INTEGRITY
1.strict adherence to a code of values or principles-
usually moral or artistic
2. an unimpaired, unhindered,
unhampered condition
3. the quality or state of being complete or undivided
How does one go forward when one's condition has been impaired?
How does
one proceed in the face of corrupt practices?
How can one function in the midst
of division?
How can one carry on when something or someone vital is missing?
What,
if anything, in and about our lives is incorruptible, sound, complete and honest?
What can we depend upon? To what can we stamp our seal of approval?
What
security can there be if we are forever asking ourselves,
"Will it
hold?",
"Is it true?",
"Is it authentic?",
"Can
it stand?",
"Is it legitimate?",
"Is it real?",
"Can I trust it?",
"Am I being cheated, ripped off, scammed,
punked, tricked, lied to, snowed, played?"
"Is there anything in this life
that I can really count on?"
Have we been so disillusioned by the shady
and the fake, the sometime-y and the slick, the opportunistic and the greedy,
that we can no longer recognize what is real, and we walk away from blessing
after blessing?
Have we been hurt, damaged, broken down, crippled, raided,
raped, swindled or deprived so often that we no longer have the ability to
discern what is good or evil?
Do we even trust God to keep His word?
Do we echo, as
the House of Israel complained, ‘the way of the
Lord is not equal”? (Ezekiel 33;17)
Never mind the world and its obvious
woes, what about in the household of faith? We are warned not to touch the anointed.
What happens when the anointed touch you?
How do you get back to a place of strength and stability when your condition
has been compromised? How do we establish an atmosphere where integrity
abounds and is welcomed?
I didn’t want to talk about Adam and Eve. I wanted to talk about the shaky
relationship between Jacob and Laban. I wanted to submit that Laban had every
right to adhere to the law, and Jacob was simply ignorant of it. Love blinded
him, and caused him not to ask the right questions.
I didn’t want to talk about
Adam and Eve. I wanted to talk about Judah, Onan and Tamar. People often ask
things of you that seem impossible, improbable, illegal, imposing, and sometimes
crazy. I wanted to defend Onan in his desire to parent children that he could
claim as his own, but warn of the danger of disobeying the law of God- even
when it doesn’t seem just or fair.
I wanted to talk about the Israelites and
the methods they used to weed out Achan after he disobeyed a direct order from God
, the consequences of which, would have meant a corporate punishment. The Bible
says "But all the silver, and gold, and vessels of brass and iron, are
consecrated unto the Lord: they shall come into the treasury of the Lord." Achan decided either the law didn’t apply to
him, or that a little of the treasury wouldn’t be missed.
There were other
situations I wanted to explore but I was led repeatedly to the beginning. What
happened in the beginning where the word “integrity” would need to be included
in our vocabulary?
Genesis 2:17 reads, “But of the tree of
the knowledge of good and evil, thou shalt not eat of it: for in the day that
thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die.”
The
Bible lets us know that God said these words to Adam. Eve had not yet been born.
The Lord made beasts and birds, and
it wasn’t until verse 22 that Eve came on the scene.
Notice, there’s no
conversation between chapters two and three that lets us know that the serpent was
somewhere nearby when God was talking to Adam. The serpent, of course, preceded
Eve. Who was Adam talking to and trusting with important information before his
help meet showed up? Was he talking to the foxes and cougars and chicken heads,
I mean chickens and spiders? It doesn’t tell us when the conference call took
place to bring Eve up to speed on the working operation of the Garden. Adam
couldn’t have withheld that kind of critical information, even though he got
the memo first. Could he?
I wonder sometimes, did he know what he was eating? When
she handed him the fruit, did he ask which tree it came from, and then consent
to eat, or did he realize what he had eaten only after he looked at her and
said “Girl don’t you think you need to put some clothes on?”
What is it that we
are supposed to share with other people that we decide they don’t need to know?
Where were you supposed to be, or what were you supposed to do but you found out too late?
What did you
find yourself in the middle of, because someone failed to give you the heads up?
What information will benefit us all, but someone has decided to withhold it?
Who is bringing you a word or a mandate in the name of a person of authority,
but leaving out critical pieces of information?
In
the garden, the serpent had no problem convincing Eve to eat. All that any of
us have to do is plant a single seed of doubt and, like Eve, if we are not
careful, aware, or thinking properly, we will find ourselves questioning, and at
odds with God.
The Bible says in verse 9, “And
the LORD God called unto Adam, and said unto him, Where art thou?”
