Posted on 01/12/2015 9:15:53 AM PST by Salvation
One of the great illusions under which we labor is that if we just get one more thing from this world, then we’ll be happy. Perhaps if we just had a little more money, or a better job, or the latest iPad, or if we were married to so-and-so, or if we just lived in a better neighborhood … then we’d be satisfied and content at last. But “at last” never comes, even if we do get some of the things on our list. As Ecclesiastes puts it, The eye never has enough of seeing, nor the ear its fill of hearing (Ecc 1:8). Or again, Whoever loves money never has money enough; whoever loves wealth is never satisfied with his income (Ecc. 5:8).
Though we know this, somehow we continue to buy into the lie again and again: that just one more thing will do it. So we lay out the money and spend the time, but the delight lasts only twenty minutes, tops. The world just can’t close the deal.
There is a little preacher’s parable that illustrates the endless treadmill the world has us on, and shows how the world endlessly seduces us to want “just one more thing.” In the end, this seduction leads us to neglect the one thing most necessary. Here is the parable, followed by some commentary:
There was a man who was lonely and thought, perhaps, that buying a pet would help his loneliness. At the pet store he looked at many animals, and found himself drawn to one in particular. The sign over the cage said, “Talking Parrot: Guaranteed to talk!” “This will surely solve my problem,” thought the man, “For here is an animal that can even talk!”
“That’ll be $250,” said the merchant.
One week later the man returned saying, “This parrot isn’t talking!”
“You mean to say,” said the merchant, “he didn’t climb the ladder and talk?”
“Ladder? You didn’t tell me about a ladder!”
“Oh, sorry,” said the merchant, “That’ll be $10.”
One week later the man returned saying, “This parrot still isn’t talking!”
“You mean to say,” said the merchant, “he didn’t climb the ladder, look in the mirror, and talk?”
“Mirror? You didn’t tell me about a mirror!”
“Oh, sorry,” said the merchant, “That’ll be $10.”
One week later the man returned saying, “This parrot still isn’t talking!”
“You mean to say,” said the merchant, “he didn’t climb the ladder, look in the mirror, peck the bell, and talk?”
“Bell? You didn’t tell me about a bell!”
“Oh, sorry,” said the merchant, “That’ll be $10.”
One week later the man returned saying, “This parrot still isn’t talking!”
“You mean to say,” said the merchant, “he didn’t climb the ladder, look in the mirror, peck the bell, jump on the swing, and talk?”
“Swing? You didn’t tell me about a swing!”
“Oh, sorry,” said the merchant, “That’ll be $10.”
One week later the man came to the shop and the merchant asked, “How’s the parrot?”
“He’s dead!” said the man.
“Dead?” said the merchant … “Did he ever talk before he died?”
“Yes, he finally talked!” said the man.
“Well, what did he say?”
“He said, ‘Don’t they sell any birdseed at that store?'”
Lesson 1: Promises, Promises - And thus this parable teaches us in a humorous way that the world and the “prince of this world” are always promising results. Yet when those results are lacking, the practice is simply to demand more of the same. First the bird, then the ladder, then the bell, then the mirror, and then the swing. There’s always something more, and then the perfect result will surely come! This is a lie. The lie comes in many forms: just one more accessory, just go from the free to the paid version, just buy the upgrade to solve the difficulty, just one more drink, one more diet, a newer car, a bigger house, a facelift, bariatric surgery, etc. It’s always just one more thing and then you’ll make it; happiness is just past the next purchase.
Jesus, in speaking to the woman at the well, said of the water of that well (which represents the world), Everyone who drinks this water will be thirsty again (Jn 4:13). And that is the sober truth about this world: it cannot finally quench our thirst, which is a thirst for God and Heaven. But time and time again we go back to the world and listen to the same lie, thinking, “This time it’ll be different.”
Surely it is sensible that we make use of the things of this world insofar as they aid us to accomplish our basic duties. But they are not the answer to our deeper needs. The big lie is that they are the answer. And when they fail, the lie just gets bigger by declaring that just a little more of the failed product will surely close the deal. It’s a big lie and it gets bigger.
Lesson 2: The One Thing Most Necessary - In the pursuit of the ladders, mirrors, bells, and swings, the one thing most necessary was neglected: the food. And this is true for us, too. We seek to accumulate worldly toys and trinkets that pass away, and we neglect eternal and lasting realities. There is enough time for TV, sports, gossip, shopping … you name it. But prayer, Scripture, Sacraments, Liturgy, worship, and developing any kind of relationship with the Lord are most often neglected or even wholly forgotten in our pursuit of ladders, mirrors, bells, and swings. We are staring into the mirror focused too much on ourself. The bells of this world summon us to countless things, mostly trivial in the long run, and we are climbing the ladder of success with little care as to what wall it is leaning against.
