What
is ethics? Ethics is about moral principles
and rules of conduct. My ethics are the rules or standards governing the
conduct by which I live my life and make all my decisions. One of the best ways
of defining ethics is to take a quick look at what you believe and then think
about how you would react when those beliefs are challenged.
Your ethics govern your
thought process so that when a problem arises or you need to try and work your
way through a situation your solution is based on your ethics. Ethics are not
born in a vacuum. Ethics are more like a jigsaw puzzle that is thrown together
over time that when complete, makes up who you are and what you believe. From
our earliest days of life, we start to learn from those around us. These
learned behaviors add to the traits that we are already born with and help to
shape us into the person we will become. As part of this learning process, we
develop what will become our norms.
Norms are our everyday way of
looking at how the world around us works and helps us to understand our place
in the world. Norms also govern how we react to different situations and
problems that arise around us. These are our ethics; the things we learn as we
grow that govern the rest of our lives. Ethics are important for a number of
reasons. First, ethics are important because they give us a baseline for
understanding the concepts of right and wrong. Ethics help us to have a ready
understanding of how to react to a certain situation long before that situation
happens.
There are situational ethics
whereby we react as the situation dictates but our reaction is due to our
built-in value system that tells us what to do, not the situation itself.
The major problem with having
situational ethics is that they change with the situation. Having a standard of
ethics that governs us each day of our lives means we always know how we are to
live no matter what. There is no second-guessing and no changing your ethics
according to what you feel your ethics are at the moment.
Second, ethics are important
because they act as our mediator when dealing or coming into contact with other
people. If we have the wrong sense of ethics we will react to people in a
negative manner. But if our ethics are built on the truth, as found in the Word
of God, we will see people for who they are as children of God and we will
learn to love them just as God loves them.
Third, ethics are important
because we pass them onto others. We have the ability to show others the
correct way to act and behave by remaining ethical in the way we live,
regardless of whether it involves our personal or business life. I have also
learned over the years that ethics help us to remain on stable ground in an
ever-changing world and that a person’s ethics can be changed. Mine were
changed when I came to know the God personally. In fact, in life, I think there
is a process we go through where we search for a set of values that offer the
truth in order to better guide our lives. This search can and always will
center on the Bible which was written by God as our standard of ethics by which
we live our lives.
At the heart of ethics is the
integrity and values of the individual. If you can change the values and
increase the integrity of the individual, you will change their ethics. This is
what the Christian life is about: showing others the ethics we stand for and
letting them know how they can turn from living by their own situational ethics
to living according to the truth. (Charles Jay P. Pascua, Pedro Apostol Jr.,
Joed S. Agulay)
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