We live in a time and in a culture which can only be adequately described as “cluttered”. We are constantly and ruthlessly bombarded from every side with “choices”. From politics to religion, commerce to pop culture, we are faced with half truths and propaganda, which, on the surface, give the impression of weightiness, but under the microscope of our consciences are destined to reveal a certain flimsiness and the inherent inability to hold anything substantial within.
The truth of the matter is this: Beneath the clutter of our day to day, beyond the false impression of “choice”, there lay only two ways to go—the right one and the wrong one. But, how do we know which is the right and which the wrong? The right one will usually be the hardest choice to commit ourselves to, but the motivation behind it is self-evident, while the wrong, simple though it is to follow, carries with it the inherent need of constant justification.
