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Living a Life Others Can Trust

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We are more often betrayed by our weaknesses than by the malice of others.

La Rochefoucauld

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Living a Life Others Can Trust

Imagine if the person who knows you best—a spouse, a dear friend, or a family member—were asked to measure your trustworthiness on a scale from one to ten. What number do you think they would choose? And if that person were known for speaking plainly, without flattery or softening the truth, how would their honest answer settle in your spirit?

It’s not a comfortable thought. It’s a question that engenders growth to maturity.

In a world where confidence in others is fragile and easily lost, trust has become one of the rarest treasures. To be called trustworthy is not mere kindness—it is a declaration about the kind of person you are. Every deep relationship rests on this foundation, and when it crumbles, what often remains is ache, separation, and quiet grief. The psalmist understood the power of what we say when he prayed, “Set a guard over my mouth, Lord; keep watch over the door of my lips.” (Psalm 141:3) Words, especially those spoken in secrecy or in anger, can either protect or devastate a soul.

Across cultures, betrayal has many names, but the Japanese word uragiri carries haunting clarity. It means “to cut from behind.” The picture is striking; you walk forward, unguarded, because you believe the one behind you is keeping watch. Yet instead of protecting you, they wound you. This kind of harm shows up everywhere—in families, churches, friendships, and workplaces. It appears in whispered conversations, in twisted truths, in confidences exposed for the sake of power or attention.

Often, what hurts most is not only the betrayal itself, but the silence that surrounds it—the absence of any chance to explain or defend. There is a unique cruelty in being misrepresented when you are not present to speak. Psalm 41 gives words to that ache:

“My enemies speak with malice…
My visitor utters lies;
then goes out and spreads them…
They say, ‘He will never rise again.’” (Psalm 41:5–8)

These ancient sorrows feel remarkably close to home.

Still, betrayal is not the end of the story. Healing remains possible. Hope still stands.

One of the most powerful choices we can make is to become the very person on whom we long to rely. A person who treats another’s secrets as sacred ground. Someone whose integrity does not depend on being warned, “Don’t tell anyone.” Someone who chooses restraint over rumour, kindness over curiosity, faithfulness over attention.

There are people in my own past who never truly came to know me—not because I withdrew, but because trust had not yet been earned. And that is a quiet truth of wisdom: not every heart is safe to hold your story. We are not called to close ourselves off to love, but neither are we called to offer our deepest parts to those who would not protect them. Love requires both courage and discernment.

Trustworthiness is not weakness. It is strength—built through honesty, humility, and the discipline to guard what does not belong to us. Those who live this way earn more than admiration from others; they earn peace within themselves. They rest without secrets. They speak without double meaning. They love without fear of being false because betrayal is not in their nature.

So, if that question unsettles you—What number would they give me? —do not turn away from the discomfort. Let it refine you, not shame you. Let it draw you deeper into grace, into growth, and into the steady shaping of a trustworthy life less you become lonely and without companions.

Because a life built on trust is gentler. It is truer. And it looks a great deal like Christ.

All verses from the BSB Bible.

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Jim McCrory

How Mature are You? Can you be Trusted?

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Edited by Jim McCrory, Saturday 19 July 2025 at 16:25

 

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The Trustworthy Life

If your closest companion, your mate, a long-time friend, or a  family member were asked to rate your trustworthiness on a scale of one to ten, what score might they give you? And if they were someone known for their honesty, not one to flatter or withhold truth out of politeness, how might their answer sit with you?

It’s a sobering thought, but also a sacred one.

We live in a world where trust is a rare and precious currency. To be counted trustworthy is not a sentimental compliment, but a statement of character. Trust is the foundation of all meaningful relationships, and when it is broken, the cost is heartbreak, silence, and distance. As the Psalmist prayed in humility and self-awareness: "Set a guard, O Lord, over my mouth; keep watch at the door of my lips." (Psalm 141:3) Our words, especially when spoken in confidence or anger, can shape or shatter someone's view of the world—and of us.

Among the many words for betrayal in the languages of the world, the Japanese Uragiri stands out. It literally means “cutting from behind.” What an image. You trust someone enough to walk ahead, to expose your back, believing they’ll guard it, not wound it. But some will. Whether in workplaces, families, or religious communities, there will always be those who whisper behind closed doors, who twist your words, who reveal what was shared in sacred confidence.

Perhaps the deepest wound of betrayal is not merely the breach of trust, but the silence in which it is committed; the lack of presence to defend oneself, to clarify, to correct. There is something cruel in being judged in absence, misrepresented in whispers. Psalm 41 gives voice to that pain:

"My enemies say with malice: 'When will he die and be forgotten?'
My visitor speaks falsehood; he gathers slander in his heart;
he goes out and spreads it abroad…
They imagine the worst for me: 'He will never rise again.'"
(Psalm 41:5–8)

These ancient words still echo in our modern wounds.

Yet not all is lost in the face of betrayal. There is hope. There is healing.

One of the wisest things we can do is to become the kind of person we ourselves wish we could trust. Someone who keeps confidences as sacred, who does not need to be told “don’t repeat this” because integrity is second nature. Someone who chooses dignity over drama, and compassion over gossip.

There are people in my past who never got close to knowing me—not because I was aloof, but because they had not earned my trust. And perhaps that’s the quiet wisdom life teaches us: you cannot share your soul with those who do not treasure it. We are not here to harden or to hide, but to love. And to love well, we must learn when to open our hearts, and when to guard them.

Trust is not a soft virtue; it is a strong one. It is forged in honesty, humility, and the ability to keep another’s story safe. And those who live trustworthy lives not only gain the respect of others—they gain the deeper dignity of self-respect. They sleep with a clear conscience. They speak without hidden agendas. They love without fear of betrayal, because they themselves would never betray.

So, if the question stings— “What mark out of ten would they give me?”—treasure the sting. Let it be a wake-up call, not a condemnation. A call to step into maturity, into grace, into a trustworthy life.

Because in the end, a life of trust is more peaceful. It’s more human. It’s more like Christ.

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