Vaccinations: The Freedom to Choose and the Chance to Choose Love

Rob Yackley
2 min readAug 9, 2021

I’ve had way more time in the last 3weeks to ponder the many COVID-related issues at play in our country than I wish I did, and I’m pretty sure most folks are done with it, (well, until you get knocked on your butt by a breakthrough infection or lose a loved one because of it, which is where I currently find myself). But here’s my take on what feels to me like a hopeful pathway forward that is both fair and responsible:

I am encouraged by the trend I see in society towards personal choice, but choice that comes with personal consequences. If you don’t want to get the vaccine because of rational, non-reactionary, ideological convictions or because of personal health issues, then don’t get it. I get that, (or at least I’m trying to). But please give stores, gyms, schools, churches, synagogues, restaurants, hospitals, airlines, etc. the same degree of freedom to live by their convictions to protect themselves, their families, their teams, and their livelihoods that you want for yourself.

Every choice we make has consequences. Each of us can choose how much of society we’d like to participate in or how little we would like to participate in. That’s freedom, but not unbounded, irresponsible, “my way or the highway” freedom. None of us has the right to put others in harm’s way simply because we choose to, even if our intent is not to harm them. I can’t choose to drive 65 miles an hour past a school simply because I think I’m a really good driver, or becuase I have my rights and I really don’t think anyone will get hurt anyway. If you want to drive 65, then you’re simply choosing not to participate in the life at or around the school, but in this case, you’ve still got the highway to use if you choose to.

I should also add that I don’t think that freedom is the ultimate value that should guide our lives. But it does seem like giving people the freedom to make a responsible choice also gives people an opportunity to take an even a higher road and lean into the value that rises far above freedom: love. Love that looks like choosing to do the things that show others that our hearts are with them.

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Rob Yackley
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Creator and Director of Thresholds, co-author of Thin Places: Six Postures for Creating and Practicing Missional Community, lead guide at The Garden House.