Blessing or a curse?

by Princess 3 Replies latest jw friends

  • Princess
    Princess

    My mother in law sent me this. Kind of long but a good story.

    Princess

    > Once there was a young boy who lived with his father in a
    > cottage deep in the forest. His father worked him hard from
    > sunrise to sunset and still almost every evening he would
    > hear his father say the same thing:
    >
    > "Poor me! Poor me! I will die a sad old man because you are
    > a fool and will never amount to anything."
    >
    > But the boy was not a fool He showed a lot of wisdom for his
    > age and had a generous heart. One day, after helping an old
    > widow stack some wood, he was about to go home when she
    > stopped him, placed her hand on his head and said, "You are
    > a reflection of the face of God.
    > The world is brighter for the joy you have given me this
    > day. I bless you my child!"
    >
    > The boy stepped back, amazed: "What was that?"
    >
    > "Why, it was a blessing my child! Haven't you ever received
    > a blessing?"
    >
    > Back at home he asked,: "Papa? Why do you curse me? Why do
    > you not bless me?"
    >
    > "What a ridiculous question! Because it is against my nature
    > to bless and I will not do what feels so unnatural to me.
    > What a ridiculous question. Poor me! Poor me! I will die a
    > sad old man because you are a fool and will never amount to
    > anything."
    >
    > "Oh." said the boy, and he felt sorry for his father, but
    > that night he decided that no matter how uncomfortable it
    > felt, he would become the kind of person who blessed others.
    > And so
    > he did.
    >
    > The boy grew to be a man, left the forest and built a home
    > for himself in the meadowlands. In time he had a family of
    > his own. He was still haunted by the curses of his father,
    > and it would make him sad for days at a time, but he had
    > decided to bless, so even though he felt sad, almost every
    > evening, he would call one of his children to himself, lay
    > his hand upon their head and speak these words: "You are a
    > reflection of the face of God. The world is brighter for the
    > joy you give me this day. I bless you my child."
    >
    > One night he had a dream in which he saw his father and
    > heard him saying over and over: "Poor me! Poor me! I will
    > die a sad old man because you are a fool and will never
    > amount to
    > anything."
    >
    > It upset him so much he woke up, got out of bed, and went
    > out into the backyard. He stood there by the trees in the
    > moonlight and was so angry his hands became fists as he
    > spoke out loud to the wind: "What's the point in being
    > someone who blesses? I'm still so haunted by these curses of
    > my father! Well, maybe I should curse as well!"
    >
    > And he kicked the ground as hard as he could which shook
    > loose a stone. He picked it up to throw and just then the
    > wind became very strong and he thought he heard a voice: "Do
    > not
    > discard your father's heart!"
    >
    > He looked at the trees and then at the rock in his hands.
    > The voice called again: "Do not discard your father's
    > heart!"
    >
    > "Who are you?"
    >
    > "I am the Father of every son and daughter and I tell you,
    > the stone you hold in your hand is like the condition of
    > your father's heart!"
    >
    > He looked at the rock. He could tell it was badly misshapen,
    > that it had broken off from a larger rock and had many
    > cracks and flaws. Again the voice: "You can try to change
    > this rock. You can press it until your fingers bleed, but
    > you will not succeed in changing it! Neither will you
    > succeed in changing the heart of your father by force or
    > manipulation. Hold your father's heart gently within your
    > own and pray for him. You have no idea what forces shaped
    > this rock. Neither do you know
    > the forces that shaped the heart of your father. Hold your
    > father's heart gently within your own and pray for him."
    >
    > "When did his heart become like this?"
    >
    > "When he chose to curse instead of bless. But do not become
    > proud...Your heart would look just like this, if I had not
    > blessed you as a child."
    >
    > "I only remember the old woman."
    >
    > "The voice was hers, but the words were mine."
    >
    > "Then why didn't you bless my father when he was a child?"
    >
    > "I bless every one of my children. But I never force them to
    > bless in return. In eternity you will have no questions. For
    > now, it is enough that you decide to bless and not curse."
    >
    > "Father of every son and daughter, bless my father."
    >
    > And as soon as he spoke these words, the wind died down and
    > everything became peaceful in the countryside and in the
    > heart of the young man. He went back inside, put the rock in
    > a safe place, laid down and went right to sleep. He had the
    > best night sleep he'd had for a long time.
    > And from then on whenever he recalled one of the curses of
    > his father, he genuinely prayed a
    > blessing on his father, and in time began to experience true
    > healing and a strong peace within.
    > One evening there was a knock on the front door and as he
    > had raised his children to do, they welcomed in a blind
