 |
Marcelo Teixeira |
|
|
Humbleness
is
fruitful
|
Who
called
my
attention
to the
finding
that
gives
its
title to
this
article
was the
actor
Eriberto
Leao, in
an
interview
given to
the
“Programa
do Jo”
(TV
Globo)
on
December
11,
2009. At
that
time, he
clarified
that the
word
humbleness
comes
from the
word
humus,
which
means
good
land,
able to
receive
the seed
and make
it
germinate,
bearing
fruit
and more
fruit.
So I
went to
the
dictionary,
and
confirmed
what
Eriberto
had
said.
Therefore,
humbleness
is
fruitful.
For me,
this was
one of
the
greatest
discoveries
of
recent
times.
It is a
great
opportunity
to
review
the
concept
we had
about
humbleness,
mistakenly
interpreting
it as
lowering
of the
head,
being
simple,
using
frayed
clothes
and so
on. To
be
humble
is not
this,
luckily.
And, to
be
humble
does not
mean to
belittle
ourselves.
It is to
let
yourself
be
fruitful.
This is
much
more
fascinating
and
profound.
This
finding
leads us
to read
again
some
Gospel
passages
to
realize
the
importance
of being
fruitful
and
allow
the soil
of our
conscious
to be
fertilized
by
various
seeds
that
life
throws
at us on
a daily
basis.
We shall
start
with the
first of
the
Beatitudes:
"Blessed
are the
poor in
Spirit,
for
theirs
is the
Kingdom
of
Heaven."
In
The
Gospel
According
to
Spiritism,
Chapter
VII,
item 2,
Allan
Kardec
reminds
that
Jesus,
in the
mentioned
Beatitude,
does not
refer to
those
devoid
of
intelligence,
but to
the
humble.
Therefore,
it is
for the
fruitful
that the
Kingdom
of
Heaven
(permanent
state of
happiness,
conscience
and
sense of
accomplishment)
is
reserved.
We
should
be
fruitful,
but how
do we do
this?
In the
book
The
Voice of
the
Mount,
the
writer,
Richard
Simonetti,
says it
is not
for
nothing
that
this
Beatitude
is the
first to
be
proclaimed
in the
Sermon
on the
Mount.
Jesus
Christ,
being
the
Master
Teacher,
wanted
to give
a
logical
sequence
to such
great
teachings.
Therefore,
He
wanted
to make
clear
that, to
begin
our
evolutionary
journey,
we must
be lucid
and
coherent,
and we
must be
fruitful
enough
to have
an
accurate
idea of
who we
really
are. How
do we do
this? By
recognizing
that we
are not
perfect;
that we
also
make
mistakes;
that we
are not
always
right;
that we
should
learn
how to
receive
a
critic,
because
the
person,
who
offends
us, may
be going
through
a
difficult
time,
and so
on.
These
are some
of the
seeds
that are
thrown
at us
daily.
If the
soil of
our
consciousness
is
humble
(fruitful
and
fertile),
the
seeds
will
grow
into
crops of
self-understanding
and
inner
knowledge,
for
example.
But if
the land
is dry
and not
fruitful,
the
seeds
will not
germinate.
The
result
is:
anger,
retaliation,
wounded
pride,
insecurity,
fanaticism
and so
many
evils
that
affect
us, due
to the
lack of
humbleness.
Maybe
that is
why, in
the
Parable
of the
Sower,
another
known
excerpt
of the
New
Testament,
Jesus
makes a
point of
clarifying
the
nature
of the
types of
soil
that
received
the seed
that the
sower
planted.
The
first
three
waves of
seeds
fell
along
the way,
between
rocks
and in
the
midst of
thorns.
None of
them
sprouted;
they
were
eaten by
the
birds,
burnt
down by
the sun,
or
muffled
by the
thorns.
They
died due
to the
lack of
humbleness,
characterized
by
indifference,
superficiality,
oppression,
selfishness,
power
struggle,
contempt,
and
prejudice.
Throw a
stone,
the one
who is
without
a sin
On the
other
hand,
the
fourth
batch of
seeds
fell on
good
soil and
produced
a
hundredfold;
others
sixty,
and some
thirty.
That is,
according
to the
degree
of
fertility,
people
matured,
let the
voice of
their
conscience
be
heard,
and
produced
in
accordance
with the
understanding
they
had.
But,
they did
not fail
to
produce.
