Current decision-makers act as temporary holders.
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Purpose
This principle reminds leaders that their authority is held for a time, not possessed permanently.
Principle
Current decision-makers act as temporary holders.
Meaning
Those exercising authority today occupy positions within a longer chain of inheritance. They manage responsibilities that existed before them and will continue after them.
Holding is not owning.
Why This Matters
- Encourages humility.
- Promotes restraint.
- Connects action to future judgment.
- Protects continuity of governance.
Temporary Nature of Authority
Leadership changes. Consequences remain.
Understanding this difference shapes responsible conduct.
What Is Being Held
- Land and resources.
- Law and precedent.
- Institutional stability.
- Reputation and relationships.
- Future choice.
These must be passed forward intact or improved.
Examples
- Maintaining options rather than closing them.
- Avoiding irreversible commitments.
- Preserving clarity for successors.
- Documenting decisions responsibly.
If Forgotten
- Authority may be treated as property.
- Short-term advantage may dominate.
- Future leaders may inherit constraint.
- Legitimacy may weaken.
Safeguards
- Teach trusteeship.
- Evaluate generational impact.
- Seek witnessing.
- Preserve adaptability.
Cross-references
- Present Authority Carries Long-Term Responsibility
- Future Generations Are Holders of Inherent Interest
- Actions Must Preserve Options for Those Who Follow.
- Law Is Judged Across Generations, Not Moments
- Continuity Depends on Careful Preservation.
Notes
Future development may include orientation for new office holders.