Three Hermits
I read a story last night around 2 am that I thought I'd
share because I really liked it. It's a summary of a story by Tolstoy:
"A bishop and several pilgrims are travelling on a fishing boat from
Archangel to the Solovétsk Monastery. During the voyage, the bishop overhears a
discussion about a remote island, nearby their course, where three old hermits
live a spartan existence focused on seeking "salvation for their
souls."
Inquiring about the hermits, the bishop finds that several of the
fishermen claim to have seen the hermits once. The bishop then informs the
captain that he wishes to visit the island. The captain seeks to dissuade him
by saying, "the old men are not worth your pains. I have heard say that
they are foolish old fellows, who understand nothing, and never speak a
word." The bishop insists and the captain steers the ship toward the
island.
The bishop subsequently sets off in a rowboat to visit. He is met
ashore by the three hermits. The bishop informs the hermits that he has heard
of them and of their search for salvation. He inquires how they are seeking
salvation and serving God, but the hermits say they do not know how, only that
they pray, simply: "Three are ye, three are we, have mercy upon us."
Subsequently, the bishop acknowledges that they have a little knowledge but are
ignorant of the true meaning of the doctrine and how to pray properly. He tells
them that he will teach them "not a way of my own, but the way in which
God in the Holy Scriptures has commanded all men to pray to Him" and
proceeds to explain the doctrines of the incarnation and the Trinity.
He
attempts to teach them the Lord's Prayer, the "Our Father", but the
simple hermits blunder and cannot remember the words. This compels the bishop
to repeat the lesson late into the night. After he is satisfied that they have
memorized the prayer, the Bishop departs from the island leaving the hermits
with a firm instruction to pray as he has taught them. The bishop then returns
to the fisherman's vessel anchored offshore in the rowboat and continues his
voyage.
While on board, the bishop notices that their vessel is being followed.
At first he thinks a boat is behind them but he soon realizes that the three
hermits are running across the surface of the water "as though it were dry
land." The hermits catch up to the vessel as the captain stops the boat,
and inform the bishop, "We have forgotten your teaching, servant of God.
As long as we kept repeating it we remembered, but when we stopped saying it
for a time, a word dropped out, and now it has all gone to pieces. We can
remember nothing of it. Teach us again."
The bishop is humbled and replies
to the hermits, "Your own prayer will reach the Lord, men of God. It is
not for me to teach you. Pray for us sinners."
After this, the hermits turn
around and walk back to their island.
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