Erwin McManus uses an analogy about a watermelon to describe integrity.8 You have probably bought a watermelon. As you stand in the produce section holding a watermelon, the only thing you can see is the watermelon rind. You thump the rind, and if the melon sounds hollow you buy it. When you check out, you spend your hard-earned cash on a watermelon when you can only see the rind. When you arrive home and cut open the rind, what do you expect to find inside? Watermelon. You trusted that the melon had integrity. What if you cut open the rind only to find a banana inside? That would never happen because a melon has integrity. A watermelon is always on the inside what it claims to be on the outside.