WEBVTT 00:00:00.885 --> 00:00:02.407 So I've been thinking about the difference between 00:00:02.407 --> 00:00:05.541 the résumé virtues and the eulogy virtues. 00:00:05.541 --> 00:00:08.443 The résumé virtues are the ones you put on your résumé, 00:00:08.443 --> 00:00:11.909 which are the skills you bring to the marketplace. 00:00:11.909 --> 00:00:13.647 The eulogy virtues are the ones 00:00:13.647 --> 00:00:15.129 that get mentioned in the eulogy, 00:00:15.129 --> 00:00:18.067 which are deeper: who are you, in your depth, 00:00:18.067 --> 00:00:19.843 what is the nature of your relationships, 00:00:19.843 --> 00:00:23.407 are you bold, loving, dependable, consistency? 00:00:23.407 --> 00:00:24.901 And most of us, including me, would say 00:00:24.901 --> 00:00:28.117 that the eulogy virtues are the more important of the virtues. 00:00:28.127 --> 00:00:30.200 But at least in my case, are they the ones that 00:00:30.200 --> 00:00:33.002 I think about the most? And the answer is no. NOTE Paragraph 00:00:33.002 --> 00:00:35.295 So I've been thinking about that problem, 00:00:35.295 --> 00:00:36.463 and a thinker who has helped me think about it 00:00:36.463 --> 00:00:38.076 is a guy named Joseph Soloveitchik, who was a rabbi 00:00:38.076 --> 00:00:41.446 who wrote a book called "The Lonely Man Of Faith" in 1965. 00:00:41.446 --> 00:00:44.766 Soloveitchik said there are two sides of our natures, 00:00:44.766 --> 00:00:47.156 which he called Adam I and Adam II. 00:00:47.156 --> 00:00:48.888 Adam I is the worldly, ambitious, 00:00:48.888 --> 00:00:51.111 external side of our nature. 00:00:51.111 --> 00:00:53.184 He wants to build, create, create companies, 00:00:53.184 --> 00:00:54.730 create innovation. 00:00:54.730 --> 00:00:57.468 Adam II is the humble side of our nature. 00:00:57.468 --> 00:01:00.285 Adam II wants not only to do good but to be good, 00:01:00.285 --> 00:01:02.232 to live in a way internally 00:01:02.232 --> 00:01:06.035 that honors God, creation and our possibilities. 00:01:06.035 --> 00:01:07.923 Adam I wants to conquer the world. 00:01:07.923 --> 00:01:10.687 Adam II wants to hear a calling and obey the world. 00:01:10.687 --> 00:01:13.175 Adam I savors accomplishment. 00:01:13.175 --> 00:01:15.857 Adam II savors inner consistency and strength. 00:01:15.857 --> 00:01:18.600 Adam I asks how things work. 00:01:18.600 --> 00:01:20.918 Adam II asks why we're here. 00:01:20.918 --> 00:01:23.022 Adam I's motto is "success." 00:01:23.022 --> 00:01:27.268 Adam II's motto is "love, redemption and return." NOTE Paragraph 00:01:27.268 --> 00:01:29.118 And Soloveitchik argued that these two sides 00:01:29.118 --> 00:01:31.766 of our nature are at war with each other. 00:01:31.766 --> 00:01:33.830 We live in perpetual self-confrontation 00:01:33.830 --> 00:01:37.094 between the external success and the internal value. 00:01:37.094 --> 00:01:39.578 And the tricky thing, I'd say, about these 00:01:39.578 --> 00:01:41.270 two sides of our nature is they work 00:01:41.270 --> 00:01:43.680 by different logics. 00:01:43.680 --> 00:01:45.914 The external logic is an economic logic: 00:01:45.914 --> 00:01:49.380 input leads to output, risk leads to reward. 00:01:49.380 --> 00:01:51.156 The internal side of our nature 00:01:51.156 --> 00:01:54.577 is a moral logic and often an inverse logic. 00:01:54.577 --> 00:01:56.451 You have to give to receive. 00:01:56.451 --> 00:01:58.167 You have to surrender to something outside yourself 00:01:58.167 --> 00:02:00.449 to gain strength within yourself. 00:02:00.449 --> 00:02:02.770 You have to conquer the desire to get what you want. 00:02:02.770 --> 00:02:05.561 In order to fulfill yourself, you have to forget yourself. 