The following excerpt is from Elder Paisios of the Holy Mountain:
Father
Paisios told us the following story, wishing to give us an example of
the way God looks after His children, while many times we get angry at
Him and do not understand His actions:
“An ascetic was praying to
God asking Him to reveal why the righteous and pious people are
miserable and suffer unjustly, whereas the unrighteous and sinful ones
are rich and contented. While he was asking God to reveal to him this
mystery, he heard a voice saying to him:
--Do not ask to
comprehend what your mind and power of knowledge cannot grasp and do not
examine the mysteries of God, as His judgments are like an endless
ocean. However, since you wish to know, go out there in the world and
watch carefully the people, and you will be able to understand a small
part of God’s judgment. Then, you will know that God’s prudent governing
is unexplored and inscrutable.
When
the ascetic heard all this he left for the world. After walking for a
while, he reached a meadow. There was a fountain nearby and an old tree
with a large hollow. He hid inside the hollow, in order to watch the
busy street passing by the meadow. After a while, a rich man passed by
riding his horse. He stopped by the fountain to drink some water and
rest. While he was sitting there, he took a purse out of his pocket
containing one hundred golden coins, and started counting them. When he
finished counting, he mistakenly left the purse on the grass instead of
putting it in his pocket. After he ate, he rested and slept for a while,
and then he took off without realizing that he had left his purse on
the grass.
After some time, another passer-by appeared. He
stopped by the fountain, and when he saw the purse with the golden
coins, he took it and left running in the fields. A few minutes later, a
third man came along. As he was tired, he too went by the fountain to
drink some water and sat to eat a piece of bread. As this poor man was
eating, the rich man came back to look for his purse. He had an
extremely angry look on his face and went straight to him, shouting in
rage and demanding his purse. The poor man, though, who had no idea
about the purse and the golden coins, assured him that he had not seen
it. Then, the rich man began beating him up so badly that he finally
killed him. He searched through his clothes and found nothing. He felt
feeling very sad.
The ascetic was watching the incident sitting
inside the hollow and was astounded. He felt very sad and began to cry,
feeling sorry for the unjust death of the poor man and prayed to God:
--Lord,
what is the meaning of this will of Yours? Let me know how Your
kindness can tolerate such an injustice. Someone lost the coins, another
man found them, and a third man was unjustly murdered!
As he was praying and crying, an angel of the Lord appeared and told him:
--Do
not feel sorry for the poor man, nor think that this incident is not
the will of God. Bear in mind that some things occur, either because God
permits them to, or in order to instruct people or because He causes
them to happen for our benefit.
Now, listen: The man who lost the
golden coins is the next door neighbor of the one who found them. He
owned a farm worth one hundred golden coins. The rich man, who was an
avaricious person, forced him to sell his farm to him for only fifty
golden coins. The poor man, feeling helpless, prayed to God to punish
his unjust neighbor on his behalf. And God rewarded him in double. The
second man, the tired and poor one, who was unjustly killed, had once
committed a murder. He had honestly repented and lived the rest of his
life according to God’s will. He constantly prayed to God to forgive him
and said to Him: ‘God, let me have the same kind of death as the one I
gave.’ Of course, our Lord had forgiven him since the first time he
expressed his repentance for his sinful act. However, He was moved by
the sensitivity and righteous of this man, who not only tried to live
according to His will, but also wished to pay back for his sinful act.
So, God fulfilled his wish and gave him the chance to experience a
violent death, - as he himself had asked for – and took him to heaven by
His side, granting him a glorious laurel for his deep and responsive
repentance!
The third man, the avaricious one, who lost the
golden coins and committed the murder, had fallen into two sins, avarice
and stinginess. God permitted a violent murder to be committed, so that
he may experience pain, which in turn, would lead him to repentance.
The sin of murder turned out to be the cause of his decision to leave
the world and become a monk.
So, where and under what
circumstances do you see that God was unjust, merciless and cruel? You
should not examine God’s judgments, as He always makes them correctly
and according to the way He knows, whereas you misjudge them and find
them unjust. You should also know that many things happen with God’s
will for reasons we do not know. Therefore, the right thing for us to
say is: ‘Righteous art thou, O Lord, and right are thy judgments.’ (Ps
118:137)
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