This
means
that
even
producing
little,
the
trend is
that
fertility
increases
and
gradually
the
human
being
improves
its
level of
understanding,
being
able
thus to
be more
humble,
as he
improves
his
perception
and
becomes
aware of
his
imperfection,
always
needing
to learn
something
and
being
open to
the new.
Another
good
example,
still
using
the New
Testament,
is the
celebrated
episode
of the
adulterous
woman
about to
be
stoned
by the
mob that
lynches.
Then
Jesus
says
that the
one
without
sin
should
throw
the
first
stone.
What did
the
Master
do? He
threw
seeds of
understanding,
which,
for
various
reasons,
we
believe,
were
understood
by those
men with
their
hands up
holding
stones.
They
were led
to have
a
humble/fertile
attitude.
They let
the
teaching
of
Christ
sprout
in the
soil of
their
consciences.
They put
aside
the
aridity
of pride
and
intolerance.
The seed
fertilized
the soil
of each
one of
them.
Therefore,
many of
them
sprouted,
and made
those
men
think:
-
Wow, I
also
have
several
faults.
– If I
were in
her
place,
would I
like
them to
throw
stones
at me? –
What am
I doing
with
this
stone in
my hand,
if I do
not even
know
this
woman? –
I must
not
listen
to those
that
tell me
to throw
stones
on this
poor
creature.
Otherwise,
I will
run the
risk of
being
pointed
out as
an
agitator!
Indeed,
what
does it
mean to
be
humble?
Finally,
seeds,
then,
made
several
land
produce
five,
ten,
twenty
or a
hundred,
never
mind. It
was
sufficient
production
for all
drop
their
stones
and go
away,
renovated
that
were to
have
left to
fertilize
the seed
of
Christ's
teaching,
which
made
them
reassess,
in a
split
second,
their
own
values.
This is
to be
humble.
Each man
was
humble
in his
own way.
I
believe
that
when we
think of
humility,
we must
also be
sensitive
to
realize
its
significance
goes
beyond
the
pride of
antonym.
In his
book
Working
for
Yourself,
the
author,
Jose
Carlos
Leal,
tells us
a story
of a
teacher,
who,
after 20
years
teaching
at a
college,
was
fired.
He then
took the
money he
received
and
opened a
school.
Today,
he has a
much
better
income
and is
his own
boss. He
was
humble!
He let
himself
be
fertilized
by the
opportunity
that
this
difficult
situation
presented
and
turned
it over.
If he
had not
been
humble,
he would
have
fallen
into
depression,
or would
have
gone and
look for
another
job that
would
have
paid him
a
similar
salary.
Or, with
his
pride
wounded,
he would
simply
be very
angry
and feel
bitter
towards
his
former
employer.
Humbleness
has,
therefore,
a lot to
do with
entrepreneurship,
a word
very
much
used
these
days. We
are
being
fertile
when we
understand
that we
can try
another
way.
Humbleness
can be
an ally
to a
good
sense of
humor
Evaristo
Antunes,
my
grandfather’s
cousin,
and for
many
years,
the
President
of the
Spiritist
Municipal
Union of
Petropolis
(Umep),
once
witnessed
a
traffic
discussion.
When
trying
to calm
down one
of the
drivers,
the man
told him
he was
very
angry,
because
the
other
driver
had told
him to
go and…
Evaristo,
very
calmly
and with
a sense
of
humor,
said:
“Well,
my son,
just
don’t
go!” It
was as
simple
as that.
Now,
here is
the
humbleness
that is
a
synonymous
of a
good
sense of
humor.
We must
be
fruitful
enough
to be a
good
sport,
when
someone
offends
us. This
is
humbleness
full of
presence
of mind.
Generally,
we
disarm
the
offender
and he
is left
with no
action,
since we
were
humble
enough
not to
give any
importance
to the
offending
words.
The
offender
will be
embarrassed,
because
his
offense
was not
taken
into
consideration.
The
offender
will be
embarrassed,
and will
become
aware
that his
offense
means
nothing
at all,
and
therefore,
he will
leave,
with our
fruitful
reaction
in mind.
There is
the risk
that
later,
he will
laugh at
the
situation,
as I
have
already
seen it
happen.
In the
late
1970s,
there
was on
TV an
advertising
campaign
called
“Disarm
up and
live
better”.
It
consisted
of
several
commercials
where
aggressive
people
were
"disarmed"
by
kindness.