An
omniscient God wasn’t asking about location. I believe he was asking what state
they were in. Where are you? Are you healthy, sober, and whole? Can you look at yourself
in the mirror and not be ashamed?Have you stopped caring? Have you decided to
abandon your faith and everything you’ve ever been taught? Have you been discouraged, and decided like the
apostles to “go a fishing”?
Have you lost credibility, favor, or access?
Have you given up? Are you hiding? Adam where are you?
The
serpent caused Eve to look at God differently. It’s what we often do when people
hold back what we think we deserve, or don’t freely give all we think they
should. A sense of entitlement will do it every time. Sometimes when you give
too much, it is no longer appreciated, it’s expected. Convince someone to think
they are missing out on something. Imply that someone hasn't been given all
that they are supposed to have. I see it every time I give one student a
piece of drawing paper and inadvertently, give two sheets to another. You never
knew there could be such indignation on the face of a four year old. The
implication is that I am being unfair, or that I favor one student over another.
To me, it’s just paper, and there’s
plenty of it, but it suddenly gains
greater value when it is not distributed evenly.
Do I have to evenly distribute what belongs
to me? Do I have to distribute it at all? If I don’t rectify the situation, the
class will be orderly as long as I maintain my presence, or with a heavy hand, demand
order, but the atmosphere, the spirit in which some of the children work, will
have been contaminated. They’ll be quiet and do what I say, but an element of
trust will be missing. “Why didn’t I get two pieces of paper?” “Why does she
like her better than me?”
A simple act, or failure to act, will cause suspicion,
division, and animosity. If I turn my back, I can count on a child attempting
to snatch that extra piece of paper for themselves, tearing it up so that it
will not be fit to use, or sitting idly and pouting in a time out chair for the
rest of the class period.
We’re all responsible for the way we respond, but we also
have to take responsibility for the things we set in motion. If I initiate
something, and then change even simple rules midstream, I run the risk of
causing collapse.
Infer that someone has been cheated or
shortchanged, and you will see once vital relationships crumble if there is no
effective intervention to repair them. The serpent's whole aim was to drive a
permanent wedge between man and God- a wedge that he hoped neither would be
able or willing to remove. He came with a lying spirit and only part of the
truth. Once his mission was accomplished, it took God and God alone to
implement a plan of reconciliation that could not be breached, tampered with or
broken. Never before had Adam and Eve been afraid of God. They'd never hidden
themselves from His presence. They had no known enemy. The serpent, in a single
encounter caused them to doubt and be suspicious of God's motives and
principles. “Who told thee that thou wast
naked?”
We really have to be careful who sidles up to us and has an
important message from God, or an alternative interpretation of His word.
It infuriates most parents when their children find out things in improper and
underhanded ways. Be careful of those who seek to damage the integrity of your
relationship with your child by questioning your faith, undermining your rules,
mocking your guidelines, and exposing what you have forbidden. Everyone who is
close to your child is not a friend of theirs, or a fan of yours.
I was always
leery of people who wanted to spend more time with my child then they did with
their own. I couldn’t understand those who always wanted to redress her, change
her hair, keep her out late, associate her with troublemakers, discuss our home
life, discourage her from doing her homework or chores, leave her in the
company of strangers, buy her things I’d told her she couldn’t have, or take her
places I didn’t want her to go.
In the case of Adam and Eve, maybe nakedness was a lesson for another day.
Maybe there would been no shame attached to it if Adam and Eve had learned of
it from God. There they were— fearful, paranoid and hiding in their own
home, from the One who created them. There they were, altering the purpose of
those poor fig leaves.
When integrity is destroyed, it affects even seemingly
insignificant things. Instead of enjoying the fruit of the fig tree, they were
sewing leaves together and making their first uniform.
Disobedience caused them
to know and experience things they should never have encountered. Disobedience
doesn’t cause us to stop hearing God, or knowing that He exists. It doesn’t stop
us from knowing which direction he is coming from, or even understanding what He
is saying. It just causes us to flee from His presence and not do our part to
maintain close contact with Him.
God, in His mercy and grace watched over His word. He watched over his
creation and with immeasurable love, sent Jesus to insure that there would be a
way to reestablish communion with Him. God's integrity was never at stake. The
serpent, on the other hand, never had any. Adam and Eve had to learn in whom it
was that they could, and should put their trust. God was new to them. He wasn’t
new to the serpent.
Notice.
The serpent knew exactly what to say to Eve. We know what to say to people, too,
in order to get them to do what we want. He had a working relationship with God
that was void of love. You have to respect the devil. He’s cunning, persistent, and consistent. He works hard and diligently. He tries to make his
presence known in everything. He had the love of God at one time, and in his backwards
way, settles for God’s attention since he cannot have his affection. It’s not
the kind of attention anyone should want, but I believe there is a part of
every creature that senses and longs for God, and wants to be near Him. A lack
of honesty makes that relationship impossible to maintain, and doomed to fail.
