1 min reading: the law and the fruits

Illustration by Ken Crane
In the desert, fruit was scarce. God called one of his prophets and said:

- Each person may only eat one fruit a day.

The custom was obeyed for many generations, and the ecology of the place was preserved. Since the remaining fruit supplied seeds, other trees appeared. Soon, the entire region was turned into fertile soil, which was the envy of other towns.

But the people continued to eat one fruit a day – they remained faithful to what the ancient prophet of their forefathers had told them. However they never allowed the inhabitants of other villages to take advantage of the abundant harvest with which they were rewarded each year.

The result was that fruit rotted on the ground.

God called a new prophet and said:

- Let them eat as much fruit as they like. And ask them to share the abundance with their neighbors.

The prophet came to the town with the new message. But he was stoned – for by now the custom was ingrained in the hearts and minds of each of the inhabitants.

With time, the younger villagers began to question the barbaric old custom. But, since the tradition of the elders was unbending, they decided to abandon the religion. Thus, they could eat as much fruit as they wished, and give the rest to those in need of food.

The only people who remained faithful to the local church, were those who considered themselves saints. But in truth they were unable to see how the world changes, and recognize how one must change with it.

Online Bookstore HERE
Kindle (four languages) HERE

 

Hey, like this post? Why not share it?

Comments

  1. vivekchaudhary says:

    its such a simple thing and the so called best creatures made by god doesn’t understand it..thanks for sharing this message

  2. jitendra says:

    it’s true;;
    thanks for sharing this story..

  3. abi says:

    wonderful

  4. densi says:

    love it :)
    thank you – again

  5. Wahyudin Anwar says:

    Tradition starts with change.
    In order to start a new tradition, one must change.

  6. kiba says:

    a nice story but changes are also the same people whos soul have grown and whos life was always an adventure because they not only welcome the changes but also the defeats and pain

  7. akansha says:

    the story makes us remembr of the illness which is inside us, the unfair things we do for the sake of rituals n customs…

  8. criststar11 says:

    SI. SONO DACCORDO MA… è l’ albero che porta i frutti e non produrrà mai frutti di qualità se non è abbastanza radicato nella terra. I frutti dipendono ANCHE dall’ albero. Per quello il mistico ricerca una simbiosi con la tradizione e ritrova in se una via nuova, per arrichire il suo percorso spirituale. Ecco la mia opinione sulla questione. Ciao ;) Muita luz,

    Cris

  9. Marie-Christine says:

    The Natural Way is bleeding.
    Our lungs are being removed daily from our forests and replaced by Co2, Our mountains depleted of H2o.
    Suddenly, the view of the ‘Snows of ‘KIL I MAN J ARO’ would make Ernest turn in his grave and that is what is happening.

    Thank you for that message.
    With Love
    Marie-Christine

    1. criststar11 says:

      I would like to see that one day the tree will blow again on this earth… this is what I was born for. Sending you Love and Light, Cris

  10. Toni-Yvonne says:

    I love the message in this story. No matter how much time passes this story will forever be understood

    x

  11. …vivo rodeado de santos…;)

  12. Ben Yung says:

    I have no idea what “fruit” means to everyone but…folks, the first sentence of any article could always tell you the most important message… “In the desert, fruit was scarce.” We are living in the world of uncertainty and we probably have no idea next day is a good day or bad day. We might bless for having ten fruits a day or we might be getting mad for purchasing pricy fruits everyday. That said, it’s situational.

    People might dislike doctrines because they believe church do not listen to people, or seem to being ignorance. Doctrines are essential for any religion in my point of view. It’s a cushion for any uncertainty that happen in the future, to be more precise, “a path”. Your issue might not be the doctrines himself but how you think about the church using the doctrines. I don’t know if chuches do everything absolutely correct, I couldn’t tell, but there are some bigger problems which are not on the “doctrines” or the “fruit” themselves, ironically and once again, they’re on everyone inside.