00:02:05.561 --> 00:02:09.873 In order to find yourself, you have to lose yourself. NOTE Paragraph 00:02:09.873 --> 00:02:12.809 We happen to live in a society that favors Adam I, 00:02:12.809 --> 00:02:15.049 and often neglects Adam II. 00:02:15.049 --> 00:02:18.281 And the problem is, that turns you into a shrewd animal 00:02:18.281 --> 00:02:19.838 who treats life as a game, 00:02:19.838 --> 00:02:22.563 and you become a cold, calculating creature 00:02:22.563 --> 00:02:25.369 who slips into a sort of mediocrity 00:02:25.369 --> 00:02:26.829 where you realize there's a difference 00:02:26.829 --> 00:02:29.401 between your desired self and your actual self. 00:02:29.401 --> 00:02:33.374 You're not earning the sort of eulogy you want, 00:02:33.374 --> 00:02:34.934 you hope someone will give to you. 00:02:34.934 --> 00:02:36.660 You don't have the depth of conviction. 00:02:36.660 --> 00:02:39.197 You don't have an emotional sonorousness. 00:02:39.197 --> 00:02:40.966 You don't have commitment to tasks 00:02:40.966 --> 00:02:44.180 that would take more than a lifetime to commit. NOTE Paragraph 00:02:44.180 --> 00:02:47.627 I was reminded of a common response through history 00:02:47.627 --> 00:02:50.389 of how you build a solid Adam II, 00:02:50.389 --> 00:02:52.399 how you build a depth of character. 00:02:52.399 --> 00:02:55.124 Through history, people have gone back 00:02:55.124 --> 00:02:57.010 into their own pasts, 00:02:57.010 --> 00:02:59.260 sometimes to a precious time in their life, 00:02:59.260 --> 00:03:00.719 to their childhood, 00:03:00.719 --> 00:03:04.685 and often, the mind gravitates in the past 00:03:04.685 --> 00:03:06.073 to a moment of shame, 00:03:06.073 --> 00:03:09.000 some sin committed, some act of selfishness, 00:03:09.000 --> 00:03:11.290 an act of omission, of shallowness, 00:03:11.290 --> 00:03:14.033 the sin of anger, the sin of self-pity, 00:03:14.033 --> 00:03:17.618 trying to be a people-pleaser, a lack of courage. 00:03:17.618 --> 00:03:22.313 Adam I is built by building on your strengths. 00:03:22.313 --> 00:03:26.409 Adam II is built by fighting your weaknesses. 00:03:26.409 --> 00:03:29.267 You go into yourself, you find the sin 00:03:29.267 --> 00:03:30.939 which you've committed over and again through your life, 00:03:30.939 --> 00:03:32.740 your signature sin 00:03:32.740 --> 00:03:35.431 out of which the others emerge, 00:03:35.431 --> 00:03:38.295 and you fight that sin and you wrestle with that sin, 00:03:38.295 --> 00:03:41.431 and out of that wrestling, that suffering, 00:03:41.431 --> 00:03:45.049 then a depth of character is constructed. 00:03:45.049 --> 00:03:46.951 And we're often not taught to recognize 00:03:46.951 --> 00:03:48.087 the sin in ourselves, 00:03:48.087 --> 00:03:49.935 in that we're not taught in this culture 00:03:49.935 --> 00:03:51.882 how to wrestle with it, 00:03:51.882 --> 00:03:54.555 how to confront it, and how to combat it. 00:03:54.555 --> 00:03:57.885 We live in a culture with an Adam I mentality 00:03:57.885 --> 00:04:01.054 where we're inarticulate about Adam II. NOTE Paragraph 00:04:01.054 --> 00:04:02.710 Finally, Reinhold Niebuhr 00:04:02.710 --> 00:04:04.845 summed up the confrontation, the fully lived 00:04:04.845 --> 00:04:08.398 Adam I and Adam II life, this way: 00:04:08.398 --> 00:04:11.660 "Nothing that is worth doing can be achieved in our lifetime; 00:04:11.660 --> 00:04:14.042 therefore we must be saved by hope. 00:04:14.042 --> 00:04:17.148 Nothing which is true or beautiful or good makes 00:04:17.148 --> 00:04:20.104 complete sense in any immediate context of history; 00:04:20.104 --> 00:04:22.782 therefore we must be saved by faith. 00:04:22.782 --> 00:04:26.672 Nothing we do, however virtuous, can be accomplished alone; 00:04:26.672 --> 00:04:29.718 therefore we must be saved by love. 00:04:29.718 --> 00:04:32.155 No virtuous act is quite as virtuous 00:04:32.155 --> 00:04:36.141 from the standpoint of our friend or foe as from our own standpoint. 00:04:36.141 --> 00:04:38.968 Therefore we must be saved by that final form of love, 00:04:38.968 --> 00:04:40.604 which is forgiveness.” NOTE Paragraph 00:04:40.604 --> 00:04:42.680 Thanks. NOTE Paragraph 00:04:42.680 --> 00:04:44.398 (Applause)