
Do Not Be A Fool 
A musician, who taught many students how
to play the piano, when it came to public
recitals, would have them practice the conclusion
over and over again. Many found the repetition
of these last measures of music excessive.
However when someone would voice his complaints,
the wise teacher would always answer, “You
can make a mistake in the beginning or you
can make a mistake in the middle. The people
will forget it if you make the ending glorious!”
This is also true in life. What counts
in
life is how we end it. Because after
the
end, there is eternity. And eternity
is for
ever and ever. And so it is wise to
prepare
ourselves well for it. One of the classical
books of spirituality that unfortunately
have fallen in disuse, written by the
saint
Alphonse of Liguori, was called ‘Preparation
for a Happy Death’. Worth recovering
it from
the dust of oblivion.
One day a court jester said something
so
foolish that the king handed him a
staff
and told him, “Take this and keep it
until
you find a bigger fool than yourself.”
Some years later the king was dying.
“I am
about to leave you,” he told his family
and
friends gathered around him. “I am
going
on a very long journey, and I shall
not return
to this place...” At this, the jester
stepped
forward and asking permission to speak,
remarked,
“Your Majesty, may I ask you a question?
When you journeyed abroad visiting
your people,
staying with your nobles or paying
diplomatic
visits to other kingdoms, your heralds
and
servants always went before you making
arrangements
for you. May I ask what preparations
your
Majesty has made for this journey you
are
about to take?” “Alas!” he answered,
“I have
made no preparation.” “Then,” the jester
said, “take this staff with you, for
now
I have found a bigger fool than myself!”
This is precisely what Jesus Christ
calls
anyone who stores up things for himself
and
is not rich towards God – ‘fool’. He
says
this immediately after having recounted
the
Parable of the Rich Fool. “The ground
of
a certain rich man produced a good
crop.
He thought to himself, ‘What shall
I do?
I have no place to store my crops.’
Then
he said, ‘This is what I’ll do. I will
tear
down my barns and build bigger ones,
and
there I will store all my grain and
my goods.
And I’ll say to myself, “You have plenty
of good things laid up for many years.
Take
life easy; eat, drink and be merry.”
But
God said to him, ‘You fool! This very
night
your life will be demanded from you.
Then
who will get what you have prepared
for yourself?”
A young student came to Saint Philip
Neri
one day and told him he was to study
law.
“What a happy man I will be! I am going
to
study and become a learned man.” “And
then
what?” asked Philip. “Then I shall
become
a great lawyer and win fame.” “And
then what?”
“Then I shall become very rich and
build
a beautiful home for myself.” “And
then what?”
“Then I shall marry and live in comfort
to
a ripe old age.” “Then what?” “Hmm!
I don’t
know. Then I suppose I shall die.”
“And then
what?”
Yes, then what?!
“Great secret of death!” wrote Saint
Alphonse
in the book mentioned above. “It makes
us
see what the lovers of this world do
not
see. The princeliest fortunes, the
most exalted
dignities, and the most superb triumphs
lose
their entire splendor when viewed from
the
bed of death.”
It is the vision that we have embedded
in
our mind that determines our whole
attitude
in life. If we have heaven as our vision,
then what the Pope Saint Gregory the
Great
wrote, way back in 590 makes a lot
of sense
even to us today. “No matter what obstacles
we encounter, we must not allow them
to turn
us aside from the joy of that heavenly
feast.
Anyone who is determined to reach his
destination
(heaven) is not deterred by the roughness
of the road that leads to it. Nor must
we
allow the charm of success to seduce
us,
or we shall be like a foolish traveler
who
is so distracted by the pleasant meadows
through which he is passing that he
forgets
where he is going.”
Let us press ahead!
(c) Fr. Pius Sammut, OCD. Permission
is
hereby granted for any non-commercial
use,
provided that the content is unaltered
from
its original state, if this copyright
notice
is included.
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