For the good that I would I do not, but the evil that I would not that I do.
- Romans 8 v 9.
Close your eyes for a moment and imagine a world where everybody did the right thing. What a wonderful world that would be. I do not
mean whatever is right in their own eyes, but that which
is right in the sight of others. The true definition of
what is right is only determined by how it benefits
everybody else but you. Doing wrong is rooted in selfishness to the detriment
of everyone else.
United States Senator Olympia Snowe is resigning from politics. She says nobody wants to come
to an agreement on that which will benefit the whole nation, not their own
specific district.
That has been the problem from the beginning, the resolution between what you
want and what is right. You were created by a righteous
maker to do that which is right but your selfish
desires lead you to do to the wrong thing and it has been downhill ever since.
Invariably, whenever what you want supersedes that which is right there results in death to a person, place or
relationship. If you neglect the old adage, "do into others as you would
have others do unto you," what follows is pain, trouble, suffering and
sorrow.
Even if you disregard the Bible as a myth or the collection of stories as old
wives' fables, the moral lessons gleaned from these writings cannot be
discounted. They are as applicable today as the first time they were recorded.
Satan, falling prey to his own selfish ambitions, being evicted from heaven
along with a third of the angelic host, in effect, offered a clear
demonstration that that what you want can cause you to trade heaven for hell, perfection for damnation.
King David, surrendering to his lustful desires for another man's wife, Bathsheba,
terminating in the deaths of her husband and a child born from this unholy union
results in trouble never leaving one's household from that day forward.
Solomon, the wisest man, overcome by his prodigious appetite for exotic, ungodly
women, forsook his God, benefactor and provider.
Rehoboam, the son of Solomon, refused the sage advice of his elders and lost
more than half of his kingdom.
Samson, the strongest man, arrogantly dismissed the right
and godly counsel of his father. He pleaded with the rebellious son not to get
involved with foreign women. Instead, Samson defiantly replied, "get her
for me for she pleases me well." Ultimately his selfish cravings cost him
sight, his freedom and, finally, his life.
Throughout the ages, all the fairy tales, myths, legends, fables and parables
have told us the same thing.
They, without exception, have warned us about the same principle.
If what you want conflicts with what is right, you will never go wrong if - as Spike Lee says - you "do the right thing."
Aretha Franklin, the great soul singer, cried, "if you want a do right woman, you've got to be a do right
man."
So, as you make your path in life, stay right, do right and you will end up all right.