The Wisdom Of
Motives
Is
it right to consider not only whether a law was broken, but why?
I’ve been wondering about this after reading how a German court handled the ticketing of a motorist caught speeding by a traffic control camera. When the court learned why the driver had broken the speed limit, charges were waived. Instead, officials sent the driver a doll of a policeman holding a traffic camera. It mattered to someone in the system that the man was speeding to get his wife to the hospital for the birth of their first child.
Motives and the courts
The
“police doll verdict” touches on an issue of law discussed by defense
lawyer
and author Melvin Belli. In Everybody’s Guide to the Law, he
writes,
“Two things must be present for a crime to be committed: an act
. . .
and a particular state of mind.” Belli goes on to say, “In law,
it is
frequently said that an act is not a crime if done without a guilty
mind.”
But
what is a guilty mind? Legal scholars have an ongoing debate about
whether courts should weigh motive in considering guilt. Should a
traffic court
really be interested in why a speeding driver is breaking the law?
Motives and everyday life
Outside
of court, motives are easier to consider even if they remain difficult
to
prove. If a wife sees red when her husband brings home yellow roses,
her
reaction is more likely to be about her suspicion of his motives than
the color
of the flowers. When large corporations give big money to a political
campaign,
we suspect an ulterior motive. In so many areas, we naturally look for
the
hidden agenda behind gifts, personal endorsements, and even good
manners.
Motives and faith
Jesus
talked a lot about motives. His approach, however, was to help us focus
on our
own hearts before going after the faults of others. Because of our
inclination
to do the right things for the wrong reasons, He told His disciples not
to let
their left hand know when their right hand was giving to the poor
(Matthew
6:3-4). He also said that when they prayed they should do so in secret
rather
than making a self-serving public display of their spirituality (vv.6,
18).
What difference do motives make?
If
we are not careful, we can do some of the best things for the worst
reasons.
Our purposes combine with what we believe and do to shape the character
of our
faith, our love, and our laughter. They fuel blind ambition and feed
bitter
envy. They determine whether we use the knowledge of the Bible to help
others,
or to control, condemn, and con them out of their money.
Bad
motives can put honorable actions to shame just as good motives can
turn even
the most menial task into something noble.
Where do good motives come from?
The
wonderful thing about good motives is that their source and story is
not
limited to a conscience or commandment that says, “You should, you
ought, or
you must.” According to Jesus and the Bible, if we love well, it is because
God first loved us (1 John 4:19). If we have the right kind of faith in
the
darkest night, it is because our God has shown Himself to be
more
trustworthy than our circumstances.
But
thinking about where good motives come from raises another important
question.
What happens when the music stops?
This
was the question Job faced. According to the Bible, he was one of the
wealthiest men in the world until his reasons for serving God were
challenged.
As
the story unfolds, Job’s name comes up in a conversation between God
and the
devil. The King of heaven points to Job as an example of someone who
has
remained loyal to Him. Satan, however, responds by attacking Job’s
motives. He
argues that Job sees God as a meal ticket and says that if Job weren’t
getting
what he wanted, the King’s model citizen would be cursing rather than
praying.
So
God allows Satan to test Job’s heart. In waves of terrible misfortune,
Job
finds himself destitute and confused by pain and grief. Why? Why was
God
allowing this to happen? The harder Job tried to find answers, the more
bitter
and angry he became.
While
much of his earlier life had been spent trying to help others (Job 29),
Job now
finds himself in a desperate struggle to defend his own reputation.
Even his
friends are accusing him of hiding the scandal they believe would
explain his
suffering.
Only
when God intervenes does Job’s terrible ordeal come to an end (38-42).
Only
when God opens Job’s eyes and enables him to see the wonder and wisdom
of his
Creator as he has never seen Him before does Job’s cloud of despair
lift. Only
then does Job declare, “I have heard of You by the hearing of the ear,
but now
my eye sees You. Therefore I abhor myself, and repent in dust and
ashes”
(42:5-6).
Job’s
motives for remaining loyal to God had been tested. His reasons for
fearing God
and hating evil (1:8) had been refined in the fires of loss. Now in
stark
nakedness of soul, he worshiped God because he had come to see
that God
alone deserves to be trusted in the dark night of our soul.
Thousands
of years later, Job’s story is still helping us to see that, in a
sense, Satan
had a point. In the courts of heaven and on earth, motives count. If we
are not
careful, why we seek God can say more about our desires than
about our
confidence in His eternal power, wisdom, and honor (James 4:1-3).