I
remember
that in
one of
the
commercials,
a man
began to
argue
with
another,
because
he
believed
that he
had
jumped
the
queue at
the
restaurant.
This
second
man,
instead
of
continuing
the
discussion,
humbly
apologized.
Then,
overcoming
the
stress
of that
moment,
he
invited
the
couple
to sit
with him
and his
wife.
The
person,
who had
begun
the
discussion,
smiled
embarrassed
and
accepted
the
invitation.
Humbleness
requires
presence
of mind
I know a
great
story
about
two
people
(not
sure if
relatives,
or
friends),
who
began to
argue.
One of
them, at
the
height
of the
fight,
said to
the
other
something
like:
"You are
this and
that!”
“Do you
really
think I
am all
that?”
“Yes, I
do!”
replied
the
first
one
angrily.
The
other
one,
then,
said
very
calmly:
“OK”.
And put
an end
to the
argument
leaving
her
opponent
with no
action
whatsoever.
Sometimes,
humbleness
is
difficult,
because
it
requires
presence
of mind,
something
that is
presently
forgotten.
We
prefer
to
appeal
to
stress,
to a
heated
discussion,
bad
mood,
and
wounded
pride.
The
result
is: a
fertile
soil for
no seed
to
sprout.
Miriam
Machado,
with
whom I
worked
at
Editora
Voices,
once
told me
that her
ex-husband
wanted
to
emancipate
their
daughter,
then 16.
With
this
purpose
in mind,
he
insisted
so much
with the
teenager,
and
began to
plant
this
idea in
the
mother’s
mind
too.
What did
Miriam
do? She
was
humble.
In what
way? She
agreed
at once
with the
emancipation,
claiming
that, if
the
daughter
and her
ex-husband
wanted,
she was
already
outvoted,
and
therefore
she
would
not
fight
(to
fight is
lack of
humbleness).
The
matter
died
there
and
there.
If
Miriam’s
intelligence
had not
worked
in a
humble
way, she
would
have had
a fight
with
both of
them,
and the
three
would be
affected
by an
endless
stress.
There
are many
other
behaviors
that
demonstrate
our lack
of
humbleness/fertility.
Stubbornness
is one
of them.
You know
those
people
who
insist
on a
lost
cause?
There
are
several
such
stories.
People
who
refuse
to see
the
obvious
and pass
sometimes
a whole
life
working
out in
cold
iron.
The
daughter,
who did
not
become a
Princess
I met a
widower,
who did
not
accept
his only
daughter’s
choices.
He
wanted
his
daughter
to be a
princess
and a
good
student.
But, she
never
cared to
study
(with
difficulty
she
completed
High
School),
and she
did not
marry
too by
the
rules.
She went
to live
together
with the
man she
loved,
took a
course
in
hairdressing
and went
to work
at a
hairdresser’s
salon.
It was
perfect
for her
and she
always
looked
after
her
father,
her
children
and her
husband.
However,
her
father,
instead
of being
humble
and
accepting
his
daughters’
choices,
he
rather
decided
to make
her life
a
misery:
for
years
and
years he
verbally
abused
her and
her
husband
too. In
this
father’s
opinion,
his
daughter
had to
go back
to her
studies
and
marry
dressed
in
white.
Decades
went by
and this
father
went on
stressing
the
family,
being
stubborn,
not
accepting
the
obvious,
like a
dog
trying
to bite
his own
tale,
running
round
and
round in
circles
and
getting
nowhere,
until he
passed
away. We
should
learn
how
fruitful
and
fertile
it is to
regard
our
children’s
choices,
even
though
they may
not
correspond
to our
dreams.
To be
humble
is to
respect
other
peoples’
choices.
I want
to talk
about
another
example
of lack
of
humbleness:
the
difficulty
some
people
have to
accept
the
changes
that the
world is
going
through.
I speak
of
reactionary
people,
who
refuse
to admit
that new
times
always
follows.
Yes,
reactionary
plus an
arid
soil,
and we
have
here a
very
uncomfortable
partnership.
They
never
give in,
and they
own the
truth.
We need
a
shovel,
a hoe,
rake,
pick and
fertilizer
to work
this
soil.
Even
with all
this
work,
many of
them
continue
dry as a
cork.
What a
pity!
The
example
of a
supportive
man
My
consolation
is to
know
that one
day,
under
painful
blows
the
Earth
will
have to
become
humble,
and
finally
accept
to be
fruitful
and
fertilized
by the
new
mentality
seeds.
