In the Wilderness of...
Illustration
In the Wilderness of Sin, the Israelites made the mistake of measuring their life in terms of what they had --and this is always a mistake. "We had the fleshpots," they said, "but not any more." They didn‚--ôt want to get far from the fleshpots from which they had eaten in Egypt.
Theirs was a fear which many people have --the fear of not having everything. Theirs was a feeling shared by many --if I cannot have everything, somehow my life is incomplete; somehow I am being denied my rights as a human being. Life is being valued by the abundance of things which one possesses. A pathetic failure, this; a failure to understand what life really is.
A colleague of motion--picture producer Louis B. Mayer once tried to persuade him to give money to a charity. The solicitor said to Mayer, "You know, you cannot take it with you when you go." "If I can‚--ôt take it with me," retorted Mayer, "then I won‚--ôt go." But, in 1957, he did.
-- Mann