Why Don’t We Talk About Duty Anymore?
I was having a conversation recently about how we don’t hear about duty much anymore.
Why is that?
Not long ago duty was considered a virtue.
People spoke naturally about duty to God, family, community, and neighbor.
Today, the word feels almost offensive.
Part of the reason may be
that men and women often hear the word differently.
In general, men tend to associate duty with purpose, mission, sacrifice, and meaning.
For them, duty sounds like an
honorable call to rise up.
Yet many women may associate duty with being overlooked, exhausted, or unappreciated.
Historically, much of women’s sacrifice has involved
raising children, caring for others, and holding families together—often without recognition or honor.
That distinction matters.
Because when sacrifice is disconnected
from meaning, gratitude, and shared purpose, people begin to resent duty itself.
But a society cannot survive without a shared understanding that we owe something to one another.
Without duty:
-families weaken
-communities fragment
-and freedom turns inward into radical individualism.
Ironically, many people today are starving for meaning while rejecting the very
things that often produce it:
-responsibility
-commitment
-service
-and sacrifice
Scripture presents these not as oppression, but as part of our design and
calling.
From the beginning, mankind was created to cultivate, keep, build, protect, and serve under God’s authority.
This is our shared duty.
We were not made to live only for ourselves.
People will sacrifice greatly when they believe their sacrifice is connected to something eternal.
And in Christ, it is.
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