This past week my wife and I were drawn to an interesting
and insightful headline from the Sports section of the newspaper: “Free agency can be useful tool if used
correctly”. Very true. This may be true in the games of sports. It certainly is true in life.
In professional sports, free agency means having some choice
as to which team a player may join and on what terms, depending on talent and
performance, interest, and the advocacy skill of his representative, among
other factors. Used well, the player may
go on to a successful and happy career, profitable for him and for his team,
opening up even greater opportunities, including perhaps championship
achievements and continuing successes beyond.
Used unwisely, free agency can lead to a career that is a frustrating
struggle inhibiting growth, achievement, and limiting follow on opportunities.
In life, free agency means that you and I can choose our
manner of living in mortality and, in the process, the terms of living and
opportunities available in the immortal worlds, depending again on talent (as
expressed in performance), interest (again demonstrated by performance), and
the effectiveness of our representative.
If you will agree to His terms, you can have the very best Advocate as
your representative, who only emphasizes your triumphs and takes upon Himself
the blame for all of your failures.
A popular board game I knew as a child was “The Game of LIFE.” In this game several players compete by
moving along the board on a marked path, buffeted by the vicissitudes and
aggrandized by the rewards of life as determined by the cast of the die. Its virtue is that it presents to children
how life is a steadily moving journey filled with a variety of experiences building
to some degree on the ones before. The
game was not a favorite of mine, because it asks for little skill from the
players, the events of the game subject almost entirely to chance. In that sense, it teaches the false lesson
that how you fare in life has almost nothing to do with your skill and the
exercise of your free agency and
everything to do with fate, beyond your control. Success or failure
happens. Perhaps the game does little
harm as a diversion, but I have not played it in a long while.
Life is not a game of chance. Neither, is it a sport, least of all a
spectator sport. Each of us is the key
and central player involved in making and applying decisions. The period of life called mortality is a
testing ground, where decisions are free only because results are
meaningful. The results derive their
meaning from their reach into the worlds of immortality, following our death
and resurrection. Because life has
meaning then, it has meaning now.
That meaning is a gift from Jesus Christ, purchased by His
free gift of voluntarily suffering for our sins, including surrendering His life
in an unjust execution, one that He could have prevented should He have
exercised His free agency not to bear our burdens. Because of the injustice of that suffering,
He came back from the dead and conquered death, to die no more. Death was thus converted into a temporary
interlude for all of us, allowing the choices of this life to extend beyond the
grave.
If, on the contrary, each one of us were to end in death, if
our being were then to cease to exist, then nothing we did would really matter
in that end. Whatever we did, whatever
we achieved, whatever we learned, so what?
It would all be gone, never to be reclaimed.
Nothing we do makes any difference in the end, if in the end
we are nothing, literally nothing. As
far as we are concerned, it all vanishes with us, and any memory of us ends
with the end of any who remembered. With
nothing now mattering later, then all loses any present
meaning. Any meaning we attach to
anything now is a mirage, or even a charade.
Like a child’s game, things seem to matter until the game is over, when
nothing matters.
If nothing that we do matters, then the choices and
decisions that we make do not matter, they have no lasting result, they make no
real difference in the end. Whether we
put too much salt or pepper in the soup, it makes no difference if no one eats
it. With death as the end of it all, of
all existence of any kind for each of us, then we really have no freedom,
because we cannot and do not change anything for ourselves or for others. In any and all cases, whatever choices we
make, it all ends the same way, in complete nothingness, annihilation of being. Choice itself becomes meaningless, a mirage,
a charade.
But it is not like that in reality. It does not feel like that, and very few of
us, even the atheists among us, believe or act like nothingness is our destiny,
as if what we do is lost in the void, as if our choices do not matter. Christ’s redemption of us and of the world
has changed everything for everyone. It gives
lasting value to our choices, our actions, our decisions, making them all very real,
preserving their consequences, their reach into the continuing life beyond our
very temporary death. Our decisions can
and do affect ourselves and others, in lingering ways. Christ’s redemption from death makes our
freedom possible, then and now, because what we do matters, and how it matters
is preserved.
With that freedom, Christ has given us a tool, which
certainly can be useful, if used correctly.
Fortunately, He also has given us guidance and still gives us guidance
so that we may get and save the best results from the use of our free agency. And that is a big part of why we celebrate Easter, why Christ's atonement and resurrection are the central event in Earth's history.
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