Hon Stephen Ibrahim Agya and the youths on moral behavior
In an interview with Hon Stephen I. Agya his stated that Values
are used to explain the worthiness of things. When things serve useful purpose
or are
very important in life, they are said to be valuable.
very important in life, they are said to be valuable.
Value refers to precepts, moral
principle, ideas, beliefs we hold and cherish as important, meaningful and
worthwhile attribute of life which must, neither be abused nor despised. These
meaningful and worthwhile values have positive effects on our behavioral
output, such as decision, actions and reactions in our surroundings, pattern of
lives, choice of activities we engage in and the satisfactions in our day to
day life.
In life, there appears to be many
valuable things without which life becomes meaningless and valueless. We attach
value to things because the serve useful purpose. Our parents, elders,
relatives, teachers, friends, classmates, priests e.t.c. are some of the people
we attach value to and most importantly, God is valuable to us. Things we
attach value to, includes money, houses, clothes, water, air, food, happiness,
education, security, Government, fruit and lots more.
Value also includes our likes and
dislikes. Likes include respect to parent, elders, constituted authorities,
being law-abiding, punctuality to school, work, showing seriousness as it
affects our Christian work, e.t.c. Dislikes- among others, includes
Ø Fighting
Ø Cultism
Ø Indecent dressing
Ø Telling lies
Ø Gossiping
Ø Going to church late
Ø Keeping bad company
Ø Engaging in sexual immorality
Ø Going late to work
Ø Money politics
Ø Examination malpractice
Ø Stealing
Ø Kidnapping
KINDS OF VALUES
Values are naturally of two kinds, these are:
1. Extrinsic Values and
2. Intrinsic Values.
These
are the important values that are expected of every member because they mould
the destiny of individuals and ministry. They are enduring and expected to be
pervading.
They are internalized norms, ideas and
ideals which the Church, Family or school, different societies and government
make efforts to instill in individuals and church members (congregation).
The values include justice,
selflessness, love, respect for constituted authority, education, faith in God,
trust, community work for development, work for livelihood, respect for others
opinions an culture, tolerance, quality leadership and exemplary life-style.
EXTRINSIC VALUES
Extrinsic
values are those values which we desire because they help us to acquire
intrinsic values.
Their values depend on how, or to the
extent they help us acquire more lasting or enduring values. They are time
bound, often short-lived.
They could be human or non-human,
material or immaterial. They are auxiliary in nature. For instance, a teacher
who imparted knowledge on a child has an extrinsic value while the knowledge
has an intrinsic value.
Extrinsic are usually formulated,
organized, and established by the church and government, it enable us to
achieve a more enduring value. Extrinsic values becomes useful to the extent we
are able to make use of them. The society encourages good relations and
exchanges, church/government makes how, and mount programmes while families
teacher obedience, honesty, selfishness, purity, love, e.t.c. which help in
shaping life and activities.
TYPES OF VALUES
There are various types of values we will
consider in this theme. They include, among others, honesty, justice and
selflessness.
Before the early 90s, few people had
written about vision.
Vision
has become the hottest topic around the world.
Major Corporation started searching
for leaders who could inspire personnel and investor with a compelling vision for
the nation, culminating in Bill Clinton’s defeating the incumbent George Bush
in Nov. 1992 political analysts noted that Mr. Bush had derisively and in
retrospect, unfortunately – dismissed “the Vision thing”
“Vision”
had entered the lexicon of the average person.
But things changed slowly in the
church- sometimes for good reason, other times perhaps not so.
Thousand of church leaders, are aware
of the vision revolution occurring in society at large, began to read books on
the topic. Talk about the matter at conference and suggested to their
congregants that a vision statement is needed. Despite those good intentions,
few churches immerse their selves in a true vision-development process that
produced a genuine sense of God’s vision and related vision statement. What
emerged, for the most part, were committee meeting resulting in refried mission
statement or updated strategy statement designed to justify what the church was
already doing. God was not at the center of the process as he must be if we are
seeking his vision.
Infact,
there was often a serious problem of centricity.
The outcome of vision development
efforts resulted in the explication of human vision rather than God’s idea and
his will for humanity, and there must be an act or strategy ineptitude by
leaving a myriad of untapped opportunities untapped.
1. Although they are good people and have been called to
ministry, most senior pastors do not have understanding of God’s vision for the
ministries they an trying to lead and, consequently, most churches have little
impact in their community or in the lives or their congregants. Not even out of
every 10 pastors of protestant churches can articulate God’s vision. For their
church clearly, this is one of the most important areas for growth during the
present decade.
