Thursday, January 27, 2022

A bird lives in the forest, yet does not see the forest


PRAYER VII


Would that I could make musicians from stone, dan­cers from the sand of the lake, and minstrels from the leaves of all the trees in the mountains, so that they might help me glorify the Lord—that the voice of the earth might be heard amidst the choirs of angels!
 
The sons of men gorge themselves at the table of the absent Master, singing for no one but themselves and about nothing save that which fills their mouths, which must in time return to the earth.
 
Exceedingly sad is the blindness of the sons of men, who do not see the power and glory of the Lord. A bird lives in the forest, yet does not see the forest. A fish swims in the water, yet does not see the water. A mole lives in the earth, yet does not see the earth. In truth, the likeness of man to birds, fish, and moles is exceedingly sad.
 
Humans, like animals, do not heed what exists in excessive abundance, but open their eyes only before that which is rare or exceptional.
 
Of Thee, O Lord, my breath, there is excess; therefore, men do not see Thee. Thou art too obvious, O Lord, my sighing; therefore, the attention of men is diverted from Thee and directed towards polar bears, towards rarities in the distance.
 
Thou servest Thy servants too greatly, my sweet faithfulness; therefore, Thou art subjected to scorn. Thou rises' to kindle the sun over the lake too early; therefore, the sleepyheads cannot bear Thee. Thou are too zealous in lighting the vigil lamps in the firmament at night, my unsurpassed zeal; and the lazy hearts of men speak more of the indolent servant than to one zealous.
 
O my love, would that I could motivate all the inhabitants of the earth, water, and air to hum a hymn to Thee! Would that I could remove leprosy from the face of the earth and turn this wanton world back into the virginal purity that Thou didst create!
 
Truly, my God, Thou art just as great with or without the world.
 
Thou art equally great, whether the world glorifies Thee or whether the world blasphemes Thee. But when the world blas­phemes Thee, in the eyes of the Saints Thou seemest even greater.
 
 
 "Prayers by the Lake"
St. Nikolai of Ohrid