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Podcast guest Jesse Eubanks shares about his experience building healthier relationships with God, himself, and others.
How do you foster a healthy work culture with a diverse team? Our guest is a mediator, conflict consultant, and international education...
How can you navigate the tension between people and profit, and what does the Bible have to say about it?
The words we use in our places of work have the power either to bless or curse, to build others up or...
Philippians 1:3-11 (NIV) “I thank my God every time I remember you. In all my prayers for all of you, I always...
As the creator of Peanuts reminds us, the hours we spend at work are so much more than just “work” hours. Many...
Lots of business advice out there today—even some of the advice we shared with you last week —is for people in charge...
Magazines both print and virtual, from the Harvard Business Review to Lifehacker, offer tips to help us be more productive. We’re tempted...
Ten years ago, I was hired by a company I used to work for. My job was dealing with issues that had...
I’m learning that true discernment requires community.
Starting January 1, The High Calling will become a joint publication of the Theology of Work Project and The H. E. Butt Family Foundation.
Jesus doesn’t take away our fears, but he can transform them.
In sports, in business, in life, winners put team victory first.
Respecting others means allowing members to contribute equally to group discussions. It means reading each other’s emotions.
The benediction is an act of faith. These words must be pronounced by someone who is confident that they are true.
If you don’t have fear, you can’t have wisdom. It is that simple.
David Zimmerman believes that, like good music, work relationships contain tension that must be resolved. When it does, he says, “We are satisfied with the music we’ve made together.”
The voices and friendships Laura Boggess has found here at The High Calling have helped her fill in the details of her own chalk outline, coaxed her writing voice into a rich, wide-lipped smile.
The High Calling, and the friends Dena Dyer made virtually because of it, provided a safe place for her to write, learn, share concerns, and grow spiritually.
Glynn Young remembers finding poetry in The High Calling network—poetry in the much broader sense of how God’s people spoke, wrote and talked with each other.