Faith@Work Devotional
Faith@Work Devotional is a short, Scripture-centered devotional designed to help you live out your faith in the workplace.
Hosted by Kelsi Timm, each episode creates space to slow down, open God’s Word, and listen for His voice in the middle of your everyday work. Whether you lead a team, run a business, serve others, or work behind the scenes, your work matters to God.
Through Scripture, reflection, and prayer, you’ll be encouraged to follow Jesus with greater clarity, integrity, and purpose — right where He has placed you.
This devotional is part of the Unity Foundation’s mission to encourage and equip people to live out their faith at work.
Faith@Work Devotional
Abide Before You Lead
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Before leadership becomes influence, strategy, or results, it must first be rooted in abiding. In this episode of the Faith@Work Devotional, we reflect on John 15:4–5 and the invitation of Jesus to remain in Him before we try to produce fruit for Him. If you have felt pressure, striving, or the weight of carrying responsibility on your own, this devotional will help reframe leadership through the lens of connection, surrender, and union with Christ. True fruit in the workplace does not come from performance alone—it flows from abiding.
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Abide Before You Lead
Anchored in John 15:4–5
“Abide in me, and I in you. As the branch cannot bear fruit by itself, unless it abides in the vine, neither can you, unless you abide in me. 5I am the vine; you are the branches. Whoever abides in me and I in him, he it is that bears much fruit, for apart from me you can do nothing
— John 15:4–5
There is a difference between leading with skill and leading from union.
In John 15, Jesus gives the order:
Abide first.
Fruit second.
In the workplace, fruit often means:
Results.
Impact.
Influence.
Growth.
Stability.
But Jesus does not say, “Produce for Me.”
He says, “Remain in Me.”
Abiding is not inactivity.
It is connection.
And connection changes how you carry responsibility.
Without abiding: Pressure becomes personal. Feedback becomes threatening.
Comparison becomes consuming.
With abiding:
Pressure becomes stewardship.
Feedback becomes refinement.
Comparison loses its power.
When you lead without connection, you strain.
When you lead from union, you stabilize rooms.
Abiding looks like:
Inviting God into strategy. Pausing before hard emails. Releasing outcomes you cannot control. Letting identity anchor you before meetings begin.
A branch doesn’t force fruit. It stays connected.
When you remain in Christ, fruit grows naturally:
Patience with difficult employees. Gentleness in correction. Wisdom in timing. Restraint in conflict. Clarity in chaos.
That fruit cannot be manufactured through personality.
It flows from union.
The question is not how effective you are.
The question is — are you connected?
Because the workplace will always expose what you rely on. Abiding transforms leadership from performance to overflow.
Ponder with the Lord:
Where at work am I striving to carry something You never asked me to carry alone?
Prayer: Jesus, anchor me in union before I step into responsibility. Let my leadership flow from connection, not pressure. Produce fruit in me that lasts. Amen.