The enemy so breached the integrity of his relationship with God, that it
forever sealed his fate. His fate was not designed for you or me, but
provisions have been made to accommodate anyone who chooses to follow in the
enemy’s footsteps. Just like we place extra chairs in the aisles and wherever else it is permissible to make room for our brothers and sisters, the Bible says
that hell hath enlarged herself, too.
Anybody ever had a house party? It’s supposed to be confined to the basement
but the word got out, and nobody was watching the door, and folk took the
liberty to bring other folk with them. You ended up with people in the
basement, in the bathroom, sitting on the washing machine and dryer, on the front porch, playing cards on the beds, standing up eating in the kitchen, and crowded on
the back deck. The deck, like Hell was not originally designed to hold a
multitude of people. Even Hell had limited specifications at one time. However,
unlike a deck, that will inevitably come crashing down under the weight of all
of the people who aren’t supposed to be standing upon it, Hell has undergone
some modifications so that its integrity will not be affected by the multitudes
on the way. Hell is not like the private house party. Hell says "the more the
merrier!"
It is not the will of God that
any should perish, but according to the very nature of God, our choices are
respected. The Bible says that he stands at the door and knocks. See? He’s very
polite, very respectful, very orderly, and stands with great regard for your
prerogative to answer or tell Him to go away. He is concerned that our
union with Him is not one-sided, lopsided, or unstable. His love cannot be
measured, and there is no way I can love Him to the degree that he loves me, and
He knows that. He has established the foundation. He has built this house of
love. If I am going to be saved, if I am going to have a place with Him, it has
to be by grace, through faith. There is a door already fashioned for me to
freely enter. If I choose not to answer when he knocks, he is not going to
return with a battering ram and a heavenly swat team, and just break down the
door to my heart, and set up camp.
Isn’t it good to know, though, that He
allows us to come boldly to His door?
I can’t undermine the integrity of anything He has established no matter how I
try! His rules, methods, and practices don’t change. He is very specific about
how things are supposed to work and what to do in order to maintain stability.
Unfortunately, our rules change on a daily basis.
Because you and I have the affection of God,
it is the enemy’s sole purpose to kick as many legs out from under your table
with God as he can. God himself spoke into existence everything that Adam and
Eve could have ever needed or wanted. He showed them incredible favor and great
affection. He made them wonderful promises. He embraced them and took them by
the hand. He provided a place to flourish. He established a system whereby
everything in the Garden required no maintenance and was structurally sound.
All Adam and Eve had to do was exist, enjoy the fruit of God’s labor, and
strictly adhere God’s guidelines. Their conversation and covenant had been with
God. If there were any modifications, if Eve had any questions, before she took
a third party’s word for anything dealing with the operating system of the
garden, she should have consulted the creator and manufacturer. The
manufacturer knows the integrity of his product- what it will, and won’t do, and
the dangers of using it improperly. God put a warning on his product. It wasn’t
in fine print. He said very plainly what would happen if the integrity of the
garden was breached. Could it be that the tree in the midst of the garden was
like a central computer, assisting with the daily operations of the rest of the
garden? Eve proved that she didn’t really know God, and that her relationship
with him was lacking. He had shown himself completely, and provided abundantly.
Eve allowed the serpent to challenge her knowledge of God, the integrity of His
word, and the truth behind the tree.
Question integrity, and risk losing access.
Too often we allow what is masquerading as authority to affect significant
aspects of our lives. The enemy then watches as we forfeit blessings, lose
fellowship, waste time, contribute to our own suffering, and make significant
work for ourselves as we attempt to rebuild what he has destroyed, and regain
what he has stolen.
At
some point in everyone’s life we face the consequences of tampering with the
wrong, seemingly small and insignificant thing, only to find out it is either an
expensive and irreplaceable part, without which, a thing simply will not
function, or a toxic, dangerous part that should not be handled at all.
One
thing out of place, or (as Achan found), in place, or in the wrong place, can be
disastrous, and spell consequences for many. One person’s actions may not seem
to affect the whole. The old adage “one monkey don’t stop no show” is a
favorite especially when we don’t want a particular person around in the first
place. If what one is running is a show, then the adage is true. Yes.
You can always find someone to step into the shoes of someone else, do the work
of someone else, and assume the role of someone else, and they may even prove
to be better at it, but is it the person that God has ordained? A body can
hardly afford to be so cavalier.
