There once lived a man so godly that
even the angels rejoiced at the sight of him. But, in spite of his great
holiness, he had no notion that he was holy. He just went about his
humdrum tasks diffusing goodness the way flowers unselfconsciously
diffuse their fragrance and street lamps their glow.
His holiness lay in
this that he forgot each person's past and looked at them as they were
now, and he looked beyond each person's appearance to the very centre of
their being where they were innocent and blameless and too ignorant to
know what they were doing. Thus he loved and forgave everyone he met and
he saw nothing extraordinary in this for it was the result of his way
of looking at people.
One day an angel said to him, "I have
been sent to you by God. Ask for anything you wish and it will be given
to you. Would you wish to have the gift of healing?" "No," said the man,
"I'd rather God did the healing himself."
"Would you want
to bring sinners back to the path of righteousness?" "No," he said, "it
is not for me to touch human hearts. That is the work of angels."
"Would you like to be such a model of virtue that people will be drawn
to imitate you?" "No," said the saint, "for that would make me the
centre of attention."
"What then do
you wish for?" asked the angel. "The grace of God," was the man's reply.
"Having that, I have all I desire." "No, you must ask for some
miracle," said the angel, "or one will be forced on you." "Well, then I
shall ask for this: let good be done through me without my being aware of it."
So it was decreed that the holy man's
shadow would be endowed with healing properties whenever it fell behind
him. So everywhere his shadow fell—provided he had his back to it—the
sick were healed, the land became fertile, fountains sprang to life and
colour returned to the faces of those who were weighed down by life's
sorrow.
But the saint knew
nothing of this because the attention of people was so centred on the
shadow that they forgot about the man and so his wish that good be done
through him and be forgotten was abundantly fulfilled.
There is no
limit to what a person can achieve if he does not want the credits.
Humility and egolessness, Swami says, are the hallmark of true
education.
(Source: Radio Sai)
(Illustration by S.B.Sai Krishna, SSSIHL)
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