“May We All Be Forgotten”
by Paulo Coelho
“In
the monastery of Sceta, Abbot Lucas gathered the brothers together for a
sermon. ‘May you all be forgotten,’ he said. ‘But why?’ one of the
brothers asked. ‘Does that mean that our example can never serve to help
someone in need?’
‘In
the days when everyone was just, no one paid any attention to people
who behaved in an exemplary manner,’ replied the abbot. ‘Everyone did
their best, never thinking that by behaving thus they were doing their
duty by their brother. They loved their neighbor because they understood
that this was part of life and they were merely obeying a law of
nature. They shared their possessions in order not to accumulate more
than they could carry, for journeys lasted a whole lifetime. They lived
together in freedom, giving and receiving, making no demands on others
and blaming no one.
That
is why their deeds were never spoken of and that is why they left no
stories. If only we could achieve the same thing now: to make goodness
such an ordinary thing that there would be no need to praise those who
practice it.”
- http://paulocoelhoblog.com/
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