Thursday, December 29, 2016

EXCUSES


As a former public school teacher I was quite used to the many excuses I would hear each day from students and receive as written notes from their parents.  In conversations with friends who were law enforcement officers or with colleagues who are golf course marshals we sometimes comment on the disingenuous excuses (they are rarely very creative) we hear from those we engage with who are in violation of laws/rules/expectations of the course. 
  
As a duty as an interviewing officer in my Church with ecclesiastical responsibilities I have also heard a fair number of excuses which had to be dealt with in the confession process before repentance could be complete and forgiveness come about.  Judges in courts of law and parents hear excuses all the time and have to cut through them to get to the truth of the matter.

If we were honest we would know that nearly everyone wants to rationalize or attempt to justify misconduct or deficient performance.  Even I have caught myself occasionally trying to gloss-over things until I bring myself up short and remember the folly of so doing.

In light of these realities I tender a few quotations (in italics and in red) I have accumulated over the years that give us some insight as to this unfortunate tendency of human behavior.  After all, Since excuses were invented, no one is ever in the wrong.” 

The Bible warns us that “Every way of a man is right in his own eyes: but the Lord pondereth the hearts” (Proverbs 21:2)  In fact, the entire book of Proverbs gives us many pithy and insightful variations on this and related themes.  I read it often. 

A few other warnings to those who tend to make excuses are:
         “He that once deceives is ever suspected.”
         “The truth doesn’t hurt unless it ought to.”
          "The sting of a reproach is the truth of it.”  B. Franklin
          “Several excuses are always less convincing than one.”A. Huxley
“He that always complains is never pitied.”

Two wonderful quotations by Abraham Lincoln remind me of the “more excellent way” to deal with excuses or opposition by others:

            “Better give your path to a dog than being bitten by him in contesting for the right.  Even killing the dog would not cure the bite.” 

            “I wish no explanation made to our enemies.  What they want is a squabble and a fuss; and that they can have if we explain, and they cannot have if we don’t.  I shall do nothing in malice.  What I deal with is too vast for malicious dealing.”

Another way of putting it is: “Soft words are hard arguments.”  I take this to mean that 'soft words' are words like 'you are right, I really messed up on this one;' or 'I don't why I did that, I hope you will forgive me;' or 'I'm sorry.'

The use of 'soft words' or even no defense at all are an important part of the development of character.   Character is the ability to win an argument by keeping your mouth shut. 

So, why is it we are so prone to make excuses?  If we really think about it, we know we are not fooling ourselves.  And we should know that most of the people who we make excuses to are not fooled.  And certainly God is not fooled.  


How refreshing it is to engage with people who do not make excuses.  

Saturday, December 17, 2016

LOYALTY (thanks, Jon)


I was never in our country’s armed forces and I never saw the movie, Band of Brothers.  I was never in a youth gang or took one of their oaths.  As a boy I was never such a rabid baseball fan that I would get into a fist fight or bitter argument over who was better, the Yankees or the Dodgers (the Yankees were indubitably better, although the Dodges had Sandy Kofax).  But I was in the Boy Scouts and I learned the Scout Law and recited it with conviction: “A scout is trustworthy, loyal, helpful, courteous, kind, obedient, cheerful, thrifty, brave, clean and reverent.”

The training stuck.

It is hard for me to understand why more people do not more consciously choose to seek out those signal values (how can a person have a quarrel with any of them?) in being loyal to people and principles and causes that are true and will lead to peace in this life and set one on a course to a positive outcome in the life to come.

I work with a friend who recently said something like this to me:  “I check your blog every day but have been disappointed to see that you haven’t posted for 3 months.”  Well, that is loyalty.
 
I am embarrassed, sorry and will simply have to find the time produce these thoughts that I have been so prompted to do.  I have some reasons why I have lagged so badly these last several months but they just come down to excuses and I don’t have an abundance of patience for others who constantly have ‘excuses’ for certain of their behaviors. So why burden you with my excuses?  In fact, I have been thinking about writing about excuses as a topic for exploration and will do so sometime soon.  So thanks, Jon for getting me fired up again.  Even my own family members, I am quite sure, stopped looking long ago.
 
Now it is true, I cannot hope for a loyal following unless I produce something that benefits people and they recognize it.  Though it is satisfying to know that over the course of several hundred postings I have, at times, had several dozen (at least) regular readers, but I wonder if that is the real test of loyalty?
   
A Japanese dog that I read about decades ago locked me into the virtue of loyalty as a component of character and I have reflected upon his story as I have ‘examined myself’ periodically as encouraged by scripture.  Read about Hachiko on Wikipedia or on You Tube or other sources.  I have since learned of other dogs demonstrating this remarkable characteristic.  Though it would be absurd like ‘man’s best friend’ to daily lay on the grave or stand sentinel at the last place we saw our departed spouse/parent/child/hero in this life,  it would not be too much to be loyal to their memory, their teachings, their highest loyalties that we have inculcated in ourselves. 
   
For us, we should give our deepest loyalties to the highest causes.  For me, it is contained in the life and mission and gospel and teachings of Jesus Christ.  I believe that with an eye single to that standard, all other worthy loyalties will fall naturally into place.

Believing, as I do, that God is my Father in Heaven, (Jesus, himself, prayed to his Father who he said was our Father as well) we could keep this thought in mind:  ‘Be loyal to the Royal within us’ for our spirit is a child of royal birth.
   
As an aid to reflection or contemplation (as you will know if you have, over the years, been even an occasional reader of my weblog) I often turn to music to be my prompter or brain default which then turns on a stream of worthy thoughts that remind me of my loyalties.  I close with lyrics from two songs from my Church hymnbook that bear on loyalty and that you might consider adding to your mental lexicon:

            The soul that on Jesus hath leaned for repose
            I will not, I cannot, desert to his foes;
            That soul, though all hell should endeavor to shake,
            I’ll never, no never, no never forsake!
                                                Hymns, 1985, no. 85

            He has sounded forth the trumpet that shall never call retreat;
He is sifting out the hearts of men before his judgment seat. O be swift my soul to answer him; be jubilant my feet!  Our God is marching on.
Hymns, 1985, no. 60