Saturday, April 26, 2025

Electing Number One

 For The Citizen column “From the Minister’s Study” - May 2, 2025

            The playoffs are on – as numerous hockey teams shoot and shove and score in an attempt to become Number One in the league, and take home the coveted Stanley Cup for this year. Will it be a Canadian team, perhaps? Who are you cheering for?

            Meanwhile, Canadians have gone to the polls to choose a new federal government. Unlike our neighbours to the south, we do not elect a ‘president’ directly; instead, we vote for a local party representative, and the prime minister is decided indirectly based on the most number of seats won by the respective parties. Nevertheless, an election is basically about choosing who will form the ruling party, and thus determine our most important political leader. Which horse in this race are you backing? A ballot forces us to choose just one option.

            Life is about making choices. Playoffs select a single champion team. Elections choose a single ultimate political leader. Each day brings its own decisions as to the choices we make, all the way from what we will wear or eat to major ones like whom to marry or which house to buy. Our choices reveal our priorities, what’s most important to us, to which option we attach the most value.

            “Worship” is not a term consigned solely to remain within the walls of religious establishments; the term comes from “worth-ship”, meaning what we deem as having the highest or supreme value. Thus our whole life, insofar as it consists of making choices based on our values, has to do with worship. What we treasure, what we prize most highly, will influence what we do, what we give our attention to, how we spend our time, the way we allocate our resources.

            As Jordan Peterson observes in his book We Who Wrestle with God: “Something is inevitably imitated, celebrated, and even worshipped, no matter which way we turn; no matter whether we engage in an ultimately counterproductive selfishness or a productive reciprocal generosity. One thing or another is being elevated to the highest place, which is an act always necessary before attentional resources can be allocated and forward movement initiated. To attend to one thing, or to do one thing, is to sacrifice everything else that could have instead been noticed or done. To prioritize is to sacrifice, and to sacrifice properly is to atone.”

            Life is short. We can’t “do it all”. We sacrifice certain options in favour of doing what’s more important, more valuable (‘worth-shipped’) to us in the long run. Be it scrolling Facebook, watching the hockey game, or choosing to write an encouraging email to a family member or friend who’s going through a tough time – we are constantly making ‘elections’ based on what we hold most precious and worthwhile.

            The Bible advises us to choose carefully what we elect to take the highest place in our lives. Arriving at Sinai, Moses had led a rag-tag multitude of former slaves out into the wilderness to be congealed together somehow into a functional, flourishing society. The first couple of the Ten Commandments emphasized the need to place God first in our scheme of values. “I am the LORD your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of slavery. You shall have no other gods before me. You shall not make for yourself a carved image, or any likeness of anything that is in heaven above, or that is in the earth beneath, or that is in the water under the earth. You shall not bow down to them or serve them, for I the LORD your God am a jealous God…” (Exodus 20:2–5)

            The Lord knows that when we place any lesser idol at the pinnacle of our system of values, we are not only dishonouring our Creator, we are also setting ourselves up for disappointment – because no other idol will allow us to ultimately flourish. His “jealousy” for our worship is actually for our good, to protect us from the abuse, manipulation, and extortion lesser gods would exact from us.

            This exclusive claim of God upon our devotion is summarized in the traditional “Shema” memorized by Israelites: “Hear, O Israel: The LORD our God, the LORD is one. You shall love the LORD your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your might.” (Deuteronomy 6:4–5) That word “all” is significant: if I say I have eaten “all” the muffin, no one would expect to have some piece left over!

            The Sadducees and Pharisees were hostile toward Jesus and His teaching, and sought to trap Him in His words on several occasions. Once one of them, a legal expert, tested Him on this matter of what’s most important, asking: “Which is the greatest commandment in the Law?” Jesus replied using the famous “Shema” – “You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind.” Jesus noted, “This is the great and first commandment.” (Matthew 22:37–38) In one regard, He wasn’t telling them something they didn’t already know; but, now, they were hearing it emphasized directly from God Incarnate, the Son of God Himself.

            Jesus was not given to insisting people bow down to Him; when people realized He was the Messiah and started announcing it, He was more inclined to hush them than to encourage the news to be broadcast. Yet, for His disciples, He did solicit their allegiance and devotion, calling them to “Follow Me”. Discipleship is ‘followership’ and entails sacrifices – choosing to forego other options so we can do what the Lord wants. To follow Jesus requires putting Him first. He insisted, “And everyone who has left houses or brothers or sisters or father or mother or children or lands, for my name’s sake, will receive a hundredfold and will inherit eternal life.” (Matthew 19:29) That entails careful weighing of our priorities.

            Tradition tells us the Apostle John outlived the other original disciples, who were martyred for their conviction Jesus had risen from the dead. He survived torture and was exiled to a deserted island, Patmos. His first letter to churches of the time concludes with a poignant, simple caution, which stands out in its context: “Dear children, keep yourselves from idols.” (1John 5:21) Do our choices show we are free from idols? What do our actions reveal we are electing as Number One?

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