Saturday, May 7, 2011

Honesty - Gospel principles lesson part 2 - examples of honesty

This is somewhat cheating, but I send out an email when I'm teaching a lesson so that people will know what we're talking about and perhaps think about it.

Here's the email I sent today:

Elders,

Tomorrow our lesson is on honesty. A few thoughts for you to consider and we can discuss tomorrow:

Dishonesty happens when our actions don't align with our words. A lot of times we think of honesty being saying something that isn't true, but it also happens when we say something that ends up not being true. The second scenario is probably more common for many of us.

Concerning honesty in business, a story about Jon Huntsman from a book he wrote:

"One of my favorites in the book was how he agreed to sell 40% of his company for $54 million to Great Lakes Chemical Company. But it took 6 months for the lawyers to get the paper work drafted. Within that timeframe their margin had improved dramatically and their company was worth a lot more. The CEO called him and said that he was willing to pay more. He may have gotten $200 million more!! Mr. Huntsman refused, saying that his word was his bond. The CEO had him speak at his funeral even though the two weren’t very close."

Honesty also is necessary to become like Heavenly Father. Here's how he's described in D.C. 3:2 -

2For God doth not awalk in crooked paths, neither doth he bturn to the right hand nor to the left, neither doth he vary from that which he hath said, therefore his paths are straight, and his ccourse is one eternal round.

A big part of honesty seems to be the need to do things the correct way and never take something you don't have, that includes not taking credit for things you haven't done and also not taking things you shouldn't take.

In a talk given while he was President of BYU, Elder Holland spoke about Jesus always doing the right thing the right way. Here's a line from that talk, titled The Inconvenient Messiah.

Whatever else Satan may do, he will certainly appeal to our appetites. Far better to play on natural, acknowledged needs than struggle to plant in us artificial ones. Here Jesus experiences the real and very understandable hunger for food by which he must sustain his mortal life. We would not deny anyone this relief; certainly we would not deny the Son of Man. Israel had its manna in the wilderness. This is Israel's God. He has fasted for forty days and forty nights. Why not eat? He seems ready to break his fast, or surely must soon. Why not simply turn the stones to bread and eat?


The temptation is not in the eating. He has eaten before, he will soon eat again, and he must eat for the rest of his mortal life. The temptation, at least the part I wish to focus on, is to do it this way, to get his bread--his physical satisfaction, relief for his human appetite--the easy way, by abuse of power and without a willingness to wait for the right time and the right way. It is the temptation to be the convenient Messiah. Why do things the hard way? Why walk to the shop--or bakery? Why travel all the way home? Why deny yourself satisfaction when with ever such a slight compromise you might enjoy this much-needed nourishment? But Christ will not ask selfishly for unearned bread. He will postpone gratification, indefinitely if necessary, rather than appease appetite--even ravenous appetite--with what is not his.


In my mind, dishonesty, cheating, or stealing often occurs simply because one wants to take the easy way out of a tough situation.

A few questions to consider:
1) Did Jon Huntsman make the right decision? Was it the right business decision or just the right moral decision? Does it matter?
2) Who is hurt when we are dishonest?
3) What will help us become a more honest people?

See you tomorrow!

A couple comments on my questions. Jon Huntsman did make the right decision for his business and morally. He would only be honest with people and that gave him more respect and trust over the long term. Being honest and trustworthy is a very good long-term business decision. Sometimes it costs us money in the short term to gain trust (and therefore money) in the long-term.

Morally, no question that it was a good decision. He earned the respect of a man and that man's family. It impacted the world for good.

We hurt a lot of people when we are dishonest. Our spouse and kids are the most obvious. They won't be able to trust so many things about us if we're dishonest. All others that we're around are impacted as well.

Developing honesty - not sure. Need to think more about this one.... Certainly having a longer term perspective helps with honesty. The gospel helps us think about the long-term more than many things, so developing a gospel perspective in life (through prayer and scripture study and helping others) probably helps develop honesty. I'm sure there's more than that. Maybe developing respect for honest people will help also....

2 comments:

7Carters!E,H,V,B,R,C,E said...

LaDon,
This is great! How did the lesson go? I have no doubt that it was incredible. The members of your quorum are blessed to have such a dedicated teacher.
I love the line about how "dishonesty, cheating, or stealing often occurs simbly because one wants to take the easy way out of a tough situation." That's so true. This is gonna be weird, but you'll know it's from me. In Princess and the Frog the bad guy, "The Shadow Man" is Dr. Facilier, which taken from French or Spanish of "facile" shows that his use of power is simply to take the easy way out of work and we see where he ends up. Thanks for the thought provoking post.
-Eric

The Lindes said...

Thanks Eric. Good thought - even Disney gets that cheaters take the easy way out :)