Saturday, July 04, 2009

Hugh MacLeod on Remembering the White Pebble

Hugh MacLeod has a web site called Gaping Void upon which he posts “cartoons drawn on the back of business cards” (like the one pictured).

In a recent post Hugh shares this story:

There's a wonderful metaphor in the Bible [Revelation 2:17] about "a white pebble".

17 Let the one who has an ear hear what the spirit says to the congregations: To him that conquers I will give some of the hidden manna, and I will give him a white pebble, and upon the pebble a new name written which no one knows except the one receiving it.

The metaphor was once explained to me by a Catholic monk. To paraphrase:

"You have three selves: The person that you think you are, the person that other people think you are, and the person that God thinks you are. The white pebble represents the latter. And of the three, it is by far the most important."

He then gave me some good advice, something I've always kept with me:

"When life gets really tough, just remember the white pebble. Just remember who you really are. Just remember the person that only God can see."

Whatever your thoughts on God or Religion may be, positive or negative, the white pebble is a very simple metaphor that audaciously asks the question: "Who are you, really?"

Yes, why are you here, exactly? Who are you here for? Yourself? Other people? God? Or maybe some other cause? You tell me...

It's one of those questions that never gets old. Unlike the poor body that houses us.

Read the full post and subscribe to Hugh’s (in)site at:

Hugh MacLeod, Everyone Needs an Evil Plan, Gaping Void, 25 June 2009.

Dr Geoff Pound