Elie Wiesel once told the...
Illustration
Elie Wiesel once told the story of a man who is in a boat, out on the open sea. There are
others in the boat with him. One night, without warning, the man takes out a drill and
begins to cut a hole in the planks underneath his seat.
The other people on the boat see what he's doing and shout at him to stop: "What on earth are you doing? Have you gone mad? Do you want to sink us all?"
The man just keeps on drilling, and as he does so, he answers: "I don't understand what you're upset about. What I'm doing is a personal matter. It's none of your business. This is my seat, and if I want to drill a hole under it, that's my privilege."
David imagined that his sin in forcing Bathsheba into an adulterous sexual relationship was a personal matter. He did not recognize that it had dire consequences not only for himself, Bathsheba and Uriah, but for the entire community.
The other people on the boat see what he's doing and shout at him to stop: "What on earth are you doing? Have you gone mad? Do you want to sink us all?"
The man just keeps on drilling, and as he does so, he answers: "I don't understand what you're upset about. What I'm doing is a personal matter. It's none of your business. This is my seat, and if I want to drill a hole under it, that's my privilege."
David imagined that his sin in forcing Bathsheba into an adulterous sexual relationship was a personal matter. He did not recognize that it had dire consequences not only for himself, Bathsheba and Uriah, but for the entire community.
