It was Dale Wasserman who...
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It was Dale Wasserman who gave us the musical version of Don Quixote, Man of LaMancha. Wasserman intended the musical to reflect the novel's story line and theme about a man who fought windmills and one's capacity for self-deception. To his great surprise, however, his musical was received as an occasion for inspiration. One has need for a vision, something to drive one on, something to aspire to. In the musical that notion was supported by the lines, "To dream the impossible dream. To fight the unbeatable foe." Twice these lines were removed from the play, but each time they were replaced as being essential to the theme of the musical. Wasserman concluded "I was committed to an idealism that was hopelessly naive." Yet the author recognized that this theme has great appeal and must be taken seriously. It is the kind of theme the Apostle Paul enunciates when he confesses "having this ministry we do not lose heart." What Paul throws out to us is encouragement to pursue what God has set before us. This lesson is the inspiration for us to see what the world does not see and for us to live in the vision of the transfiguration itself.
