Responsibility = Response Ability
"Make it your ambition  to lead a quiet life, to mind your own business and to work with your hands …  so that you will not be dependent on anybody."1
    
  One of the great principles we need to emphasize to keep ourselves and our  society healthy and productive is the principle of personal responsibility.  It's a principle that needs, through repetition, to be programmed into our  belief system. It needs to be taught and demonstrated in the home and at every  level of society—including among the highest business and political leaders in  our communities and nation. 
  
  If people don't believe they are responsible, they will not act responsibly. If  they believe and know they are responsible, most will consistently act  responsibly. 
  
  Obviously, we weren't responsible for our background and upbringing, but we are  fully responsible for what we do about these and for what we become. The world  doesn't owe us a living. As the Bible teaches, if we are unwilling to work we  shouldn't eat. 
  
  When we repeatedly do anything for others that they can and need to do for  themselves, we can make and keep them over-dependent, immature and irresponsible.  It is not the loving thing to do. 
  
  I remember reading about some sea gulls in a fishing village that, for many  years, fed on the scraps the fishermen left. When the fishing industry in this  place closed, the sea gulls had forgotten how to gather food for themselves.  They died of starvation. 
  
  The same principle applies to people. When we do things to keep them  over-dependent, we destroy their growth and maturity. It's the same with God, He  will bend the heavens to touch the earth to do for us what we cannot do for  ourselves—such as giving His Son, Jesus, to die on the cross of Calvary to pay the just penalty for all our sins—but He won't do for us what we can and need to do for ourselves. As another has  said, “God feeds the sparrows but He doesn’t throw the food into their nest.”
  
  One effective way to program responsibility into one's unconscious mind is by  constantly saying to one's self, either silently or out loud: "I am  responsible. I am responsible. I am responsible." And say it with the feeling that you really  mean it and believe it. Just mouthing the words is meaningless. 
  
  Suggested prayer: "Dear God, I am responsible. Thank You for granting me  this freedom. Help me to remember this and act accordingly always in all ways. Thank You for  hearing and answering my prayer. Gratefully, in Jesus's name, amen."
  
1. 1 Thessalonians 4:11 (NIV).
    
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All articles on this website are written by 
            Richard (Dick) Innes unless otherwise stated.