2. Most believers know about the concept of the vision,
but few but few have God’s vision in place in their life and ministry. The
observable consequences include people experiencing feeling of frustration and
self-doubt, slide into spiritual complacency, the degeneration of Christian
service in ministry, heightened selfishness and the acceptance or mediocrity
within the church.
As the church or God struggle with issues
related to purpose, meaning and significance, the heart of the solution will be
the discernment of God’s vision for their lives, all else limits one potential
to be the people God created us to be
3. The institutions that serve as get keepers for the
local church such as the seminary here moves slowly to respond to the recent discovering
and insight about vision. There is still a seminary in this country that uses
the explication of one’s vision as a filter for acceptance into the school, as
given students, as criteria for the selection of a student mentor and as an
indication of a student’s leadership potential. Seminaries play a very useful
and important role in the church; that role could be much valuable it God’s
vision were integrated at the center of the process.
4. Within the local church, few elder boards search
committees rely upon the church’s vision as the core filter through which
pastoral candidates screened. Fewer than lout of every 20 protestant churches
use their vision statement as the key to their evaluation process. If God’s
vision were known and emphasized in such setting, imagine the difference it
would make in the focus and influence of these well-intentioned ministries.
In summary, then, although Pastors and
laity are more aware of the importance of the vision for ministry, we are also
more desperate, needed than ever for a clear understanding of his purpose for
each individual church. Posting a two-line mission statement in the weekly
program is not good enough, as the evidence clearly shows. After all, every
church has basically the same mission (i.e. to help people fulfill the great
commission and the great commandment through effective worship, evangelism,
discipleship, stewardship, community service and relationships).
If every church also has the same
vision then God must intend for his churches to compete with each other for
resources such people, money, personnel, property e.t.c. But that creates an
unhealthy in-house desire to “show up” or “defeat” brothers and sisters in
Christ, and takes our eyes off both the ultimate prize and ultimate enemy.
Infact scriptures is quit clear that we are not to compete, but we are to love
assist and serve each other because we are all part of the same body working
toward the same goals. Success in the kingdom is not all about our personal or
group accomplishments but about how we work together for the greater good and
the end of the kingdom. Because a God of love and order, not of disharmony and
confusion created us, it is imperative that we grasp his vision for each church
that he has into existence and that we fervently pursue that vision as a necessary
addition into the building of God’s eternal kingdom according to his perfect
purpose.
MAY GOD’S VISION REIGN
There are of course thousands and thousands of
Christians who are tremendous example of God vision focusing and energizing,
their lives, and whose ministry reflect their commitment to God’s purposes. As
we have time to interview those individuals, I have seen three elements
A. First, they enter the vision development process
uncertain of what they are seeking to do but persuaded they must do something
to provide greater clarity for their future. In my experience it seems as if a
holy frustration has lead them to seek something more profound in their efforts
at serving God and he has been waiting and hoping for the opportunity to shape
their minds and hearts through vision
B. The process extracts a significant cost from vision
seekers. They admit that while they were involved in the process, they often
questioned whether or not they should continue. But those who endure invariably
submit that the result was worth the cost, many times vision is perhaps the
most important component in all of the activities associated with God’s vision.
For He takes greater joy in our getting to know Him and deciding that he is
worthy of such devotion than in all of our effort to facilitate great income
for his purposes. As an omnipotent being, He really doesn’t need our efforts as
much as he desires to know us and desire for us to know Him deeper, sincerely
and joyfully. The vision journey is a major step into that process.
C. Those who persevere and arrive at an understanding of
God’s vision, and then devote themselves to implementing it, experience income
they never could have for seen without God’s vision as the heartbeat of the
ministry.
God’s given vision is beyond our comprehension and
certainly beyond our grasp; it is only through his empowerment that we see and
accomplish the vision.
Many people have testimonies of how vision has changed
their lives and those of many other people
God has called you to a specific ministry, and He
wants to impart to you His idea or what that ministry is and how best to
accomplish His perfect outcomes through you.
That is what his vision is all about: maximizing your
God’s given potentials to bless God and others through your commitment to doing
His work, His way, we all need His vision. Imagine what the world and the
Church would be like if we all took our direction from Him for the sole purpose
of serving Him! What a different – and wonderful world it would be.

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