The
Peacegiver
Agency
in the Balance
Chapter
19
By
James L. Ferrell
An excerpt from The
Peacegiver, published by Deseret Book.
You
have been taught well by your parents about the premortal
life of man, and how there was a great battle in heaven
between those who followed the Father’s plan, led by Jehovah,
and those who lined up with the dissenter, Lucifer.”
Rick
nodded.
“Do
you remember what the battle was about?” his grandfather
asked.
“Of
course. Two things, really—Satan’s pride and the agency
of man.”
Grandpa
Carson waited for more.
“The
plan for salvation was to provide mankind with bodies
and afford us the opportunity to grow to become like our
Heavenly Parents. We were to come to an earth, our minds
veiled from the specific memories of our prior existence,
to see if we would follow our spiritual intuitions and,
through faith, learn to obey the commandments of God.
“Lucifer
wanted to deny us our agency,” Rick continued. “That is,
he wanted the power to lead us at his will, to make us
do what we needed to do to receive salvation. And then
he wanted the glory for leading the effort. Many of the
hosts of heaven joined him in this battle against Jehovah,
Michael, and the other spirit children of God. Moses,
Isaiah, and John the Revelator all speak of this.”
“Good,
Ricky. Let me ask you a question, then. You say that this
premortal battle was over agency, and you are right about
that. But what would you say agency is?”
“The
ability to choose.”
“The
ability to choose what?” his grandfather responded.
“Isn’t
it just the ability to choose between options, and to
be able to make those choices ourselves, without duress?”
His
grandfather began fingering through the book Rick had
just been reading.
“Those
who have been imprisoned,” he said, “those who are handicapped,
those who are poor—there are many things they cannot choose
to do. Does that mean they then lack agency?”
“No,
I don’t think I would say that,” Rick answered thoughtfully.
“They all still have the ability to choose, even though
their options may be limited.”
Grandpa
Carson put his thumb in the book, apparently to save his
place. “I want to push your thinking for a moment, Ricky,”
he said.
“Okay.”
“Suppose
a man is tied up so tightly he can’t move a limb. Suppose
as well that his eyes are propped open and his mouth is
taped shut. All he can do is sit; he has no other options.
Would he lack agency, the way that term is used in the
scriptures?”
Rick
considered this carefully. “I suppose so, yes.”
“Really?”
“I
suppose you’ll say he wouldn’t.”
Grandpa
Carson smiled at the friendly joust.
“That’s
correct, Ricky—that is what I would say. This man would
have as much agency as the freest man on the street. The
reason why is that agency does not refer broadly to the
ability to choose—our choices are always bounded by certain
limitations, after all. Rather, agency has to do with
a particular kind of choice. Agency, as used in the scriptures,
is the capacity to choose who we will follow—the Lord
of Light or the Lord of Darkness. That is the choice that
was at stake in the premortal realm. And it is a choice
we retain here, even when bound and gagged.”
“Okay,”
Rick offered pensively, unsure where his grandfather was
going with his line of thinking.
“Actually,”
Grandpa Carson continued, “it is a choice we may retain,
even when bound and gagged, for we can exercise our agency
in such a way that we end up losing it as well. Part of
having agency is having the agency to give it away.”
“How
can we give it away?”
“By
giving Satan such iron hold upon our hearts that nothing
but the merits of the Son of God can break us free,” Grandpa
answered.
Rick
stood deep in thought, trying to process the implications,
but his grandfather quickly continued.
“The
war over agency did not end in the premortal world, Ricky.
Satan took up the same war before a tree in Eden, a war that continues to this day, and a war most of
mankind is losing.
“Here,”
he said, offering Rick the book again. “Read.”
And
there was war in heaven, the book began. Michael and his
angels fought against the dragon; and the dragon fought
and his angels, and prevailed not.60
This
time, the words buried themselves deep within Rick and
spoke directly to his soul.
Wherefore,
because that Satan rebelled against me, and sought to
destroy the agency of man, which I, the Lord God, had
given him, and also, that I should give unto him mine
own power; . . . I caused that he should be cast down.
And he became Satan, yea, even the devil, the father of
all lies, to deceive and to blind men, and—the words boomed
within him—to lead them captive at his will, even as many
as would not hearken unto my voice.61
Then
Rick heard what he had heard earlier: This is what is
meant by the chains of hell,62 and he perceived once more
the great chain that darkened the earth.