    > beggar, sat him down at the kitchen table, and gave him some
    > food to eat. The young man walked in and immediately
    > recognized it was his own father. But he didn't reveal his
    > own identity. He listened to the old man speak. And the old
    > man talked about how his son had abandoned him, how he had
    > lost his eyesight, and how he'd been forced to beg in a
    > world where life was hard.
    >
    > Just then his son spoke up: "Grandfather! You're welcome to
    > stay here with us!"
    >
    > "But I have no money to pay you."
    >
    > "Oh, we don't need any money; all we ask is that as long as
    > you stay with us, you speak only blessings. -- What's the
    > matter?"
    >
    > "It...it's against my nature to bless!"
    >
    > "Grandfather, I can tell by your hands that you have worked
    > your whole life. So, begging must be against your nature as
    > well, but see, it has brought you here to us!"
    >
    > The old man couldn't argue this point, so he agreed to stay,
    > but it was weeks before he spoke a word - it was so against
    > his nature to bless. When he finally did, you could hardly
    > hear him:
    >
    > "What's that Grandfather?"
    >
    > "I said, bless you for taking an old man in from the cold. I
    > wish my son had turned out like you, but he was a fool
    > and..."
    >
    > "Ah! Grandfather, only blessings!"
    >
    > "Well, I wish my son had turned out like you! Bless you!"
    >
    > Wasn't bad for a first blessing! And a week later he spoke
    > another one and it was a little smoother. And the next day
    > he spoke two - and they were a lot smoother. Then he began
    > to
    > bless every day -- many times in a day. He really got into
    > it! You could say that blessing
    > became... second nature to him. And the more he blessed,
    > the more he smiled. And the more he smiled the more his face
    > softened. And the more his face softened, the more his heart
    > softened and the more his heart softened, the more joy he
    > began to experience; a different kind of joy than he had
    > known before.
    >
    > They lived happily for years until one winter the old man
    > fell ill and was near death. As his breathing grew labored,
    > his son sat on the bedside and asked: "Grandfather, is there
    > anything
    > I can get for you?"
    >
    > "No one can bring me what I most need at this hour."
    >
    > "Please Grandfather, anything! What would you like?"
    >
    > "I should like to see my own son once more to give him my
    > blessing. As he was growing I gave only curses. I told him
    > it was against my nature to bless. And, as you can see, I
    > have learned to bless too late..."
    >
    > Then his son leaned closer and whispered: "Papa! Papa it's
    > me, your own son... I am here! It is not too late! God has
    > seen fit to bring us together these last years...It's not
    > too late! I'm here... I'm here!"
    >
    > And they embraced. A moment later the old man straightened
    > up, stretched out a trembling hand, laid it upon his son's
    > head, and spoke these words: "You are a reflection of the
    > face of
    > God. Though I cannot see you with my eyes, I see you with my
    > heart and the mercy you have
    > shown me these past years is like a brilliant light,
    > dispelling all shadow as I pass from time into
    > eternity. I will die a happy, happy old man, because I have
    > learned to bless and so...my son... I... bless you."
    >
    > And with these words, his hand fell back down to his chest
    > and he died with this beautiful smile on his face. Later
    > that night the young man took the stone out of the place he
    > had put it years before and he sat at the kitchen table by
    > candlelight. Turning it over and over in his hands, a single
    > tear fell onto the rock and it split in two. Inside was a
    > priceless stone; smooth to the
    > touch and sparkling in beauty. Just then the wind became
    > very strong outside and he got up to
    > close the shutter, but then again he heard the ancient
    > voice: "Eternity shines brighter for the joy
    > you bring me this day. And I bless you my child."
    >
    > Then the wind died down and everything became peaceful in
    > the countryside and in the heart
    > of the young man.
    >
    > God sees hidden in every person's heart a precious jewel.
    > Please don't give up on those that have cursed you in the
    > past. "Give blessings and you will be blessed," is a
    > powerful Biblical
    > principle.

  • ozziepost
    ozziepost

    It takes us quite a while to change our viewpoint from the one conditioned by the WTS.

    It's something we've had to make a real effort to do (bless instead of curse) since we learned that there is something better.

    We were so used to judging that we forgot how to bless!

    Nice story, Rachel.

    Cheers,
    Ozzie

    "It's better to light a candle than to curse the darkness."
    Anonymous

  • Prisca
    Prisca

    Wow... beautiful story

    Blessings seem to be a dying art. My grandmother (a JW since the 30s) used to sign off her letters to me with "may Jehovah bless you". Yet we never seem to hear people blessing each other anymore.

    Have people forgotten how to bless?

  • LaDonnaAna
    LaDonnaAna

    Rachel,

    That was really beautiful.

    Thankyou,
    Ana

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