When Malice Wears a Name Tag: A Reflection on Greed, Labor, and Redemption
From ancient times to the present day, one truth has remained heartbreakingly consistent: those who labor the hardest are often rewarded the least. Behind every empire, every booming business, every glittering success story, there are workers whose sweat built the foundation—while someone else collected the riches.
This isn’t just unfair. It’s malicious.
Workplace malice is more than bad management or toxic culture. It’s a spiritual force—an evil rooted in the lust for money. And that lust, too, is a spirit all its own. Together, they’ve haunted every sector of society, from the fields of ancient civilizations to the break rooms of modern corporations.
We see it in the underpaid, overworked employees. In the manipulation of good-hearted people for profit. In the way some leaders treat human beings as disposable tools rather than souls with purpose.
And it’s still happening. Every day.
But here’s the deeper truth I hold onto: real peace and lasting wealth aren’t found in this world. They belong to those who leave this life with a heart made whole—ready to rise from the grave and meet Jesus in the air. That moment of divine reunion will mark the end of workplace malice. The greed, the exploitation, the spiritual sickness behind it all will finally be cast down.
Until then, we endure. We work with integrity. We serve with love. And we wait for the day when justice isn’t just a dream—it’s a promise fulfilled. by: Connie Limon
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