
A Stone, A Frog, A Whistle 
John The Dwarf, was sold for a bottle of
wine in the market place of Corinth
to Likas.
From then on, he was condemned to play
the
clown to satisfy his audience to laughter.
When he was fifteen years old he fell
sick
and Likas having no more use of him
discarded
him in the market place like an old
piece
of junk.
It was there that Abba Silvanus found
him
and took him under his protection.
He took
such a good care of him that John slowly
recovery completely. Once well again,
Abba
asked him to go and live with another
monk.
Before leaving him however the Abba
handed
him three neatly packed gifts. "Treasure
their implications!" he just told
him.
Eagerly opening his gifts, John found
out
that the first gift consisted of a
small
desert stone - it could be held in
the palm
of a hand. It was clean and shining
and had
a small hole drilled in its middle.
The dwarf
smiled as he remembered the story Abba
used
to tell him about the ants who lived
in a
small garden. They all worked and played,
built and dug in the soil, made war
and peace,
lived and died ... all within the area
of
the small garden. Except one ant, which
unlike
the others, just stayed put and stared
all
day long at the garden wall. When asked
why,
she would always answer, "I want
to
find ways and means to drill a hole
in the
wall through which I can pass and see
what
lies beyond".
The message? We are not doomed to live
within
the enclave of our resignation. We
are all
called to embark on a voyage without
end.
Let us shed off our mediocrity and
start
seeking Christ, our Beloved who is
always
beyond!
The second gift was a sculpture in
the shape
of a small frog. The dwarf laughed
because
he remembered the story. "There
were
many frogs who were theologians. They
were
all very intelligent but still, they
could
not agree about the nature of God.
All agreed
that his supernatural nature was in
the shape
of a frog. But some would contend that
He
has two heads and four eyes, others
maintained
that he had three eyes and two tongues
whereas
other frogs insisted that he had an
infinite
number of heads, legs, eyes and tongues".
The message here was also very clear:
God
is far beyond what our mind can conceive.
We can never understand God. How can
one
describe the taste of wine, the kiss
of a
couple in love, the serenity of a mother
hugging her baby in her arms? How can
one
put God in one's mind? We are called
to move
in the dark and go on a venture beyond
our
understanding.
The third gift was a whistle, aptly
made
of silver. This also reminded John
of a story
Abba used to tell him. "Once upon
a
time there were two birds. One of them,
that
lived always on the same tree, asked
the
other bird who had flown across the
wood
in its entirety: "How I would
like to
meet with the 'ruah' - 'ruah' is a
Hebrew
word that means spirit! I have been
years
searching for him for many years to
no avail;
I suppose he is not here!" The
other
bird was quick to answer: "No,
my friend!
He is here! You already know the ruah.
You
meet him every day. He keeps you fresh
and
gives you peacefulness. Without him
you cannot
fly. He plays music to your ears all
the
time. Your friend Ruah is the wind!"
Even here the lesson is clear: We are
all
under God's shelter. He is SO close
to us.
There is no need to go far to look
for him
and find Him.
"I still remember" concluded
John
the Dwarf, as he put these three gifts
on
the shelf, "the words that the
Abba
told me when he picked me, half dead,
from
the market place and took me to his
home.
'My son, you must know that He who
spreads
the stars in the sky, who fills the
oceans
with water, who decorates the peacock
in
dazzling colors, who gives the bird
a melodious
song …you must know that it was He
who, in
his love, created you!"
Happy New Year!
Adapted from Derek Webster, The Abbot
and
the Dwarf, St. Paul's Publications
1992.
(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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