emotional intelligence assessment. One of the painful findings was that I ...

Correcting Leadership Mistakes, Part I

2019-03-04T07:18:27-06:00March 4th, 2019|Tags: , , |

In a Harvard Business Review article, Deborah Grayson Riegel writes about the pain in making mistakes. But when a leader makes mistakes, the pain can feel more profound when you know others are following. When our mistakes cause others to question our expertise, our identity can be shaken. This often results in arguing, blaming others, withdrawing, deflecting accountability and/or digging ...

A Fallen World

2019-02-27T10:49:14-06:00March 1st, 2019|Tags: , , |

In January, Tom Phillips, former CEO of Raytheon, passed away. In his Wall Street Journal obituary, there’s a story of a Harvard undergraduate who asked Mr. Phillips if he believed there was a contradiction between his Christian faith and running a missile manufacturing company. Mr. Phillips answered, “We would like it to be a world where armies and weapons were ...

Doubling Down

2019-02-27T10:31:26-06:00February 28th, 2019|Tags: , , , |

Some leaders refuse to admit their mistakes. Instead, they double-down and add another lie to the situation, holding fast to their original position. Sometimes, due to pride, leaders hold fast even with irrefutable evidence that they are lying. Over the years, I’ve learned that when I make a mistake, my best path to reconciliation is to own the mistake. If ...

Sin in the Camp

2019-02-27T00:06:51-06:00February 27th, 2019|Tags: , , |

Years ago, I served on an advisory board for a national nonprofit. For months, the organization was struggling with challenges that didn’t make sense to the board. Eventually, the board was informed that the executive director of the firm was resigning due to a pornography addiction. After the revelation surfaced, there was a key leader in that organization that said, ...

Owning Your Mistakes

2019-02-25T21:01:29-06:00February 26th, 2019|Tags: , , |

Kathy and I were having dinner with some friends when it seemed that nothing went right with Kathy’s meal. Multiple mistakes were made by the chef. The manager did her research and then listened to Kathy’s story. She then said candidly, “We blew it tonight and we are so sorry. Your meal is on us and a special dessert is ...

Sin and Confession

2019-02-24T22:05:56-06:00February 25th, 2019|Tags: , , |

When I was a boy, we attended a church where most weeks we heard about our sin and our need for repentance. Our pastor’s messages elicited guilt, conviction, but also a desire to change. Many people were saved, but the sermons caused some to fear God in a way that was unhealthy. Today, many churches rarely discuss sin and repentance. ...

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