An ancient Arabian fable tells of three
merchants who crossed the desert. In the daytime, they would pitch tents for
shelter from the desert sun. When the stars came out, they would ride their
camels in the cool of the night. At one point, the merchants crossed a dry
riverbed under the stars.
"Halt!" said a voice from the
darkness.
All three men jumped down from their camels
and huddled in fear. "Who's there?" one of them said.
"Don't be afraid," said the voice
in the dark. "I won't harm you if you do as I say. See those pebbles at
your feet?"
By the dim starlight, the merchants saw
thousands of pebbles in the riverbed. "Each of you pick up a pebble and put
it in your pocket."
The three merchants obeyed. Each took a
pebble from the riverbed.
"Now leave this place," the voice
said, "and don't stop until daybreak."
The merchants mounted up. One said,
"What's this all about?"
"I will only say this," the voice
replied. "In the morning, you will be happy and sad. Now, go!"
Baffled, the three merchants proceeded on
their way. As they traveled, they wondered what the voice meant by saying that
they would be both happy and sad. When morning came, the merchants stopped. Each
man pulled the single pebble from his own pocket and saw that it sparkled in the
morning sunlight. The "pebbles" were precious gems. One man had a
ruby, another, an emerald, and the third, a sapphire.
Jewels!" one merchant said, his face
shining with joy.
"Oh, no!" wailed the second.
"There were thousands of jewels all over the riverbed! Each of us took only
one! Why didn't we grab handfuls?" "Look!" shouted the third,
pointing behind them. A desert wind had whipped up, erasing their tracks.
"We can never find our way back!" The voice in the desert had spoken
truly. The merchants were happy and sad. They had found wealth in the desert,
but they could have taken more! [1]
Unfortunately spirituality becomes as those
jewels in the desert, a wealth that we could have taken more of, but seldom do
so. We often seek out other paths
to fulfill that spiritual thirst we have within, but Christianity has many
"Jewels in the desert" that are either overlooked or simply forgotten.
[1] Finding Jewels in the Desert By Os Hillman