This article originally appeared on Radi-Call.com (view original article).
“Lord, who may abide in Your tabernacle? Who may dwell in Your holy hill? … He who swears to his own hurt and does not change.” (Psalm 15:1, 4b)
Integrity
As Anabaptists, we are taught early on of the importance of following through on what we say. Honesty, consistency, reliability – these are pivotal character qualities for us, and I dare say we’ve done well at retaining them. Many of our communities are founded on collective integrity, and our businesses flourish because of our reputation of being trustworthy folk.
Yet, sin has a way of uprooting even the sincerest intentions, and none of us are free from the temptation to bend the rules when it’s convenient. Often, our integrity flows only from tradition or good morals, but when that’s all we have, we will break when strained. Our testimony, our faith, and indeed, even our Christianity are at risk when we fail to maintain our integrity.
Article 17 of the Mennonite Confession of Faith confirms that “It is a major Christian obligation to be strictly truthful and transparent in life and doctrine, with no secrecy or hypocrisy,”1 and that kind of truthfulness comes through true faith. It is a result and outworking of our inward belief. It was – and still is – deeper than our Anabaptist culture, so let’s take a closer look at the Christian foundation for living lives of integrity.
Motive
Christian integrity is built on a solid, two-fold foundation – the character of God and the testimony of His Word.
God is truth, through and through. He does not, indeed, He cannot lie. In fact, His very words define truth, and nothing can change what He has said. And what He says, He does. Always. He comes through, perfectly fulfilling all He promised. He upholds His word. We must then, as His beloved, model His character in our own small way. We give others a glimpse of this as we engage them daily. We are truthful, trustworthy, faithful, so that others can see, appreciate, and love the steadfastness of our God.
Second, God encourages and demands our integrity through His Word. Psalm 15, which has been quoted at the beginning of this article, details the character and conduct of the man loved by God. This man follows through, or specifically, he “swears to his own hurt and does not change.” The necessity of integrity is not determined by convenience, personal benefit, or recognition. God’s people are faithful regardless of the consequences. And from where do we draw that ability? As John Piper has noted, “The issue is trust. Will we trust God to come through for us in his way and in his time?”2 Our ability to confirm our promises is dictated by our ability to trust that God will provide even when we don’t see how.
This theme is expanded in the New Testament. Jesus, in His noteworthy sermon (Matt. 5-7), touched on how His followers are to view oaths. Rather than swearing oaths vainly, or even sincerely, we ought to be so marked by honesty and truth that our “Yes” or “No” means exactly that. James essentially quotes Christ a number of years later, adding a warning of judgment for the unfaithful. These both clearly, directly affirm the necessity of Christian integrity. The overarching principle, then, is faithful, consistent action based on our word, along with intentional truthfulness in every arena of our lives.
Relevance
Integrity stretches beyond just an important character trait or a communal strength: it’s rooted in the very nature of God. Consistent trustworthiness is an essential part of our faith, and we are scarcely Christian without it.
- Mennonite Confession of Faith, 1963. GAMEO. Web. 13 Dec. 2017. <www.gameo.org/index.php?title=Mennonite_Confession_of_Faith,_1963#Article_17._Christian_Integrity>
- Piper, John. “What to Do When You Have Made an Expensive Mistake.” Desiring God, Web. 13 Dec. 2017. <www.desiringgod.org/articles/what-to-do-when-you-have-made-an-expensive-mistake.>