A
wise man once said, "A man's character is the sum of all the decisions he
has made in his life." When we discuss character, and what makes people what
they are, we overlook this simple fact. Have you ever wondered why some
people are nothing while folks from the same background somehow turn out to
be just the opposite. I believe the answer lies not in man's environment or
his genetic makeup, but in each man himself.
When I was a
child a next door neighbor had a Japanese "pinball" machine. A lever was
cocked and released and a small steel ball the size of a pea was launched up
in the air to come clattering down, bouncing and careening off hundreds of
little pins that changed the direction of the ball-till finally it came to
rest in one of several cups placed about the interior of the machine. The
object of the game was to hit the "jackpot" cup: the hardest cup to reach,
right in the middle of the board, guarded on all sides by the pins of
destiny. The "way" into the cup was barely large enough for the steel ball
to pass. It would be no accident if the ball went in. We used to sit for
hours, fascinated with the infinite variety of ways the ball would find to
bounce down. On the rare occasion that the ball would hit the "jackpot" cup,
we would painstakingly try to recreate the way that we had done it.
In a way, this
is how life is. Only it is not the law of probability that determines
whether we reach the "jackpot," but the either-or choices we make day by
day. The response we make to each decision we must make determines which way
we are going to "bounce." Every soul receives the same initial shot into the
arena of life. All are confronted with the same "pins of destiny": decisions
that must be made. Life is lived a second at a time. Every man is confronted
with choices-the responses of man to those choices makes him what he is.
`Lot chose him all the plains of Jordan"
(Gen. 13:11).
Lot's character was not fully formed when he stood with his uncle surveying
the land seeking to make a choice where to pitch his tents. But the loss and
sorrow he saw years later when his substance was destroyed, his wife dead,
his sons and daughters gone, his youngest daughters corrupted and pregnant
through incest, started when he made that first selfish decision to take the
"best part" from Abraham. He chose the plain-he chose to pitch his tent
towards Sodom-he chose to live in Sodom. Lot's character developed in the
opposite direction of Abraham.
Joshua knew the
power of the right choice in determining character, "Choose you this day
whom ye will serve"
(Josh. 24:15)!
Our day by day choices make us what we are. So often we see a young person
who walks the edge of what is right. She begins to wear her skirt shorter,
her makeup thicker, her sweater tighter. The choices are made, the character
is formed and before long she is lost to the Lord and her-family. Any who
have eyes to see have witnessed it. The young man who is silently sullen,
who uses "little deceits" to conceal his actions from those who might rebuke
him. His parents and brethren might jokingly chide him about his long hair
or the hickey on his neck. They are hurt and wonder "why?" when he grows to
be a man that has no use for morality or godly living.
Responsibility Is Respond-Abiiity
Jay Adams in
his book Competent To Counsel noted, "What is responsibility? Responsibility
is the ability to respond as God says man should respond to every life
situation, in spite of difficulties." God declares that every man will be
judged according to his deeds whether they be good or evil. This implies
respond-ability in man. Man cannot approach God with his sins and seek to
justify them by minimizing them, by imputing them to others, by blaming
environment or circumstances. Man is responsible. He doesn't have to sin.
Every man has the ability to make right choices according to God's word.
"There hath no temptation taken you but such is common to man: But God is
faithful, who will not suffer you to be tempted above that ye are able: but
will with the temptation also make a way to escape, that ye may be able to
bear it"
(1 Cor. 10:13).
Each time we
make a decision to do evil we step away from God and bend our character in
the direction of Satan. Very many steps in the wrong direction produces a
character more like the Devil than God. In the church we see brethren that
ignore such passages as
Matt. 5:23, 24 and Matt. 18:11-17
and let their brethren die in sin. The responsible Christian goes to his
brother to change his behavior. Brethren who ignore sin in their own lives
or the lives of others will reap the eternal consequences. What we are, and
what we will be is determined by the choices we make now. Do we stand with
God, or do we stand alone. What is your choice?
Truth Magazine - June 19, 1975
Other Articles by Jeffery Kingry
Humility -
True Perspective
The Only Genuine Heritage
For Past Auburn Beacons go to:
www.aubeacon.com/Bulletins.htm
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