“He has shown you, O mortal, what is good.
And what does the Lord require of you?
To act justly and to love mercy and to walk humbly with your God.” — Micah 6:8 (NIV)
I’ll never forget the moment I began to question whether doing what’s “right” by the world’s standards is always truly right.
Two films hit me like a freight train, The Devil’s Advocate and A Time to Kill. Both forced me to face the dissonance between ethics and conscience.
In The Devil’s Advocate, Keanu Reeves plays a hotshot lawyer defending a man accused of abusing a young girl.
There’s this haunting scene, the girl is bravely telling her story, and the man sits there, almost smiling. My stomach turned.
That’s when it hit me: sometimes your professional duty forces you to defend what your soul knows is wrong.
That’s the line we don’t talk about enough.
Ethics are about codes and rules.
Morality is about your soul.
Then came A Time to Kill.
Samuel L. Jackson’s character takes justice into his own hands after an unspeakable act against his daughter.
And I found myself rooting for him, desperate for him to be set free.
The same system that demanded justice in one story suddenly felt unjust in another.
It made me ask:
- What happens when the system is right, but your soul says it’s wrong?
- What happens when following the rules feels like betraying the truth?
Interpretation matters. Even scripture reveals these tensions.
Take the line: “Slaves, obey your earthly masters.” That verse was twisted to justify slavery, ethical by the standards of the time, but a betrayal of God’s heart.
Ethics govern society.
Morality governs the soul.
And if we're not anchored, even sacred words can be weaponized against what God intended.
Leadership Doesn’t Let You Hide
Leadership forces this wrestle into real life.
I’ve had to make decisions that were legally sound, ethically required, and personally gut-wrenching.
I’ve terminated employees I cared about.
Suspended pensions to save a company.
Drawn cutoff lines that impacted real families.
There were nights I couldn’t sleep.
Faces would flash through my mind.
Numbers became names.
Reports became stories.
And through it all, one question kept rising:
Am I hiding behind what’s allowed, or standing up for what’s truly right?
Because it’s one thing to follow the rules.
It’s another to stare your own conscience in the face, and not flinch.
Micah’s Call Isn’t a Checklist
Most of the world teaches us to do the bare minimum.
Check the box. Pass the test. Stay in the lines.
But Micah 6:8 isn’t a checklist , it’s a charge.
Act justly.
Love mercy.
Walk humbly.
That’s not minimum living.
That’s maximum obedience.
Ethical leadership isn’t about being technically right.
It’s about being morally true.
It’s about protecting dignity, not just preserving profit.
It’s about leading with courage, not just compliance.
A Question Worth Wrestling With
So here’s the real question:
Will you settle for just following the rules?
Or will you have the courage to follow the truth?
The world doesn’t need more rule-followers.
It’s desperate for truth-tellers.
For justice-seekers.
For mercy-lovers.
For humble walkers.
Anybody can play it safe.
Anybody can stay inside the lines.
But few rise above the rules to answer the higher call.
Be one of the few.
Be led by truth.
Be anchored in conscience.
Heavenly Father, Thank You for being a Father to the fatherless. Thank You for sending people into our lives who reflect Your love when others fall short. Help us to show up, not perfectly, but faithfully, for those we’re called to love and lead. Let our presence echo across generations. Amen.
- Closing Prayer
Hi, I’m Orvin Kimbrough, volunteer, board director, chairman, and CEO. I help professionals move from feeling stuck to being strengthened by reshaping how they think, lead, and live. My work focuses on confidence, leadership, and influence through mindset shifts, expanded networks, and bold, values-aligned action. My perspective is rooted in lived experience, from growing up in foster care to leading complex institutions as a CEO and shaped by faith, resilience, and a deep belief in human potential.
Books for Every Stage
A memoir often described as a leadership guide wrapped in an honest, relatable story of perseverance, healing, and growth. It explores how pain can be reframed into purpose and how ordinary people build meaningful lives through courage and clarity.
Written for teens and young adults, this book encourages confidence, resilience, and identity formation during the years when self-belief is being shaped.
A children’s book that gently introduces big ideas like belonging, courage, and hope, helping young readers see themselves as more than their circumstances
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