Jim's response is good - you name the classes you want to use, and they all conform to a common API. However the solution given assumes the classes are all available on the classpath of the application already. You may be wanting to be able to add more implementations later, e.g. after the application is installed.
If thats the case, then you'll probably need to use a custom classloader. For example, you could allow people to put jar files inside a particular folder somewhere, and to add the class names of the implementations to a properties file. You would then need a custom classloader than can load classes from the jars inside that folder, and you would use that classloader to load the classes (e.g. using Class.forName(className, classLoader)).
In fact if you have a classloader per jar file, you will be able to have multiple classes with the same names across the jar files, as the classloader defines the class name boundaries. This is pretty much what OSGI is doing.
Here's some code relating to loading classes from jars:
http://sourceforge.net/projects/jcloader/
http://www.javaworld.com/javatips/jw-javatip70.html