And all of these less important matters divert us from the one thing necessary: to feed our souls on the Lord. Whoever eats my flesh and drinks my blood remains in me, and I in him … the one who feeds on me will live because of me ... (Jn 6:56-58).
Ah, but no time for all that. Getting to Church, praying, receiving Communion? No time! I hear a bell summoning me to just one more diversion, one more meeting. I’m too busy climbing the ladder of success. I’m too busy looking at myself in the mirror to make sure I fit in and that everyone likes me.
Did [the parrot] ever talk before he died?”
“Yes, he finally talked!” said the man.
“Well, what did he say?”
“He said, ‘Don’t they sell any birdseed at that store?'”
Just a little parable on the lies of the devil and the false promises of this world.
Amen!
Thank you bump.
I would add for me that the one more thing, the bell maybe, would be the perfect parish/church/Mass experience. I struggle with that when I disagree with something that the priest says in his homily or the cantor is off key or the kid in the pew in front of me is misbehaving and his/her adult does nothing. These are distractions and I have to focus on the cross. The more I pray for that the easier it comes to me but it’s a constant challenge.
Monsignor Pope Ping!
My wife and I have a phrase we use when one of us sees something they really want: “If only I had THAT, my life would be utterly complete.”
But there is a bit of a difficulty with being utterly satisfied with everything you have. There are only two things that motivate human beings: Desire for a good outcome; fear of a bad outcome.
Christians need to do everything out of desire, not fear. Fear is the absence of faith, and faith is the absence of fear. I still want things, but I see every single thing I own as a “tool”. It can be a tool to make life better or a tool to do harm, but the item is not a thing to be desired. Rather, the results I achieve from using the tool should be the thing to be desired. It is also what causes me to desire the tool.
"Oliver Twist" Progressivism
May I have some more of your money, freedom, rights. Mr. American Citizen, sir? Some more please... more...
Thanks for the ping. It’s a two rolls of duct tape, type of day.
I like the tool that you and your wife use.
**If only I had THAT, my life would be utterly complete.**
**how progressives have sold their version of “utopia” for the last 100 years, it has always been, once this ONE thing passes we will be at Utopia, wait we need one more, one more, one more**
Good analogy — and yet the parrot didn’t have food.
I think we all need to ask ourselves if we are getting the spiritual food we need. Each individual’s needs, hopefully, lead to Christ on the Cross. And we must remember to pick up our own cross, deny ourselves, and move forward, imitating Christ.
What's the duct tape for?
We have a similar phrase in our house, that goes something like this: "what will you do with that, thirty minutes after you've bought it?" If it's going to sit on a shelf unseen, or go into a box, we usually don't buy it as a matter of principle. Sometimes to practice self-discipline, we'll ask each other "did you want that before you saw it in the store?" If the answer is "no", we challenge ourselves to hold off on the purchase until a later date. We find that oftentimes the "wanting" goes away as soon as we leave the store. We might even say "no" to something we could otherwise afford, just to prove that we're the masters of our wallets, and not the other way around.
I can’t say... ;)
ROTFL! Is the duct tape intended to restrain yourself, or to restrain the rest of us?
I can’t say...
Now there's a lie for you. Thinking that physically eating is feeding ones soul.
John 6:56-57 "He who eats My flesh and drinks My blood abides in Me, and I in him. As the living Father sent Me, and I live because of the Father, so he who eats Me, he also will live because of Me."
That's the quote.
"Now there's a lie for you. Thinking that physically eating is feeding ones soul."
How many FReepers would think that would be an appropriate response?.
It's like:
"This is My Body."
(Unnamed respondent)"
"I don't think so."
Maybe they don’t have the account of the Last Supper in their Bibles????
1 "This is My Body." As scholars agree, this is just a typical Semitic hyperbole.
2"This is My Blood." Another typical Semitic hyperbole. A typical 1st century Jew in Jesus' milieu would have heard these words and understood, "Hey, no prob' --- it's one of those metaphor thingies."
A literal hermeneutic requires us to believe that “This is my body ... This is my blood” really means “Answer an altar call and pray the sinners prayer”. Any other interpretation would be merely superficial allegorism. /s
That's a great idea!
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