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| How
To Form A Good Character
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Character is
the accumulation of qualities that distinguishes one person
from another. Character is not just one single trait, but the
accumulation of all a person is, the sum total of all his
traits.
Someone has suggested that reputation is what others think us
to be, character is what God knows us to be.
How does a person develop and maintain a good character?
By getting in touch with yourself. Aristotle was not
far off the mark when he suggested that one should “know
thyself.” Personal integrity is the key to developing a good
character. We have to ascertain and admit to what we need in
order to form a good character. In order to know where
you’re going, you must first realize where you are. “He
that speaketh truth in his heart”–that’s necessary to
the development of a good character (see Psalm 15:1-2).
By a constant contact with God. It is He who defines
what is a good character, for it is He who has defined what is
good in the first place. His word is not only an expression of
Who and What He is, but a revelation of how we can become like
Him, or be a “partaker of the divine nature” (II Peter
1:4). His word tells us which way to go. A man of character
does not walk just anywhere, but “his delight is in the law
of the Lord and in His law doth he meditate both day and
night” (Psalm 1:2). “Wherewith shall a young man cleanse
his way? By taking heed thereto according to Thy word”
(Psalm 119:9). A man’s character is developed by paying due
attention to where he is going, to his path of pursuit, and
that means a constant contact with the Father.
By accumulating–a little at a time–the right pieces of
holiness. Holiness is not some huge characteristic
(notice the word, please) that a person somehow suddenly
develops, but rather the piecing together of small bits and
pieces of goodness and piety. Small habits–those little acts
of kindness and goodness– are what define a person’s
character. Holiness helps to define a man’s character by
setting him apart from the trivial dross of life; it is
observed in his habitual acts of goodness. Holiness
illustrates in one's life the character of God. “But as He
which hath called you is holy, so be ye holy in all manner of
conversation” (I Peter 1:15).
By regular exposure to right influences. One of the
ways we develop good character is by observing and associating
with people whom we know to be of good character. Time spent
with a good person will increase your chances of having being
good yourself. “And let us consider one another to provoke
unto love and good works, not forsaking the assembling of
ourselves together...” (Hebrews 10:24). We need each other.
What one man lacks, another man has. What another has, one man
lacks. “Be thou an example of the believers” is good
advice, and to find and follow those who set good examples
helps to formulate right courses and plan right avenues of
pursuit. Character is helped considerably by associating with
those who have it.
By looking forward to the reward. Character and hope
run on the same track. One who has an abiding trust in God and
His word will build the kind of character that assures for him
an eventual heavenly home. “Who shall dwell in Thy holy
hill? He that worketh righteousness,” we are told (Psalm
15:2). Those who have placed a high value and importance on a
well-orchestrated life are fit for an entrance “into the
everlasting kingdom of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ?”
(II Peter 1:11). Our hope helps us see the need for a holy
character by connecting us to that which has the highest
quality and value–eternal life.
Please be advised—the absence of these things in our lives
will result in our having a distorted view of what is
important in life, and cause us to place emphasis and
enthusiasm on the wrong things.
Dee Bowman
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