Seeds of Kindness Home
Harvest of Quotes
SOK Pledges and Stats - Then and Now
Milestones
Let's Ramble
Q-Tales
SOK Newsletters
Funny Pages
Rockford 3D Meet
Support and Encouragement
Daily Motivation
Positive Thinking
Doorway to Recovery
Peter_is_in
Angels
Why Seeds of Kindness
Lest We Forget
In the End
Until Next Time ...
Hello ~ Seeds to Kindness
Helpful Links

 

The Oil Lamp and the Lighthouse

lighthouse.jpg

On an island off the coast of a rocky shore stood a stately lighthouse. During the day, the white walls of the lighthouse shimmered and sparkled under the sunlight, while at night it burned a light for those at sea that outshone even the stars. Many people visited the lighthouse, and when they did, they commented on its size and strength and admired the artistic beauty that it added to the surrounding landscape. Some told its keeper of how it had been their saving grace during a storm.


     All loved the lighthouse, with one exception: a little oil lamp that lived in the lighthouse. By day it hung forgotten at the bottom of the stairs. At dusk it helped the keeper of the lighthouse make his way from the bottom of the stairs to the lantern room. It wasn't that the oil lamp despised his job—he knew that he served a purpose—but to live in the shadow of someone else whose light was so much brighter and could reach and help so many more than a lowly oil lamp could… Those thoughts rankled deep within the oil lamp's mind.


     If the oil lamp had been anything else—a broom, for instance—it would not have had much reason to compare itself with the lighthouse; their functions would have been completely different. But since both had been made for the purpose of lighting the way for others, it seemed to the oil lamp that he fell far short. To his way of thinking, his shortcomings were magnified by his nearness to one so much greater than he. Always, the oil lamp labored under this heaviness of heart.


     Then one day, after a particularly brilliant afternoon when many visitors had come to play on the sandy turf of the island, there was a knock at the door. It was a boy, searching for a friend who he had lost sight of during their play, and who now was lost. The sun had set, and what had seemed such friendly shores hours before were now dark and foreboding. Could the kindly keeper of the lighthouse help him find his friend?


     The keeper quickly took the youth inside and, after bundling him into a blanket, turned to get his own coat to protect himself from the night chill.
     Then he reached to the hook between the door and the stairs, and took down the little oil lamp. After carefully making sure that the wick was wet with oil and the tank full, the keeper lit the lamp and whispered, "Burn bright tonight, faithful friend. I cannot take the lighthouse with me. He serves his purpose here, but you were made for times like this. It is now that I need you most!"


     In that instant, all of the oil lamp's misgivings were replaced by joy—joy in knowing that here was something only he could do.


     All through the night, through brambles and brush, the oil lamp burned brighter and more steadily than ever before. He had to; the keeper was depending on him. At last the lost boy was found and brought safely back to the lighthouse and his friend.


     Never again did the oil lamp doubt his place or purpose. He had learned a great lesson that night: He was happiest and most useful being himself.


     You, too, have a special place and purpose that no one else can fill. Others may seem to have "brighter lights"—greater talents or broader influence—but the Keeper of our hearts, in His great all-knowing love, made you the way He did for a reason. Never think your light too small to make a difference.
 

By A Matsuoka

lamp.jpg

BACK

  

homelogo.gif