Looking for success in the right place

A Christian Science perspective: A response to the Monitor editorial ‘The payoff in not paying off an official.’

July 11, 2016

It’s not easy for companies to see their competitors get ahead because they are paying bribes to officials overseas. Nor is it any easier for an athlete to see his competitive edge slip away because of drug use by competitors, or for students to watch others achieve higher grades because of cheating on exams. Yet, resisting such temptations can ultimately be a greater payoff. The Monitor’s Editorial Board wrote: “A company’s long-term competitive advantage does not lie in its ability to pay bribes but in its resources, talent, and hard work. Success cannot be bought ...” (“The payoff in not paying off an official,” CSMonitor.com, April 17).

The greater payoff involves looking for success in the right place – within a broader concept than just the standard “bottom line” or the number of wins or high grades. Success within this broader concept involves a higher sense of fulfillment, one that results in true gain; it acknowledges that success is linked to integrity and involves resisting immoral temptations such as bribery, doping, cheating, etc.. Success in the right place, then, is ultimately measured by whether moral means were used to reach our goals and whether we earnestly employed our resources and talents through hard work.

We can find some encouraging, supportive words and examples in the Bible of individuals who looked for success in the right place. For example, King Solomon saw the connection between righteousness and prosperity when he said, “He that trusteth in his riches shall fall: but the righteous shall flourish as a branch” (Proverbs 11:28). He also acknowledged the importance of hard work, “He becometh poor that dealeth with a slack hand: but the hand of the diligent maketh rich” (Proverbs 10:4). Competition in the world today seems to be all-encompassing and could try to lure us into resorting to immoral means and shortcuts to achieve success. Yet the Bible and our very own experience can help us understand that riches, in and of themselves, can be illusive, temporary, and undependable. True success, the kind that endures for the long term, is gained through moral means and diligent work.

Tracing fentanyl’s path into the US starts at this port. It doesn’t end there.

Christ Jesus certainly proved this to be true. His parable of the talents showed how diligence was rewarded with success (see Matthew 25:14-29). His unparalleled morality, and his understanding of our true nature, even converted sinners such as Zacchæus, who set aside corrupt means and made restitution for his evil ways (see Luke 19:2-10). Jesus’ words and works proved that God, good, is our true creator – that God doesn’t lead us into temptation but delivers us from evil (see Matthew 6:13). He showed us that we can prayerfully acknowledge God as “Our Father,” (Matthew 6:9) and that this divine heritage gives us the strength to overcome and resist immoral temptations such as bribery and cheating. Seeing ourselves and others in this way not only brings success found in the right place, but real healing as well.

The founder of this publication and the discoverer of Christian Science, Mary Baker Eddy, wrote: “The conscientious are successful. They follow faithfully; through evil or through good report, they work on to the achievement of good; by patience, they inherit the promise. Be active, and, however slow, thy success is sure: toil is triumph;...” (“Miscellaneous Writings 1883-1896,” p. 340).

Through our diligent efforts and prayers we can expect to reach true and lasting success through moral means. And our example and higher, more spiritual view of others will help to encourage and prayerfully support mankind in this endeavor.