If this
does not
happen
in this
life, it
will
take
place on
the next
one, or
even in
the
spiritual
dimension.
After
all, the
stubborn
will
also
disincarnate
one day.
And in
my
opinion,
there is
not a
greater
gesture
than
that of
the
humble,
who
accept
becoming
fertilized
by the
spiritual
life.
For the
one who
is arid,
it must
be a
major
blow.
Perhaps
this is
the
reason
why the
mediumistic
séances
have so
much
trouble
in
clarifying
those,
who have
left
this
world,
and do
not
accept
the
fact.
I also
have to
talk
about
people,
who are
not
aware
that
they
commit
mistakes
too, and
do not
apologize,
even
when
they
know
they did
wrong.
Have you
noticed
how
these
people
are dry
and with
no inner
peace?
How many
marital,
family
and
friendship
relationships
have
crumbled,
because
we do
not say
we are
sorry!
We are
like dry
soil!
And what
must we
say
regarding
the
fanatics,
whether
it is
about
religion,
football,
and
politics
and so
on? Only
they are
right!
The
others,
who
think
differently,
are
wrong!
Their
minds
are
closed
and they
refuse
to be
fertilized,
becoming
humble,
through
the
ability
of
perceiving
that
everything
is
relative
in this
world.
To end,
I will
tell you
about a
story I
heard
today on
TV Globo,
“Jornal
Hoje”
(Today’s
News),
which
took
place in
the 90s.
It was
about a
man in
the city
of
Ituiutaba
(State
of Minas
Gerais),
named,
Deocles
Gomes
Machado,
affectionately
called
Uncle
Doc. One
day,
Doc’s
wife
passed
away. He
was
already
retired,
and old,
but
instead
of
isolating
himself,
he chose
to help
others.
He
looked
for
vacant
plots,
asked
their
owners
to
authorize
him to
plant
and thus
he began
to plant
vegetable
gardens.
He
bought
the
seeds
and went
on
buying
them
with the
money of
his
retirement.
It did
not take
long for
the
carrots,
radish,
cabbage,
spinach,
potatoes,
chayote,
pumpkin,
lettuce,
chicory,
tomatoes,
beetroots,
and
watercress
to start
sprouting.
He also
planted
oranges,
apples,
papayas,
bananas,
avocados
and many
other
fruits
and
vegetables.
It was
nice to
discover
that
humbleness
is
fruitful
Uncle
Doc then
picked
up the
handcart
and
began
distributing
the
crops in
nurseries
and city
nursing
homes.
"When I
die, I
will not
take
anything.
I have
to take
my good
deeds.
Work for
the
benefit
of your
neighbor",
he said
with a
humbleness
that
only
those,
who have
come
across
it, know
it. I
confess
that I
wept
with
shame in
front of
the TV.
I was
deeply
moved by
this
man’s
attitude.
I felt
so small
that I
wanted
to cry
and hide
myself
under
the
table. I
was
crushed
by his
greatness.
This was
a man,
who
accepted
being
fruitful
and let
the
seeds
germinate
in an
unconditional
love of
his
neighbor.
The
seeds
sprouted
in the
form of
donations
and
produced
food for
the
needy.
And all
this
thanks
to a
simple,
strong
and
beautiful
initiative!
Almost
20 years
later,
Uncle
Doc
passed
away,
and the
Jornal
Nacional
(TV
Globo)
gave the
news of
his
death
and told
us that
he fed
approximately
1,200
people
every
month.
He was
105
years
old and
sure
went to
the
spiritual
plane,
reaping
abundant
fruits,
germinated
in the
soil and
in his
heart.
The
story
did not
stop
here.
Uncle
Doc left
followers.
Among
them was
Valmir,
another
retired
old man,
who was
taking
care of
the
gardens
left by
Deocles
and
inherited
from him
the love
for the
land and
for
children
and
elderly
people.
As he
said:
“Because,
if
someone
does
something,
the
other
can do
it too.
Ten
thousand
helping
and what
is going
to
happen?
There
will be
a great
improvement,
won’t
there?”
There
are so
many
vacant
or
enclosed
grounds
spread
around!
Imagine
if every
person
grows a
garden
in these
plots
and
shares
the
results
with
those
who need
it
badly.
It was
so good
to find
out that
humbleness
is
fruitful!
I
believe
that
this can
make
things
easier
and
morally
change
many
people,
beginning
by
myself.
Bibliography:
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