By Fr Adolf Washington –
Can you imagine any food without even a pinch of salt? In the Indian cooking even the sweet payasam dessert cannot go without a pinch of salt. When Jesus said: “You are the salt of the earth. But if the salt loses its saltiness, how can it be made salty again? It is no longer good for anything, except to be thrown out and trampled underfoot” (Mathew 5:13) Jesus was not teaching cooking but emphasizing the importance of salt in comparison to communicating happiness.”
Being Christian means not losing taste of our Beliefs. Being Christian means adding meaning to the life of people who suffer. We can have the best of material comforts but if we do not have the ‘joy of life’ everything is vanity.
A wealthy man whose little son enjoyed the comforts of their lovely mansion took him through a very poor village to spend a day to give him a ‘taste’ of what poverty is.
On returning, the dad asked his son what he saw. The boy said “I see, we eat packaged food and canned stuff, they grow their own vegetables and eat fresh, we have chandeliers for light and decoration but they sleep under the starlit skies, we have two high-breed dogs they have dogs all over the village barking at us strangers, we have a swimming pool and they have an ever flowing river, we have computer games and they have children who spring about and play around with each other, we hardly know anybody in the neighborhood but those people seem to everybody’s name in the village, we have no time to talk to each other but those parents spend so much of time with their children. I realized indeed how poor we are dad, very poor we are, when compared to them”.
The father hugged his little son as his heart struck a chord.
We can sometimes experience poverty amidst plenty. Our happiness can never subsist in material things. There are people who have possessions but are not happy and there are those who hardly have much, but are happy and content in life because they know the ‘salt of life’. We can possess the whole world but suffer a loss of identity. The worst form of poverty is the feeling of being unloved and un-cared for.