ENJOY THE GRAPE

I read a parable recently that bothered me when I read it the first time.  It is a story that was reportedly told by Buddha:

A traveler, fleeing a tiger who was chasing him, ran till he came to the edge of a cliff.  There he caught hold of a thick vine, and swung himself over the edge.

Above him the tiger snarled.  Below him he heard another snarl, and behold, there was another tiger, peering up at him.  The vine suspended him midway between two tigers.

Two mice, a white mouse and a black mouse, began to gnaw at the vine.  He could see they were quickly eating it through.  Then in front of him on the cliff side he saw a luscious bunch of grapes.  Holding onto the vine with one hand, he reached and picked a grape with the other.  How delicious!

That’s the end of the parable.  That’s it???  If you’re like me, you want to know how the story ends.  Does the man get eaten by one of the tigers?  Does he manage to find a way of escape?  We don’t know.  And how can a man possibly stop to enjoy eating a grape while in the midst of such a crisis???

I can’t tell you for sure what the parable was intended to teach, but after giving it considerable thought, here’s the lesson that I gained from it.  We are sometimes so focused on wanting to know what’s going to happen in the future that we fail to enjoy what we have right here, right now.

What is the doctor going to find when I go in for these tests?  How can I possibly meet the deadline my boss has given me since I have more work to do than I can possibly get done?  How will my wife react when I talk to her about the need to go see a counselor to deal with the deep-rooted problems we’re having?  How am I going to pay the bills that are due next week when there’s not enough money in the bank to cover them?  How should I react to the racial prejudice that’s causing students to say ugly things to me at school?

None of those things are unimportant (nor are the countless other trials and difficulties you could add to that list from your own experience); some may even be life-threatening  But today, all day long, I am surrounded by countless blessings from God — a beautiful sunrise, the changing autumn leaves, a child’s kiss, a bunch of grapes, a warm bed, hot water, and the list goes on and on.  Is it possible to focus on the blessings at hand even when we are surrounded by difficulties and we don’t know how the story will turn out?  For a child of God, it is not only possible, it is essential that we learn to do so.

“I am not saying this because I am in need, for I have learned to be content whatever the circumstances.  I know what it is to be in need, and I know what it is to have plenty. I have learned the secret of being content in any and every situation, whether well fed or hungry, whether living in plenty or in want.” (Philippians 4:11-12)

Are you surrounded by tigers today?  Take a moment to enjoy the grape that God has placed right in front of you.

Have a great day!

Alan Smith

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