Yes, a natural body, designed with almost two of everything can function on
just one. God has so marvelously made us that we can give you one of ours if
yours stops working. Loss of one part or
one sense, causes the other parts to go into overdrive and adopt functions they
certainly can do, but were not designed
to do. As a body, each part engaged in its proper function is a key to its
survival. Sure. We can always find warm, willing bodies, but are they efficient
or effective, perfectly fitted, or divinely suited to carry out what needs to
be done?
A vehicle, comprised of replacement parts, may run just as smoothly, but
why not implement a maintenance schedule whereby existing parts aren’t being
run down, wearing away, failing and falling off? If something improper is
operating in a critical place on the inside of a thing, everyone will know it,
and be affected by it. For the well being of the whole- whether it was the
Children of Israel in their journey to the Promised Land, the local church as
it stands as a light in the community, a small group launching out to provide
services, a business venture endowed with a long awaited grant, a new television,
a rare automobile, or a computer game, things simply can’t be carelessly
imbeded, installed, implanted, tacked on, sneaked in, added on, appointed or
elevated if it threatens the proper working order and operation of the whole.
Some things can’t hold all we try to add to them. Some things that are added
prove to be draining. Some things that look like help and
enhancement, are anything but. We try to add new applications to old
electronics. Add fancy additions to old houses. Increase power to old systems.
Overload old circuits with new appliances. We cram extra activities into the
days of already exhausted, sleep deprived youth. We take on much more than we
can chew and wonder why we can do no one thing well. It’s no wonder we cannot
hear the voice of God, nor recognize it when he calls, nor carry out His wishes. We compromise the integrity
of these temples, and then run and hide from him in the hopes that He’ll lose
his omniscience and forget where we are. We’re tired, worn out, and confused. He
is not. We fail to be honest with ourselves about our capabilities and
limitations. He knows us. It is through Christ that we should attempt to do all
things. Therein lies the strength. Christ doesn’t do the strengthening! He is
not a “which” or a “that” he is a “who” a person! —it is the knowledge that he
has given us the capacity to operate in His power that energizes and stabilizes
me. I can do all things through Christ. It is His strength, his integrity, his
anointing, his motivation, his assurance, his perfection! When we venture out
armed with His marching orders but our own steam, it’s easy to get confused. We
begin depending on the word of others, guided by the agendas of others, listening
to the advice and opinions of others, hopping on the bandwagons of others. Its
no wonder we are so easily discouraged and so seemingly unstable. Overwhelmed,
confused and unsure, we find ourselves doing nothing at all.
It’s
why Jonah essentially said, "throw me off the boat". He knew why the sea was acting up, and the ship was in danger. He wasn’t where he belonged! He wasn’t running from
men. He was running from God. Even if Jonah hadn’t been on that particular boat
it may have experienced the same fate. The Bible reveals a complete lack of
unity on board. These were men functioning, working, providing a service in a
dysfunctional atmosphere and utilizing haphazard methods to deal with trouble. When
trouble comes there has to be a consensus. Everyone involved would be wise to
be on one accord. These men, in Jonah 1, verse 5 “were afraid and cried every
man unto his own god”. The obvious commotion
didn’t even wake Jonah.
I recall another instance when someone was fast asleep
during a storm, and everyone else on board was losing it. The difference was,
the apostles had Jesus on board.
Wherever Jesus is there’s safety. They should have been fine, and asleep, too.
The mariners had Jonah, a fearful, apprehensive prophet on board. He was also a
little clueless if he thought that
God wouldn’t be able to locate him. At least the ship master had the good sense
to tell Jonah to do his part and call upon his
God. The mariners, with all of their gods, at least had the wherewithal to find
out the source of their trouble. They had probably never had so much trouble
before on their trips from Joppa to Tarshish. Someone was threatening the
integrity of the ship and hindering their usual comraderie. None of them
believed in the same god, but they worked together and they came together as
one body to interrogate Jonah. Why are we
suffering because of you? What do you do for a living? Where did you come from?
Who are your people? Even when Jonah told them what was necessary to calm
the sea, they opted to take him to shore instead. When they realized what they
were working with, they all got on one accord again and changed their religion. Against their better judgment, but
according to consensus, they tossed Jonah overboard, then “offered a sacrifice
and made vows”.
When it becomes evident that a particular thing, concept or
action will ensure security, it’s not a bad idea to adopt it.
The Bible is a book of integrity. It stands to
reason that there are numerous examples by which we can learn the pitfalls that
result when there’s a lack of it. We can also learn of the most unlikely victories in the
lives of those who not only said what they were going to do, but did it.