TWO CHOICES
INTRODUCTION
When we hear this story by Jesus,
the parable of the wicked tenant farmers [
Mark 12:1-12],
we hear some terrible things:
people beating other people,
people hurting other people
people stoning other people,
and then people killing other people.
QUESTIONS
Whenever something terrible happens, especially one person hurting another person, people always ask the question: Why? Why do people do these things? Why do people do bad things to other people? Why?
But people should also ask the opposite question: Why do people do good things to other people? Why? Why? Why? [1]
ANSWER
And the answer at the bottom of all the wondering is that people have freedom of choice. We all have the power to do good or evil.
CHOICES GIVE CONTRASTS
We can help or hurt.
We can construct or destruct.
We can build or tear down.
We can love or hate.
We can praise or blame.
We can light a candle or curse the darkness.
We can do good or evil.
We have the power of choice.
We can gossip, curse, blame, ruin another’s reputation or we can compliment and expression our appreciation of one another.
KNIVES AND WORDS, STICKS AND STONES
We can use a knife to cut bread or cut someone.
We can use words to say to another, “Hey that was a neat thing you did yesterday for Charlie?” Or we can say, “You were really showing off when you drove Charlie to the mall yesterday.”
Words can lift or knock down.
We can use sticks and stones to build a home or to break windows and hurt the inhabitants.
LIKE
It’s like we have two rooms. The first room is filled with light and the other is filled with darkness.
We have the choice of whatever room we want to live in or dwell in most of the time.
LUCY
I remember a Peanuts cartoon that went something like this. Lucy draws a big heart on a fence. Then she draws a line right down the middle of the heart to divide in two. She fills in one side with chalk. Then pointing to her drawing she says, “This is the human heart. One half of our heart is always fighting the other half.”
AMERICAN INDIANS
The American Indians used to say we have two dogs within us. One is a good dog; the other is bad dog. And they are always fighting each other.And then when a kid asked the teacher, "Which dog wins?" And the teacher says, "The one we feed."
CHOICES
The choice is always ours.
HANDS
Let me conclude with one of my poems. It’s called, “The Two Hands.”
THE TWO HANDS
I am a fist,
a sign of fear,
a sign of anger,
a sign of greed,
a sign of tension
I can pound a desk,
I can hoard money,
I can try to scare you,
I can punch you
in the mouth.
I am a fist.
What do you think of me?
I am an open hand,
a sign of calm,
a sign of ease,
a sign of peace,
a sign of relaxation.
I can dial a phone,
I can shake a hand,
I can change the diapers,
I can play cards,
I can break the bread,
I can heal the hurt,
I can write the poem.
I am an open hand.
What do you think of me? [2]
*****
NOTES
[1] Jacques Maritain [1882-1973] used to answer the Problem of Evil with the Problem of Good.
[2]
Listenings, The Thomas More Association, Chicago, Illinois, (c) Andrew Costello, 1980, p. 107