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Ethics in Praxis
Ethics in Praxis
1. Truthfulness in the Workplace
Scenario: Your boss asks you to exaggerate numbers in a report to make the company look better.
✅ Ethical Action: Instead of lying, you respectfully but firmly state that honesty aligns with your values. You offer a truthful alternative that highlights the company’s strengths without deception.
Teaching Mission Principle: Upholding truth while remaining respectful and solution-oriented.
2. Handling Conflict with Love
Scenario: A family member criticizes your beliefs and tries to provoke an argument.
✅ Ethical Action: Instead of reacting with anger, you respond with patience and understanding: “I appreciate your perspective. Let’s talk about what we agree on rather than focusing on our differences.”
Teaching Mission Principle: Choosing love over ego, promoting peace over division.
3. Practicing Forgiveness in Relationships
Scenario: A close friend betrayed your trust, and you feel deeply hurt.
✅ Ethical Action: You choose to release resentment and forgive, not because the action was right, but because holding onto anger weighs down your spirit. You set healthy boundaries while wishing them well.
Teaching Mission Principle: Forgiveness frees you and aligns you with divine peace.
4. Serving Others Selflessly
Scenario: You notice an elderly neighbor struggling to carry groceries.
✅ Ethical Action: Without waiting to be asked, you offer to help. You do this not for recognition but as an act of selfless service.
Teaching Mission Principle: Service is love in action—seeking nothing in return.
5. Ethical Leadership at Work
Scenario: You’re a manager and discover that a coworker is being unfairly overlooked for a promotion due to office politics.
✅ Ethical Action: You speak up on their behalf, ensuring fairness and merit-based decisions. You guide leadership to focus on truth and justice rather than favoritism.
Teaching Mission Principle: Using ethical courage to uplift others.
6. Choosing Honesty in Friendships
Scenario: A friend asks for your opinion on a life decision you believe is harmful (e.g., a toxic relationship).
✅ Ethical Action: You gently but honestly express your concern: “I care about you, and I want to share my honest thoughts because I want the best for you.” You honor their free will but don’t compromise on truth.
Teaching Mission Principle: Truth and love must go hand in hand.
7. Respecting Free Will in Parenting
Scenario: Your teenage child makes a choice you don’t agree with but isn’t harmful (e.g., a career path you wouldn’t have chosen).
✅ Ethical Action: Instead of forcing your will, you offer guidance and wisdom but allow them to follow their path. You trust that they will learn from experience and divine guidance.
Teaching Mission Principle: Guidance, not control—honoring free will while offering wisdom.
8. Ethical Consumerism
Scenario: You discover that a brand you love engages in unethical labor practices.
✅ Ethical Action: Instead of ignoring the issue, you choose to support brands that align with ethical values. You also spread awareness to others in a constructive way.
Teaching Mission Principle: Aligning economic choices with ethical consciousness.
9. Resolving Conflict in Community Work
Scenario: You volunteer at a charity, but a disagreement arises between two team members, threatening the mission.
✅ Ethical Action: You mediate by encouraging understanding and compromise. You help each person see the other’s perspective and refocus on the shared goal of service.
Teaching Mission Principle: Peace-building through ethical conflict resolution.
10. Standing Up for Justice with Compassion
Scenario: A coworker makes a discriminatory remark in a group setting.
✅ Ethical Action: Instead of ignoring it or reacting with hostility, you say: “I think we should treat everyone with kindness and respect. Let’s create an inclusive environment where everyone feels valued.”
Teaching Mission Principle: Speaking truth with love—correcting wrongs while maintaining peace.
Each of these real-life applications demonstrates how Truth, Love, and Service can guide ethical choices in various situations. Would you like these formatted into printable examples for use in your curriculum?
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