Sermon Illustrations about Integrity
Home > Illustrations > Topics > I > Integrity
Find fresh sermon illustrations on Integrity to help bring your sermon to life.
Condoleezza Rice Advises Accountability
When Katie Couric took over as anchor of the CBS Evening News in 2006, various personalities gave her advice as to what to do and what not to do. Condoleezza ...
[Read More]
Bob Newhart Experiences Legalistic Accounting
I took a job as an accountant in downtown Chicago. As your basic 9-to-5 bookkeeper, my duties included managing the petty cash. Salesmen would come in ...
[Read More]
What Guests Notice About Our Homes
Good Housekeeping magazine listed the five most-common things guests notice when they enter our homes.
First, they spy piles of mail laying around, so ...
[Read More]
Courageous Student Prevents School Shooting
In September of 2006, a high school senior named Matt Atkinson learned of a dark secret from three of his friends. In confidence, they told him of their ...
[Read More]
Pepsi Demonstrates Integrity
Who says there's no integrity in the business world? In the spring of 2006, an administrative assistant at Coca Cola's Atlanta headquarters left ...
[Read More]
Doctor Unable to Pass By Major Accident
Dr. Scott Kurtzman, chief of surgery at Waterbury Hospital, was on his way to deliver an 8 a.m. lecture when he witnessed one of the worst crashes in ...
[Read More]
Being President Versus Doing President
Steve Sample, president of the University of Southern California, writes:
In the spring of 1970, when I was 29, I learned I had won a fellowship from the ...
[Read More]
Chinese Children Stand for Christ
Near the beginning of 2005, Chinese officials from the Public Security Bureau burst into a Sunday school room at a local church. They found 30 children ...
[Read More]
Augustine on a Good Conscience
A good conscience is the palace of Christ; the temple of the Holy Ghost; the paradise of delight, the standing Sabbath of the saints.
[Read More]
Demonstrating Integrity Tactfully
Having integrity doesn't mean you have to become an obnoxious morality enforcer who piously pontificates every time the company sails into murky ethical ...
[Read More]