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There is a modern
day fable about two cats. The younger cat is busy going around
in circles chasing its tail. The old cat just sits on the
fence watching the antics of the younger cat as it gets dizzy
going around and around.
Finally the old
cat asks why the younger cat is so busy chasing his tail.
The younger cat replies in a somewhat arrogant way that he
has just returned from Cat College where he has learned that
happiness is found in the tail of a cat. If he can just catch
his tail, he believes he will achieve true happiness.
The older and
wiser cat replies that he had not had the advantage of attending
Cat College, but has instead grown up in the back alleys and
has graduated from the school of hard knocks. He also acknowledges
that happiness is found in the tail of the cat. However, he
has learned that the proper way to live is to go straight
forward trying to do the right thing and that happiness will
follow him all the days of his life.
There is a simple
Bible message found in this fable that we do well to remember.
Jesus told us that ”Whosoever will save his life shall lose
it; but whosoever shall lose his life for my sake and the
gospel’s, the same shall save it.”
If we spend all
our time trying to save our lives, we lose it, just like the
cat chasing his tail. But if we will forget about saving our
life and become totally involved in service to God by losing
our life in His service, then we end up with the very thing
that the losers were trying to achieve.
It is interesting
that the constitution of the United States guarantees its
citizens the pursuit of happiness. We have the right to chase
our tail but never catch it. On the other hand, the Lord Jesus
Christ guarantees us true happiness, lasting happiness in
his kingdom, by forgetting the chasing of happiness now.
As the fable teaches,
happiness is found in going straight ahead, forgetting the
very things that most people chase. By doing that, the things
others chase to no avail just naturally follow those on the
straight path. People who are bent on only doing that which
will please them end up the most selfish and miserable people
on earth, while those who are always thinking of others and
spending their time in service to God discover that in the
process they really have achieved happiness.
Now we are concerned
with a higher goal than the cats, but as the fable tries to
teach, we need to forget about trying to save our life and
instead give ourselves wholly and completely over to God and
in so doing we will achieve true happiness and eternal life
in His kingdom.
We are told by
Paul, ”let every one of us please his neighbor for his good
to edification. For even Christ pleased not himself... That
ye may with one mind and one mouth glorify God, even the Father
of our Lord Jesus Christ.”
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