In his book, Integrity, Yale...
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In his book, Integrity, Yale Law School professor Stephen L. Carter shares the account of a football player who failed to catch a pass. He deceived the referee by pretending to have caught the ball and then celebrating profusely. Not catching the error, the referee moved the ball forward and blew the whistle for the next play. The team quickly huddled to get on with the game, as NFL rules allow. The broadcasters and fans of the offending team might remark, "What a heads-up play!" Meaning: "Wow! What a great liar this kid is! Well done!"
discerning what is right and wrong; 2) acting on what your understanding of right from wrong is; and 3) saying openly that you are acting your understanding of right and wrong.
Paul's charge to us is to "run in such a way that you may win it." Outside the context of his other ethical exhortations for Christian living (1 Corinthians 12-14), winning at all costs by many modern standards would lack integrity.
discerning what is right and wrong; 2) acting on what your understanding of right from wrong is; and 3) saying openly that you are acting your understanding of right and wrong.
Paul's charge to us is to "run in such a way that you may win it." Outside the context of his other ethical exhortations for Christian living (1 Corinthians 12-14), winning at all costs by many modern standards would lack integrity.
