What it could be.
This is from a short story dan lent me, it’s called Walk in the Light While There is Light by Leo Tolstoy. I think you can read the whole thing online for free.
This is one of the best books i've ever read. It has made me understand (in addition to knowing dan :) how the bible looks like in real life. Or, what it could look like. It's so exciting!!!!
Here goes.
Two years passed: Julius completed his studies; and during all that time he did not once see his friend.
One day, however, he met him in the street, invited him home, and began to ask him how and where he lived.
Pamphilius told him he still lived in the same place with his mother.
“We do not live alone,” said he, “but many friends live with us, and we have all things in common.”
“What do you mean ‘in common’?” asked Julius.
“In such a way that none of us considers anything his private property.”
“Why do you do that way?”
“We are Christians,” said Pamphilius.
“Is it possible!” cried Juilius. “Why, I have been told that Christians kill children and eat them. Can it be that you take part in doing such things?
“Come and see,” replied Pamphilius. “We do nothing of the sort; we live simply, trying to do nothing wrong.”
“But how can you live, if you have no property of your own?”
“We support each other. If we give our brethren our labors, then they give us theirs.”
“But if your brethren take your labors and don’t reciprocate, then what?”
“We don’t have such persons,” said Pamphilius; “such persons prefer to live luxuriously, and they don’t join us; life among us is simple, and without luxury.”
“But are there not many lazy ones who would delight in being fed for nothing?”
“Yes, there are some such, and we willingly receive them. Not long ago a man of that character came to us - a runaway slave; at first, it is true, he was lazy, and led a bad life, but soon he changed his life, and has now become one of the good brethren.”
“But supposing he had not ordered his life aright?”
“Well, there are some such. The old man Cyril says that we must treat such as if they were the very best of the brethren, and love them all the more.”
“Can one love good-for-nothings?”
“It is impossible to help loving a human being.”
“but how can you give all men whatever they ask of you?” asked Julius. “If my father gave all persons whatever they asked him for, very soon he wouldn’t have anything left.”
“I don’t know,” replied Pamphilius. “We always have enough left for our necessities. Even if it came about that we had nothing to eat or nothing to wear, then we ask the others and they give to us. yes, it sometimes happens so. Only once did I ever have to go to bed without my supper, and that was because I was very tired and did not feel like going to ask any of the brethren.”
“I don’t know how you do,” said Julius, “only what my father says: if he didn’t have his own property, and if he gave to every one who asked him, he would die of starvation.”
“We don’t! Come and see. We live, and not only do not lack, but we have even more than we need.”
“How can that be?”
“This is the way of it: We all profess one law, but our powers of fulfilling it vary in each individual; some have greater, some have less. One has already made great improvement in the good life, while another has only just begun in it. At the head of us all stands Christ, with His life, and we all try to imitate Him, and in this only we see our well-being. Certain of us, like the old man Cyril and his wife Pelagia, are our leaders; others stand next to them, and still others in a third rank, but all of us are traveling along the same path. Those in advance are already near to the law of Christ - self-renunciation - and they are willing to lose their life in order to save it. These need nothing; they have no regret for themselves, and to those that ask they give their last possession according to the law of Christ. There are others, feebler, who cannot give all they have, who have some pity on themselves, who grow weak if they don’t have their usual dress and food, and cannot give everything away. Then there are others still weaker - such as have only just started on the path; these still live in the old way, keeping much for themselves and giving away only what is superfluous. Even those that linger in the rear give aid to those in the van.”
There is more. Go read it!
What do you guys think about living this way?
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5 comments:
That's really good, Mel. My friend Meghan is a Tolstoy fanatic and she said that he was really an aristocrat who didn't live out his beliefs. I think he still has valuable things to say, though. But, that kind of taints it for me.
Lots of people hate on Tolstoy and say that without much knowledge of how he lived. I would look into it more, because I've read about how he took lots of people in on his estate and did the work of the peasants along with the other peasants. It seems to me from my limited reading that if he did fail in his pursuit of a christian life, he failed at it while he did a much better job at it than most people.
plus he just kicked alot of ass
and from some of the stories he would publish he would give all of the profits away to causes he believed in. He alienates a lot of people though, being totally against religion as well as being totally against the ways of the world. By most any normal church dogmatic standards he would be considered a heretic.
can you tell i get defensive about tolstoy?
I think it is beautiful. Sometimes I wonder, if I gave everything away, would i make it? I guess now that I am an adult and responsible for feeding and housing myself, ideals of non-attatchment are scarier than they were under my parents roof. Also, I like to have nice things. But I think, deep inside me, I am made happier by the freedom that non-attatchment brings and the happiness that hospitality and gift-giving bring than by most of the things i like to accumulate for myself. But I have a hard time KNOWing that most of the time. I am much better trained in the art of accululation than the art of non-attatchment. Beautiful but difficult. I think sim street is a rather rare oppertunity to dive in and really try it. My final: the main requirement for it to work is trust. Deep trust in people, or God, or both.
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