Choices,
choices, choices, what is one to do?
Which path is the right and correct path to follow?
Do you remember the riddle
about coming to a fork in the road? When one thinks of a fork in the road one might think of the great philosopher, Yogi
Berra and his great insight when he commented,
"When
you come to a fork in the road, take it?"
Well so much for Yogi
Berra. So here is the riddle.
You are traveling down a road with great purpose and
up ahead you notice a divide, a fork in the road. Such prompts the question, “Which is the
correct path to take?” Only one will
lead to your destination.
It is then that you notice the two men of which you
heard. They are standing at the junction
where you will have to make a decision as to which road to take.
Both of them know the correct answer to your
question. However, you've been warned that
one of them always, without exception, lies and that the other, without
exception, tells the truth.
You are allowed one question, but it must be the
same question for both.
What is the question that you would ask to find
the right path?
Here are some choices
you might use to find the answer to the riddle.
- Use a lifeline and call a friend.
- Draw on some personal experience or another to make a decision.
- Use your intuition--you have a 50% chance of being right.
- Make a guess--again you have a 50% chance of being right.
- Make a choice and allow fate to decide outcomes.
- Flip a coin or roll the dice.
- Wait for the next person and follow them.
- Discount that the destination even exists.
- Give up the whole idea.
Maybe there are
others that can go on the list.
The solution of the
riddle is easier than it might first appear.
You would simply ask each man in turn this
question.
"Which path would this other man say is the
correct path?"
Both will give the same
answer which is the wrong path and so you simply would take the other pathway.
Here is the
explanation.
The liar will lie and say that the
truthful man would say to go down one of the paths—the wrong path. Because
it is a lie, the correct path is the other path. However you still do not
know which man you are questioning.
The truthful man will tell the truth and say that the liar would say to go
down one of the paths—the same one the liar picked. Again you would not know which man you are
questioning.
You do not need to know which is which but that they
both pointed to the wrong path. So then the correct choice is to choose
the alternate pathway which is of course the proper pathway to the questioner's
destination.
The
Choices We Make…
Choices, choices, choices, what is
one to do? Which path is the right and
correct path to follow?
Each of us, as we travel the roadway of life, arrives
at many places where choices have to be made.
Most often the choices are obvious and certainly not as complex as in
the previous riddle.
It is then that one must ask the
question. What is the basis upon which the
choice is made? As in the riddle, both roads
do not end at the desired destination.
How is one to know?
Changing Frame of Reference…
The
answer is found in what one chooses as his frame of reference. If that frame of reference is ever moving and
changing (self, group, situation, culture, mores, etc.) then there is great
difficulty in choosing the right and correct pathway. One never knows whether such is the correct
path as culture is always redefining “correct.”
This is
the easy path which must be wide in order to accommodate the great many that
choose to walk it. Actually there are
those many because it is the pathway of one’s referent group and/or the culture
in which one lives.
Constant Frame of Reference…
If on
the other hand one chooses based upon a constant frame of reference, one that
has not change for 2,000 years (The Judeo-Christian Scriptures, ethical truth,
etc.) then there is less difficulty in choosing the right and correct pathway.
This is
not the easy path, in fact it can be very difficult and therefore not many choose
to travel its miles and so it has no need to be wide. These are those who often are called upon to
stand alone.
Easy
Pathway…Maybe Not So Much!
Choices! Choices lead to pathways. Jesus taught about these pathways in his story, “The Gates.” You can read about it in His Sermon on the
Mount (Matthew 5-7).
Matthew
7:13-14 13 "Enter through the narrow gate; for the gate is wide and the
way is broad that leads to destruction, and there are many who enter through
it. 14 "For the gate is small and the way is narrow that leads to
life, and there are few who find it. NASU
The choice as to which gate to enter
has a consequence. The outcome of that
choice is a path. Walking that path has
another consequence. One path is
difficult and leads to life, the other path is easy and leads to death.
The wonderful thing about being a
follower of Jesus the Christ is this. No matter how difficult the travel, dark the night, unfair the treatment, as one travels on the narrow pathway,
there is One who said,
"I will not leave you as orphans; I will come to you" (John 14:18)
and so we who travel the difficult way though it may be difficult, dark, and lonely, we really never
do travel alone.
The question I have for you today is
actually quite simple, yet profound in its simplicity.
“Do you have the courage to
choose the pathway of the Christ and thus to enter through the narrow gate and then
to travel on the Lord’s pathway?”
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