A Story
to read and reflect upon as Lent approaches about a famous monastery that has
fallen on hard times. Once a great order, its many buildings had been
filled with young monks, but now it was nearly deserted.
Visitors
no longer came there to be nourished by prayer. A handful of old monks shuffled
through the cloisters and praised God with heavy hearts. It was just a matter
of time until their community would die out.
On the edge of the
monastery woods, an old rabbi had built a little hut. No one ever spoke with
him, but the monks felt somehow assured by his prayerful presence.
As the leader, the
Abbot of the monastery agonized over the future, it occurred to him to go visit
the rabbi. Perhaps he could offer some word of advice. So one day after morning
prayers, the Abbot set out to visit the rabbi.
As he approached the
hut, the Abbot saw the rabbi standing in the doorway, his arms outstretched in
welcome. And the rabbi motioned the Abbot to enter.
They sat there for a
moment in silence, until finally the rabbi said: “You and your brothers are
serving God with heavy hearts. You have come to ask a teaching of me. I will
give you this teaching, but you can only repeat it once. After that no one must
say it aloud again.”
The rabbi looked
straight at the rabbi and said, “One among you is the Lord.” For a while all was silent. Then the rabbi
said, “ Now you must go.” The abbot left without a word.
The next morning, the
abbot called his monks together in the chapter room. He told them he had
received a teaching from “ the rabbi who walks in the woods”, and that after he
told it his teaching was never again to be spoken aloud. Then he looked at each
of his brothers and said, “ The rabbi said that the one among us is the Lord!”
In the days, and
weeks, and months that followed, the monks pondered this riddle, and wondered
what it could mean. The Lord is among US? Could he have possibly have meant one
of us here at the monastery? If that is the case then which one of us is it? Do
you suppose that he meant the Abbot? If he meant anyone then he must have meant
the Abbot. He has been our leader for more than a generation.
On the other hand he
might have meant brother Thomas. Certainly brother Thomas is a holy man.
Everyone knows and respects brother Thomas’ keen spirituality and insight.
Certainly he could
not have meant brother Elred. Elred gets very crotchety at times. But,
when you look back on it, Elred is almost always right, often VERY right.
Maybe the rabbi did mean brother Elred.
But surely not
brother Phillip, Phillip is so passive, a real nobody. But then, almost
mysteriously, he has a gift for somehow always being there when you need him.
Maybe Phillip is the Lord.
As they contemplated
in this manner, the old monks began to treat each other with extraordinary
respect; on the off chance that one of them might actually be the Lord.
As time
went by there was a gentle, whole-hearted, human quality about them which was
hard to describe but easy to notice. They lived with each other as people who
had finally found something. But they prayed and read the Scriptures together
as people who were always looking for something.
The monks looked for the good in each other
and we are called to do the same. Look
for the good that God has put in each person, and the world will be a better
place. Lent will allow God’s light to
shine brighter in the world through you.
May God Be Praised!
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