Left to myself, I will sit around
and vegetate. I know that other people don’t do this, but I do. When I look
across the room at my dog who follows me from room to room and is happy to be
wherever I am, I know that he needs to walk. So, I get up, put on my shoes,
find his leash and off we go. It is good for him and it is good for me. What I won’t do for myself I will do for my dog.
This little act highlights an important point I have discovered. We all need to
be motivated for someone or something outside ourselves. I have heard it said,
“If you won’t do it for someone else, do it for yourself!” But I have
discovered that doing it for myself is the lowest and weakest motivator in my
life.
Some have assumed that our democratic system works because it is based on
self-interest. If everyone looks out for himself, seeks to make the biggest
profit and accumulate the most wealth, it all just seems to work out for
everybody. But that isn’t true. Our democratic system works because people are
willing to sacrifice their own self-interest in the interest of others. The key
to American democracy is selfless altruism. Not greed.
Life is not like Monopoly. We don’t win by owning the largest number of
properties, raising the rent and amassing stacks of money on our side of the
board until we drive everyone else into bankruptcy. That might work for a board
game, but even then the players seldom feel good about it. In life we win by
giving ourselves away.
We are made in such a way that we must be called to something higher. We will endure great pain, hardship, discipline
and even death for people we love and causes that challenge us.
When we live our lives and make our decisions based upon self-interest and
self-gratification we are led into dead end tributaries, into a shallow
existence that results in isolation and loneliness. When we choose to orient
our lives around serving and helping others, we launch out into the deep where
we discover meaning and fulfillment.
Howard Hughes, one of the wealthiest men of the twentieth century who spent
lavishly to indulge his whims and idiosyncrasies, died a recluse, lonely,
isolated and mentally deranged. The FBI had to resort to fingerprints in order
to identify his body.
Mother Teresa, who was penniless, spent her life caring
for the poor, sick, orphaned and dying. When she died in 1997 the Missionaries
of Charity, which she founded, had over one million co-workers serving the
“poorest of the poor” in 123 countries. In 2010, the 100th anniversary of her
birth, she was honored around the world.
This is why the Scripture urges us to put others first. “Do nothing out of
selfish ambition or vain conceit. Rather, in humility value others above
yourselves, not looking to your own interests but each of you to the interests
of others.” (Philippians 2:3-4). Jesus
said, “Give and it shall be given to you, good measure, pressed down, shaken
together and running over shall men give into your bosom.” (Luke 6:38).
Monday, November 3, 2014
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