Sunday, March 25, 2007

"Saint Anthony of Padua's Sermon to the Fishes"
by Michael Nibley


When Anthony preaches
He goes to the beaches
Converting the fish, who can't make it to church.
They swarm up to listen
A-drip and a-glisten,
The trout and the minnow, the pike and the perch.

"Treat all as your brother;
Don't murder each other,
For all of God's creatures are children alike."
What a marvelous spirit!
The minnows all cheer it;
They whisper and glare at the murderous pike.

"The root of all evil,
Great tool of the devil,
Is love of possessions; you'd best do without."
What a marvelous spirit!
The pike love to hear it;
They cast a stern eye on the miserly trout.

"Work hard! Those who idle
Will bear harsh requital;
Who shirks at his labor gets left in the lurch."
What a marvelous spirit!
The trout just revere it;
They nudge one another and mutter, "Those perch!"

"Eschew fornications
And lawless relations,
For sex unrestrained leads to sorrow and tears."
What a mervelous spirit!
The perch love to hear it;
They glance at the minnows with snickers and sneers.

The saint ends his preaching;
The fish love such teaching!
They watch as his figure recedes from the shore.
Then greed, lust and slaughter
Resume in the water,
And all is exactly the same as before.

3 comments:

Sand Ebeach said...

It must be difficult to be such a good person all the time. You should let the world in on your secret. And no I'm not being sarcastic.

Mark J. said...

um...
Practice.
I've had years and years and years of it. I think St Anthony ought to get most of the credit.

Helena said...

Our Bishop read this in church today, and I just had to find it. Very clever!

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