Western Christianity is mostly comfortable and passive. There
is a short parable by Søren Kierkegaard that raises the question, “Will you
step out in faith, and meet the challenges that God places in front of you?
"A certain flock of geese lived together in a barnyard
with high walls around it. Because the
corn was good and the barnyard was secure, these geese would never take a risk.
One day a philosopher goose came among them. He was a very good philosopher and
every week they listened quietly and attentively to his learned discourses. 'My
fellow travelers on the way of life,' he would say, 'can you seriously imagine that this barnyard,
with great high walls around it, is all there is to existence?
I tell you, there is another and a greater world outside, a
world of which we are only dimly aware. Our forefathers knew of this outside
world. For did they not stretch their wings and fly across the trackless wastes
of desert and ocean, of green valley and wooded hill? But alas, here we remain
in this barnyard, our wings folded and tucked into our sides, as we are content
to puddle in the mud, never lifting our eyes to the heavens which should be our
home.
The geese thought this was very fine lecturing. 'How
poetical,' they thought. 'How profoundly existential. What a flawless summary
of the mystery of existence.' Often the philosopher spoke of the advantages of
flight, calling on the geese to be what they were. After all, they had wings,
he pointed out. What were wings for, but to fly with? Often he reflected on the
beauty and the wonder of life outside the barnyard, and the freedom of the
skies.
And every week the geese were uplifted, inspired, moved by
the philosopher's message. They hung on his every word. They devoted hours,
weeks, months to a thoroughgoing analysis and critical evaluation of his
doctrines. They produced learned treatises on the ethical and spiritual
implications of flight. All this they did. But one thing they never did. They
did not fly! For the corn was good, and the barnyard was secure!"
The Tame Geese, by Søren
Kierkegaard
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