There’s a version of career advice floating around right now that sounds like freedom but might be doing more damage than you realize.
Act your wage. Quiet quit. Do the bare minimum. Find a cushy corporate job where nobody notices you and the paycheck still clears.
If you’ve ever thought something like that, or said it out loud without flinching, you’re not alone. A lot of people have. And honestly, there’s a reason these ideas caught on. They grew out of real frustration: burnout, underpaying, toxic leadership, feeling like a cog in a machine.
But here’s the problem. When those frustrations become your work philosophy, something starts to erode, and it’s not your employer’s bottom line. It’s your character. Your peace. And, if you’re a Christian, your witness.
This post isn’t here to guilt you into grinding yourself into the ground. It’s here to help you think more clearly about what integrity at work actually looks like — and how to pursue it without burning out.
Before we get into what to do, it’s worth naming what’s already shaping how a lot of people think about work right now.
“Act your wage” — Only put in effort that matches your pay. It sounds fair on the surface, but it relies on your personal perception of what you should be paid, and if you’ve never been an employer who paid someone out of your own pocket, you might be walking around with an inflated view of what your time is worth. That doesn’t mean you can’t be underpaid, you absolutely can. But community and honest counsel can help you figure out if that’s actually the case or if it’s a bratty assumption dressed up as a boundary.
“Quiet quitting” — Only do what’s in your job description, nothing more. Again, there’s a half-truth here. You shouldn’t constantly be doing someone else’s job without acknowledgment. But the answer to that isn’t to silently pull back. It’s to have a transparent conversation with your boss and renegotiate what your “yes” actually covers.
“Just do the bare minimum” — Put in the least amount of effort you can get away with while still keeping your job. Warming a seat. This one’s harder to find the half-truth in. And it’s the one that shows up most often on consultation calls, people saying, without any shame, that they just want a corporate job where nobody notices them and they can collect a paycheck for not doing much.
These narratives didn’t come from nowhere. But when they become your operating system, you start building a career on resentment and avoidance, and that’s a shaky foundation for anyone, let alone someone trying to honor God with their work.
Here’s what it’s not: working overtime without pay, never having boundaries, saying yes to everything, and burning yourself to ash for a company that wouldn’t send flowers.
That’s not integrity. That’s self-destruction.
And honestly, we just all have to remember what Jesus said in Matthew 5:37: “Let your yes be yes and your no be no.”
Here’s what that looks like in practice:
If you said you’d reply to that email, reply. If you said you’d help with a project, follow through. If you committed to a deadline and something comes up, get ahead of it, send a message, renegotiate the timeline, and let the other person know their request matters to you.
This isn’t about being a perfectionist. It’s about being someone whose word means something. The gap between what you say you’ll do and what you actually do — that’s where trust lives or dies.
One of my professors gave this career advice before I graduated: “Show up to work, do work, and then leave.” Many people don’t actually do that, they push boxes around, get caught up in drama, react to how their boss made them feel, and never actually solve the problems they were hired to solve.
Your job description is your baseline. Own it. Deliver on it. If you finish early and you’ve genuinely done what’s expected, take the remaining time guilt-free. But don’t confuse being busy with being productive.
Audrey put it like this: If your employer watched a recording of your entire workday, would you feel comfortable with what they saw?
That question cuts through every justification. You don’t need to answer it publicly, but answer it honestly, to yourself and to God. If the answer makes you squirm, that’s worth paying attention to.
Here’s the wild part: the actual task list might look the same either way. You could complete the same deliverables with either attitude. The difference is where it’s coming from.
A bare minimum mindset says: I’m protecting myself. I’m getting mine. They don’t deserve more than this.
An integrity mindset says: This is my domain and I’m going to own it, for the glory of God and the good of the people around me. And if I’m done, I’m done. That’s fine.
Same output, completely different posture. One builds resentment. The other builds character.
This one’s small but hits hard. When you work on screens all day and then “take a break” by scrolling your phone, your brain doesn’t register it as rest, it registers it as more screen time. So you feel exhausted all day, even if you took multiple breaks, because none of them actually recharged you.
Get up. Walk outside. Grab coffee. Look at something that isn’t a screen. Your actual productivity, and your sense of how hard you’re working, will shift.
We recommend using Toggl Track (free). Assign your tasks to projects and see where your hours actually go. Maybe you’ll find out you’re putting in a solid 40 hours, great, now you know. Or maybe you’ll find out the number is closer to 20, and the rest is drift. Either way, you’ll have real data instead of a story you’re telling yourself.
This isn’t about surveillance. It’s about self-awareness. It takes you out of your head and gives you something concrete to work with.
There’s a big difference between having a real conversation with your boss about scope and compensation, and quietly pulling back because you feel like they owe you. One is advocacy. The other is avoidance dressed up as justice.
If you’re doing more than you agreed to, say so. Renegotiate. Ask for what you need. But don’t let unspoken resentment become the thing that drives your work ethic. That costs you more than it costs them.
Now, if you’re reading all of this and thinking, but I really am burned out and I need something less intense, that’s worth addressing. Because that’s valid.
We hear it all the time on consultation calls. People come in saying they want a “cushy job” — but when they actually talk it through, what most of them are really saying is: I’ve been in a brutally demanding role for years and I need something that doesn’t destroy me.
That’s not the same thing as wanting to get paid for doing nothing. And the language matters.
A “break job” is the mindset of: I want to get paid well and not really have to try. That’s problematic, and it’s not something that we will not help you pursue, because it’s not aligned with integrity.
A “detox job” is something different. It’s a role that’s less emotionally, mentally, or physically draining. It has clearer boundaries. It requires less intensity. And it gives you room to recover after a demanding season, so you can refocus on the parts of your life God is calling you into right now.
That is completely legitimate. You’re allowed to adjust. You’re allowed to take a season where work isn’t the most demanding thing on your plate. You just want to make sure you can still show up fully for whatever that role asks of you — so your yes is still yes.
Working with integrity isn’t radical advice in most eras. But right now, in this cultural moment, it kind of is, even among Christians. The narratives around coasting, quiet quitting, and “getting yours” have gotten so loud that doing honest work for honest pay feels almost countercultural.
But integrity builds things that bare minimum never will: character, trust, reputation, peace, and — most importantly — a deeper relationship with the God you’re actually working for.
Book a free consultation call with us if you need help figuring out your next faithful step.
