The Value of Today's Choices
While the proverbial advice to “take each day as it comes”
has some validity, it also masks the dangerous assumption that the choices we
make today won’t have consequential carry-over tomorrow. In fact, while it is
both harmful and a waste of time to worry about the unknowns of the future, it
is always wise to consider what effect my decisions today will have on the
options available to me later.
It is a common parenting tool to tell your kids as they are
leaving the home to “make good choices.” We all understand that choices have
consequences, and because we love our kids we hope and pray and teach and train
for the purpose of raising children who can lead healthy, happy, and productive
lives. But too often we don’t realize ourselves that each bad decision severely
reduces the number of good decisions available to us.
Take, for example, the decision to lie. Once the lie leaves
us, we only have two available options, and both of them are painful. First, we
can continue down the path of intentional deceit that will most probably mean
more lies, leading to even more lies. We will find ourselves trapped on the
road of duplicity, forced to admit that we are liars, and consigned to keeping
track of the minute, made-up details of our story.
The only other choice that follows a lie is to repent, admit
we lied, and suffer the consequences. Either way, the choice to lie leaves us
without any good choices left. And yet, we continue to use deceit
intentionally, and watch as our national leaders turn lying into a daily
business practice. The reason? Our
national ethical foundation that once conceived of honesty as a cardinal virtue
now considers pragmatism acceptable, with all its ugliness, as long as the
outcome feeds our selfishness.
But the consequences of our choices are not always
immediately seen. In marriages it is often the case that incremental isolation
and indifference, intentionally played out in miniscule choices every day, take
the couple down the path of incivility and conflict further and faster than any
one skirmish might suggest. Then, one day they wake to the fact that they hate
each other, and now they only have hard choices in front of them. Usually they
choose what appears to be the least painful and head for divorce. But, as study
after study, and plain old common experience have shown, divorce is a solution
that only exacerbates the problem. Divorce, like a brick thrown in a pond,
extends and deepens the ripples of pain outward, affecting children, friends,
family, businesses, and beyond. The only other choice is humility, repentance,
forgiveness, and reformation of hearts that have become hardened through the
deceitfulness of incremental selfishness. In this case, the best option is
still very hard.
The ugly truth is this: every decision you and I make today
will, in some way, determine the number of good decisions available to us
tomorrow. Choosing an ethic today that values love, sacrificial service, honesty,
self-control, humility and generosity will mean greater opportunities to love,
serve, and be loved tomorrow. In my world, all that is just another way of
denying my natural, self-serving tendencies, identifying as a follower of Jesus
Christ, and then setting my mind and heart to follow him closely.
When we let the biblical ethos set our ethical foundation,
and choose righteousness, regardless of the temporal consequences, we will find
that today’s good choices open up more good opportunities to lead lives of
significance and contentment. You can only take each day as it comes if you
have a coherent ethical foundation able to cope well with every eventuality.
Pragmatism simply won’t work long term. As a nation, and as
individuals, we must demand better than that. If we are to live lives that
matter, that make a positive, lasting difference, we simply must believe and
stand for what is right, all the time. What we choose today will determine
tomorrow’s opportunities. Now, let’s go out make some good choices.
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