Rick
looked up from the page.
“So
Satan still tries to control us, to lead us captive—that’s
what you mean, isn’t it?” But Rick didn’t wait for a response.
“And that’s what I saw earlier,” he added, “the throngs
of men being led captive at his will—bound by his cord
and chain.”
“Yes,
Ricky. Satan’s premortal plan for mankind was to lead
us captive at his will in order to save us. After being
cast down, his plan became to lead us captive at his will
in order to destroy us. In its essence—the destruction
of our agency through the capture of our wills—his plan
hasn’t changed from the beginning. The cord and chain
you have seen—and your own life—are the proof of it.”
Rick,
who had been standing where he had observed his own argument
with Carol, collapsed onto the chair beside him. “What
do you mean, ‘my own life is the proof of it’?”
“You
and Carol are barreling toward an unthinkable end, each
so committed to the justice of your own course that you
are refusing to turn until too late—isn’t that what you
thought to yourself just last night?”
Rick
remembered thinking that, although he couldn’t quite place
when.
“Your
feelings toward her have turned cold, as have hers toward
you. Yet each of you feels at a total loss to change those
feelings. You are no longer sure if such a change is even
possible, the indifference sweeps over you so quickly
and so fully. When you heard her steps in the kitchen
this morning, it was like the whole atmosphere of your
morning changed. Just her presence darkened your mood.
Am I right?”
Grandpa
Carson looked seriously at Rick, who kept his eyes on
the floor.
“If
that isn’t proof of the loss of agency and the chains
of sin, what is? You’re locked into a kind of insane death
spiral—another of your own terms, I believe. Your every
thought and feeling about Carol is taking you closer to
the disaster you at once are denying and making inevitable.
All the while, you feel that your feelings and thoughts
are thrust upon you. What happened in this kitchen this
morning was just the latest episode in that tragic story.
Satan has hold of your heart, my boy, and he desires to
destroy you.”
Rick
sat silently in the chair, covering his face with his
hands. His grandfather was right, of course. He did feel
out of control, as if his thoughts and feelings, however
bitter and troubling, were thrust upon him. That had been
a large part of his despair. “But how does he do it, Grandpa?
How does Satan capture our wills and take our agency?”
“Read
on,” Grandpa Carson said, extending him the book once
more.
Wherefore,
it came to pass that the devil tempted Adam, and he partook
of the forbidden fruit and transgressed the commandment,
wherein he became subject to the will of the devil, because
he yielded unto temptation.63
Because
he yielded unto temptation—Rick repeated to himself, pondering
the implications. “Adam became subject to Satan’s will
because he yielded to temptation?”
“Yes,”
his grandfather responded. “And remember the words you
read just a minute ago as well: Satan leads captive at
his will those who ‘do not hearken unto the Lord’s voice.’64
It
is Satan’s will that we not follow the Lord, and he attempts
to capture us by enticing or tempting us to act contrary
to the Lord’s will, just as he did in the Garden with
Adam and Eve. When we do that, he gains control over us
and we effectively hand our agency over to him.”
“But
how does that happen? I don’t understand how a single
act of sin can capture us and subject us to Satan in the
way you’re describing. If that were the case, we’d all
be subject to his will.”
“And
we are, Ricky. That’s just the point. We are subject to
his will. Think about it. Do we always do what we know
we should? Do we love, or forgive, or pray like we know
we should?”
Rick
shook his head. “No,” he said sullenly.
“So
you see, Ricky, we are subject to his will. Even in the
face of knowledge, we choose away from the Lord. We find
ourselves falling away from the diligent living of his
commandments, and from the desire to fully live them.
‘Whosoever
committeth
sin,’ the Savior declared—and that includes everyone—‘is
the servant of sin.’65 And we ‘receive our wages of whom
we list to obey.’66 Each sin makes us more susceptible
to Satan’s will because each sin is a capitulation to
his will.
“Consider
the terrible irony,” he continued. “We fought a battle
in the heavens in order to protect this precious commodity
of agency—a commodity so important we were willing to
cast out many of our spirit brothers and sisters to retain
it—and then, as if we were central characters in a Greek
tragedy, we come to this earth and exercise that agency
in a way that effectively gives it away.”
“But
that’s the part I don’t understand. I don’t understand
how a single act of sin gives Satan control over us.”
“That
is because you misunderstand the nature of sin.”