Faith, Leadership and Public Life. Preston Manning

Faith, Leadership and Public Life - Preston Manning


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of every kind are particularly susceptible—of seeing moral and ethical issues in every particular situation involving others, even when such issues do not exist, while ignoring their own moral condition.70

      It should be noted that the size of the original community of disciples was small; that the relationships among them grew more personal and intimate as they lived and worked together; and that the moral tone of their community was definitely set by the high ethical standards of their leader. Where these three characteristics do not exist—as in large, impersonal organizations with distant or ethically challenged leadership—the inculcation and maintenance of high ethical standards are compromised.

      Implications for Us

      I must first of all readily admit that I have personally wrestled long and hard—often with limited success—with precisely how to internalize high standards of ethical behaviour among members of business and political organizations of which I have been a part and that I still have much to learn myself in this area.

      But it would seem to me that the ethics of the political organizations and communities of which I have been a part, including the Parliament of Canada, would be strengthened by acknowledging the following:

      • Codes of ethics and associated compliance and enforcement regimes are insufficient in themselves to achieve a high standard of ethical behaviour.

      • The ethics of an organization will never rise higher than those of its leadership, and high ethical standards should therefore be an essential prerequisite in choosing and cultivating political leadership.

      • Putting the interests of others—our fellow countrymen, our constituents, our colleagues, our families—ahead of our own selfish interests should constitute our highest ethical commitment. (Is not this the essence of self-sacrificial love as Jesus taught it?)

      • The ethical life is not static; we should be growing in ethical sensitivity—increasingly seeing ethical and moral dimensions in issues and situations where we might not have seen them before, while avoiding the extreme of seeing moral issues where in fact none exist.

      • We are in need of the fellowship of others who share our moral commitments and will hold us accountable to keep those commitments. We therefore should seek to be part of a moral community and contribute to its sustenance and activity.

      If you are ever responsible for establishing the moral tone and standards of a group—a church, company, charity, political organization, or government—surely these lessons drawn from the teachings and example of Jesus constitute an excellent starting point.

      Make self-sacrificial love the supreme ethic to be pursued and practised, encouraging and rewarding those who put the interests of others ahead of their own while constraining those who consistently put their own self-interest ahead of everything else. Commit yourself to following and learning from someone who personally practises that ethic, and seek to become that person yourself, recognizing that the ethical standards of an organization will never rise higher than those of its leadership. And form or join a moral community or fellowship—preferably a small and intimate one—where that highest of ethical standards will be practised and where you will be supported and held accountable by others for doing so.


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