Earning Trust
After living through the
Iowa presidential caucuses, I noticed how the process seemed to be addressing
one question: who can we trust to be our next president? Unfortunately, too
much of the rhetoric was dominated by candidates trumpeting the reasons why the
other candidates were not trustworthy. I’m sure this will be repeated
throughout the campaign until the election is over. But even after the election
a form of that question will still be pervasive in our lives: Who can we trust?
Simon Sinek is a current
leadership speaker who has several great messages available on the internet
about trust and leadership. (click
here for a good example,
especially the first 12 minutes about trust.) Sinek states that humans have needed
to trust in order to survive because we are meant to live with other people as
a group.
So who can we trust? Our
US currency says, “In God we trust.” The Bible includes multiple reference to
God being trustworthy and inviting people to trust in God. I believe that our relationship
with God is the place to start. But then, who on earth can we trust? And more
importantly, how can we become a person that other people can trust?
I’ve learned that I
can’t ask other people to trust me. I can only try to earn their trust. This
can be challenging whenever I’m part of a bigger organization such as a church
or a family where it may be impossible for everyone to get what they want. So
how do we earn someone’s trust?
I believe we can look to
God for the example. How do we know that we can trust God? In Jesus we can see
the process. God came to be with us in Jesus who walked with us and can relate
to the lives of people. He taught but he also listened. He learned the culture
and spoke the language with images and stories that people could understand.
But above it all, Jesus was willing to put the needs of others above his own.
From the temptation in the wilderness to the garden of Gethsemane, Jesus
struggled with the transformation from his personal preference to God’s
preferred future. That transformation can be summarized in the prayer Jesus
offered to God on the night he was betrayed, “Not my will, but yours be done”
(Luke 22:42).
During Holy Week
Christians will remember the sacrifice Jesus made for us on the cross. In that
sacrifice Jesus earned our trust. In the resurrection of Jesus on Easter God
has earned our trust. Now it is up to us to earn the trust of the people around
us so that we can bring a vision of God’s preferred future and change this
world. The future depends upon us.
It is important to ask,
“Who can we trust?” But it is more important to become a person that other
people can trust. It will require sacrifice, taking up our cross and putting
others people’s needs above our own. But the result will be an Easter joy of
relationships that reflect God’s relationship with us and offer a taste of
heaven.